2019-07-01_Australian_Sky_&_Telescope

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30 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE July 2019


investigation proved the wildcard in
the pack and, within a few years, radio
astronomy had grown to be the Lab’s
main research activity. John Bolton
was one of a brilliant group of young
men and women at Radiophysics who
pioneered this new branch of astronomy.
In 1954 the Radiophysics Lab
announced plans to build a Giant
Radio Telescope. From the start it was
an international project. Half the
funding came from the Carnegie and

Rockefellerfoundations,demonstrating
USrecognitionofAustralia’sleading
positioninthisnewfield.Thetelescope
wasdesignedbyFreemanFox&
PartnersinLondon,a firmwellknown
inAustralia— thefirm’sfounderSir
RalphFreemanhaddesignedtheSydney
HarbourBridge,thenthemosticonic
structureinAustralia.Thesitechosen
forthetelescopewasa shallowvalley
northoftheParkestownshipinNSw,
wellshieldedfromartificialsourcesof
radiointerference.

NetworkingwithNASA
WhenNASAbeganitsseriesof
unmanned and manned spacecraft
missions in the early 1960s it needed to
establish a network of tracking stations
around the globe so that, at any given
time, a spacecraft would be in contact
with at least one station. NASA initially
installed a 26-metre dish at Woomera in
the South Australian desert and then two
more 26-m dishes at Honeysuckle Creek
and Tidbinbilla near Canberra. However,
when the Parkes dish was opened in
October 1961, with John Bolton as

theinauguraldirector,NASAtookan
immediateinterest.Witha diameter
of 64 metres,Parkeshadsixtimesthe
collectingareaofthe26-mdishesand
wouldbea muchsuperiorinstrumentfor
trackingspaceprobesleavingEarthorbit
toexploretheMoonandtheplanets
beyond.NASAofferedCSIROa hefty
hourlyfeetoreserveoccasionalblocksof
timeonthenewdish.
However,therelationshipwith
NASAdidnotgetofftoa goodstart.
ParkeswasusedtotracktheMariner
IVmissiontoMarsandreceivedthe
telemetrysignalsusedtoproduce
thefirstclose-upphotographsofthe
Martian surface. The results surprised
scientists for they revealed a heavily
cratered planet with a cold, thin
atmosphere dominated by carbon
dioxide, certainly not the hospitable
planet suggested by some telescopic
observations from Earth. But when
NASA scientists published the findings
from the mission, including the
remarkably detailed photographs,
no acknowledgment was made of
the role played by Parkes. The Parkes

MOONWALK

S DISH CRICKET Sam Neill (left) cast as the
unassuming director of the Parkes dish with
Kevin Harrington and Tom Long. The Dish was
screened in Australian cinemas in October
2000, immediately after the Sydney Olympics,
and became the highest grossing Australian
film of the year.

S DISHMASTER John Bolton was the
director of the Parkes Observatory from 1961
to 1971. He then became CSIRO’s unofficial
astronomer-at-large, and served two terms
as a vice-president of the International
Astronomical Union.

S MAKING HISTORY The Apollo 11 crew
(from left): Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins
and Buzz Aldrin. Collins piloted the command
module Columbia while Armstrong and Aldrin
descended to the lunar surface.
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