Australia Telescope Compact Array, Narrabri, NSW
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), at the Paul Wild Observatory, is an array of six 22-m antennas used for radio astronomy. It is located about 25 km west of the town of Narrabri in rural NSW (about 500 km north-west of Sydney).
Australia telescope compact array time-lapse
Video transcript available here:
This timelapse celebrates the 25th anniversary of CSIRO's Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). The ATCA is a set of six dishes that work together as one much larger radio telescope, and it was officially opened in September 1988. Around 500 astronomers use the telescope each year to study cosmic objects including black holes, forming and exploding stars, and galaxies at the edge of the observable Universe. Over the years, regular technical upgrades to the telescope's equipment has ensured it maintains its place at the forefront of radio astronomy worldwide.
For more information:
Video: Alex Cherney (terrastro.com)
Radio Telescopes - CSIRO Australia Compact Array, Narrabri, Australia
Radio Telescopes - CSIRO Australia Compact Array, Narrabri, Australia.
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These radio telescopes are so sensitive, that mobile phones and microwaves will interfere with them! There are warning signs everywhere when you turn up to visit this place!
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Australia Telescope Compact Array, Narrabri
A few sequences I roughly put together of the Array at work.
Imaged on the night of the 5th Oct 2014.
Thanks for looking,
Jeanette
PS. In the second sequence, you can see Kangaroos grazing around the base of the scope.
A Visit To The Australia Telescope Compact Array
A visit to the Australian compact array telescope in Northern N.S.W.
Music (Lost In The Galaxy) by David Wilks Productions.
Sorry about the lip sync, something went wrong with the upload ,might re do it some time. Takes a day to upload ten mins of HD
in this country because of crap inernet speeds.
Australia Telescope. Narrabri, NSW, Australia
The Australia Telescope is located at the Paul Wild Observatory and is the largest and most powerful radio telescope in the southern hemisphere. After five years of planning and construction the telescope was opened in 1988 and is now keenly sought after for use by astronomer's world wide. At the observatory there are five huge antennas that can be moved along a 3km trail in an east-west direction and also along a 230m north-south track. Each antenna weighs 270 tonnes and can be moved to selected points along the rail track. A sixth antenna is situated a further 3km west of the main track. Using this configuration the combined power of the antennas can simulate a single dish 6 km in diameter.The telescope is the only one in the southern hemisphere capable of receiving signals one thousand times higher in frequency than FM radio stations.
Australia Telescope Compact Array and surrounds
Videos and Time-lapse videos taken around the CSIRO's Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) during May 2011 ... including obligatory cockatoos taking a hayride on the telescope :-)
Equipment: Canon 5D Mk II (for all video and time-lapse imagery); Canon 15mm f/2.8 Fisheye (for wide-field shots); Canon 75-300mm f/4-5.6 (for animal scenes and zoom shots); Canon TC80N3 Timer Remote Control ... and a cheap broken tripod :-(
Software: Quicktime Pro (to generate video from stills); iMovie to edit and compile movie.
Music : Song of Sorrows by Alexander L'Estrange / Dan Hewson (available for purchase here:
Cast: CSIRO's Australia Telescope Compact Array (main star); Damselfly (Apologies, I'm not sure if this is correct. Is there an entomologist in the house that can help?); Eastern Grey Kangaroo; Apostlebirds (bird playing with twig and grooming each other); Sulphur Crested Cockatoo; Swallows and the Green Tree Frog.
My trip to the Australia Telescope Compact Array
This is a series of short videos I've mashed together from a recent trip to the Australia Telescope Compact Array as part of a summer vacation scholarship. The quality isn't too good because I filmed it all handheld with a simple digital camear in video mode.
ASP1010 class chat with astronomers at the Australia Telescope Compact Array
Our unit ASP1010 - Earth to Cosmos - provides an introduction to the nature of the solar system, our galaxy, and the cosmos beyond. The unit coordinator and lecturer, Dr Jasmina Lazendic-Galloway, arranged a question and answer session during one of the lectures with astronomers at the Australia Telescope Compact Array in Narrabri via skype. This provided our students with an experience of real science in a genuine observatory environment. Our ASP1010 tutor Dane Kleiner was a duty astronomer during this session, and he explained to the students how does a radio interferometre works. One of the observers, professor James Jackson from Boston University, explained to the students the motivation and science behind his radio observations.
Australian Telescope Compact Array - Time Lapse
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), at the Narrabri Observatory, is an array of six 22-m antennas used for radio astronomy. It is located about 25 km west of the town of Narrabri in rural NSW (about 500 km north-west of Sydney). It is operated by the Australia Telescope National Facility, a business unit of CSIRO.
Sorry for the shake, this was a hand heald time lapse.
Australia Telescope Compact Array
Driving Radio Telescopes at the Compact Array
The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) near Narrabri NSW is the largest radio interferometer telescope in the southern hemisphere.
Because this is a synthesis imaging telescope, every few weeks the antenna dishes are moved to different positions along a track to change how they image the sky. I was lucky enough to be allowed to take part in one of these array reconfigurations.
Each of the six antennas weighs 270 tonnes and has a top speed of 4 km/h. Reconfiguration can take 1 - 2 hours depending on the extent of that day's changes. Antenna 2 shown in the video was driven nearly 2 km in this reconfiguration job.
Thanks to CSIRO and the Australia Telescope National Facility staff.
Australia Telescope Compact Array | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:02:01 See also
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SUMMARY
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The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) is a radio telescope operated by CSIRO at the Paul Wild Observatory, twenty five kilometres (16 mi) west of the town of Narrabri in Australia.
The telescope is an array of six identical 22-metre (72 ft) diameter dishes, which commonly operate in aperture synthesis mode to produce radio images. Five of the dishes can be moved along a three-kilometre (2 mi) railway track. The sixth antenna is situated three kilometres west of the end of the main track. Each dish weighs about 270 tonnes (270 long tons; 300 short tons).
The Compact Array is a part of the Australia Telescope National Facility network of radio telescopes. The array is frequently operated together with other CSIRO telescopes, the 64-metre (210 ft) dish at the Parkes Observatory and a single 22-metre (72 ft) dish at Mopra (near Coonabarabran), to form a very long baseline interferometry array.
The Array welcomes visitors from the general public. The facility includes a Visitor's Centre where the operations of the array can be observed in comfort and shade, and it has a range of informational displays and audiovisual presentations, while the surrounding grounds have displays and activities for visitors. Open Days are run regularly, and to mark special events such as the anniversary of the first Moon landing, or major anniversaries of the telescope itself.The children's/young adult drama Sky Trackers was filmed in this facility in 1994 with the radio telescopes being prominently featured.
Australia Telescope Compact Array - January 29, 2010
Australia Telescope Compact Array
Australia Telescope Compact Array
More Info:
Reconfig at the ATCA
Reconfiguration of the Australia Telescope Compact Array.
Compiled from 2877 photos taken over 1.5 hours.
Narrabri New South Wales Australia A Drive Through
Narrabri New South Wales Australia. Give my Channel a view to see my other videos
Narrabri Paul Wild Observatory
A glance of the Australian Telescope Compact Array. The day was electric and static haze.
Narrabri Telescope Array short Timelapse
This Is The Australian CSIRO Parkes Observatory
The Parkes Observatory is a radio telescope observatory, located 20 kilometres north of the town of Parkes, New South Wales, Australia. It was one of several radio antennas used to receive live, televised images of the Apollo 11 moon landing on 20 July 1969.
Credit: CSIRO
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