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Very Large Array

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Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Very Large Array
Phone:
+1 575-835-7000

Address:
Plains of San Agustin, Socorro County, NM

The Very Long Baseline Array is a system of ten radio telescopes which are operated remotely from their Array Operations Center located in Socorro, New Mexico, as a part of the Long Baseline Observatory . These ten radio antennas work together as an array that forms the longest system in the world that uses very long baseline interferometry. The longest baseline available in this interferometer is about 8,611 kilometres .The construction of the VLBA began in February 1986 and it was completed in May 1993. The first astrometrical observation using all ten antennas was carried out on May 29, 1993. The total cost of building the VLBA was about $85 million. The array is funded by the National Science Foundation, and costs about $10 million a year to operate.Each receiver in the VLBA consists of a parabolic dish antenna 25 meters in diameter, along with its adjacent control building. This contains the supporting electronics and machinery for the receiver, including low-noise electronics, digital computers, data storage units, and the antenna-pointing machinery. Each of the antennas is about as tall as a ten-story building when the antenna is pointed straight up, and each antenna weighs about 218 metric tons .The signals from each antenna are recorded on a bank of approximately one-terabyte hard disc drives, and the information is time-stamped using atomic clocks. Once the disc drives are loaded with information, they are carried to the Pete V. Domenici Science Operations Center at the NRAO in Socorro. There the information undergoes signal processing in a powerful set of digital computers that carry out the interferometry. These computers also make corrections for the rotation of the Earth, the slight shifts in the crust of the Earth over time, and other small measurement errors.
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