Will we finally track down extraterrestrials? Yesterday work began on a vast new radio telescope, with the power to unlock some of the deepest secrets of the universe.
Scientific 'project of the century' has begun
Will we finally track down extraterrestrials? Yesterday work began on a vast new radio telescope, with the power to unlock some of the deepest secrets of the universe.
It would be hard to find two weirder places for a party. One was the Karoo, a South African desert. The other was Murchison, an Australian county without a single town. But yesterday people gathered at both to mark an amazing moment in science.
Building work was starting on the Square Kilometre Array telescope - SKA for short. When finished, its 197 dishes and 130,000 antennae will be eight times more sensitive than existing telescopes. It will be able to map the sky 135 times faster.
According to one expert it "could detect a mobile phone in the pocket of an astronaut on Mars, 225 million kilometres away". And if there are aliens with technology like ours, it could detect radiation from their telecom equipment.
Scientists hope it will allow us to look back billions of years to when the first stars were forming. This should help us work out how galaxies take shape.
They also hope that the radio waves from dead stars will help us understand gravity.
The Australian site is called SKA-Low, because it can pick up low-frequency radio signals. The South African site is called SKA-Mid, because it can pick up signals on higher frequencies.
According to the head of SKA-Low, it will "define the next 50 years for radio astronomy, charting the birth and death of galaxies. It will expand "the boundaries of what we know about the universe."
The data collected will be processed by computers in Britain. The team running it expect to receive 600 million gigabytesA unit of storage capacity. Researchers calculate this statistic by assigning rough values in these terms to words as well as computer data. of data a year.
There have been few projects to rival it in history. The Large Hadron ColliderThe world's most powerful machine for smashing high-energy particles together. involved over 10,000 scientists from more than 100 countries. The International Space StationA joint project between the US, Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency. was created by the space agencies of the US, Russia, Europe, Japan and Canada.
Will we finally track down extraterrestrials?
Yes: The universe is so vast that we cannot be alone, but previous radio telescopes have not been powerful enough to pick up radiation from alien telecom systems. This will be our best ever hope.
No: We will do exactly the opposite. With this super-telescope we will conduct a search of the universe on a colossal scale, and finally establish beyond reasonable doubt that aliens do not exist.
Or... We are very likely to find some evidence of intelligent life outside our universe, but there is no reason to believe that it would respond. Sensible aliens would want nothing to do with us.
Keywords
Gigabytes - A unit of storage capacity. Researchers calculate this statistic by assigning rough values in these terms to words as well as computer data.
Large Hadron Collider - The world's most powerful machine for smashing high-energy particles together.
International Space Station - A joint project between the US, Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency.
Scientific ‘project of the century’ has begun
Glossary
Gigabytes - A unit of storage capacity. Researchers calculate this statistic by assigning rough values in these terms to words as well as computer data.
Large Hadron Collider - The world's most powerful machine for smashing high-energy particles together.
International Space Station - A joint project between the US, Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency.