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posted by janrinok on Wednesday December 07, @03:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the you've-yet-to-have-your-finest-hour dept.

The Square Kilometer Array will help study dark energy and the early universe:

Astronomers are now closer to a major technological upgrade. Australia has started construction of its portion of the Square Kilometer Array, a system that should become the world's largest radio telescope. The Australian portion, SKA-Low, will revolve around 131,072 antenna "trees" in the country's western Wajarri country. As the name implies, the array will focus on low-frequency signals. The Guardian notes it's expected to be eight times more sensitive than existing telescopes, and map the cosmos about 135 times faster.

A counterpart with 197 conventional radio dishes, SKA-Mid, is coming to Meerkat National Park in South Africa's dry, unpopulated Karoo region. That element will study mid-range frequencies. The Australian segment is a joint effort between the dedicated SKA Organization and the country's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO).

[...] The combined array, originally envisioned in 1991, is expected to transform radio astronomy. It will mainly be helpful for studying the early universe, and might provide new insights into the formation of the first stars during the reionization period. However, it should also help investigate dark energy and its potential effect on cosmic expansion. The extreme sensitivity may even be useful in the search for extraterrestrial life, although the resolution will limit the most detailed searches to relatively close stars. Director Dr. Sarah Pierce told The Guardian the telescopes could spot an airport radar on a planet "tens of light-years away."


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  • (Score: 2) by oumuamua on Wednesday December 07, @07:49PM (1 child)

    by oumuamua (8401) on Wednesday December 07, @07:49PM (#1281593)

    So we can infer given this and other advances in detecting exoplanets that any alien civilization within range of our industrial-age light cone (about 100 light years away) knows an intelligent species is here on Earth. And that light cone keeps expanding.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 07, @11:25PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 07, @11:25PM (#1281622) Journal
      Of course, they might have know that there was one or more intelligent species here on Earth millions of years ago.
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