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Dwingeloo, The Netherlands,
11 December 2007
First international LOFAR station in Effelsberg starts observations
PRESS RELEASE
The Max Planck Institute for Radio
Astronomy has teamed up with The Netherlands Institute for Radio
Astronomy, ASTRON, to realise the first international telescope
station of the LOFAR radio telescope. LOFAR is the LOw Frequency
ARray, initiated by ASTRON with stations centred on Exloo in the
northeast of The Netherlands, and is now becoming an international
project that will encompass stations in many European countries.
The first international LOFAR station (IS-DE1) was completed on
the area of the Effelsberg radio observatory next to the 100-m radio
telescope of the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy. On 20
November 2007, the formal handover and acceptance of the LOFAR station
took place in Effelsberg between representatives from ASTRON and
MPIfR. This official moment marks the start of systematic observations.
LOFAR is a new concept radio telescope. It is the
first digital radio telescope that does not employ any moving parts.
At low frequencies between 20 MHz and 80 MHz (wavelengths of several
meters) at which LOFAR works, each antenna of LOFAR observes cosmic
radio waves from the full sky. The viewing direction and field of
view of aLOFAR station are not determined mechanically as in conventional
radio telescopes, but are electronically steered when combining
signals from the 96 single antennas of a station and from the different
stations. LOFAR will also have antennas operating at radio frequencies
between 120 MHz and 240 MHz. A central supercomputer (IBM BlueGene/L
hosted by the University of Groningen, NL) receives all digital
signals together. This enables the observer to simultaneously peer
into multiple directions on the sky at the same time, thus permitting
many different observing programmes to be conducted at the same
time. This greatly increases the productivity of the instrument.
LOFAR has been developed by ASTRON, which has had
the first LOFAR station, CS1, in operation at Exloo (NL) since 2006,
and will be rolling out a minimum of 36 stations in The Netherlands
with well over 25000 individual antennas over the next two years.
The investigation of details of the various sources
of cosmic radiation that LOFAR will be sensitive to in the the sky
(e.g. exploding stars, distant galaxies and quasars hosting supermassive
black holes),requires an angular resolution that is better than
an arcsecond. This will be achieved by connecting the stations in
the Netherlands, in Germany and soon also in other European countries
(e.g. UK, France and Sweden) via high speed, cross-border optical
fibre links. In November 2007, Effelsberg has taken an important
step towards such a connection by installing a fibre cable between
the observatory in Effelsberg and the institute in Bonn, and by
connecting to the German high speed network to transfer the data
to the LOFAR supercomputer (IBM BlueGene/L) at the University of
Groningen.
The image of the whole radio sky as shown in figure
1 was measured using only the antennas of the LOFAR station in Effelsberg.
In a second of observation time, it is possible to detect the whole
sky as if with a fish-eye lens and to show not only the Milky Way
but also other discrete sources (Cygnus A, Cassiopeia). This observation
from 29 October 2007 represents the 'first light' for the LOFAR
station in Effelsberg and the start of astronomical observations
of this station. This demonstrates the capability of LOFAR to monitor
the sky for possible changes on short time scales.
On Tuesday, 20 November 2007, the official handover
of the LOFAR station Effelsberg took place. The station is thus
the first international station of the LOFAR project (with the abbreviation
IS-DE1) and after the Netherlands station CS1, only the second LOFAR
station to come online so far. At a meeting in the radio observatory
Effelsberg, the location of the station, Mark Bentum (ASTRON), rollout
manager of the LOFAR project from The Netherlands, and Wolfgang
Reich, LOFAR project manager for the MPIfR, signed the handover
agreement. Further collaboration between ASTRON and the MPIfR in
all technical and scientific matters of the project takes place
in the framework of a Memorandum of Understanding that was signed
in 2006.
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Figure 1: The radio
sky above Effelsberg on 29 October 2007 as observed in only
one second. First image with all 96 LOFAR antennas in Effelsberg
at 42 MHz (7 metre wavelength). Image: Stefan Wijnholds,
ASTRON, Peter Müller, MPIfR (Please click for higher resolution).
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Figure
2: The first international station of the low frequency
radio telescope LOFAR (IS-DE1) in close proximity to giant
the 100-m radio telescope. A part of the 96 dipole antennas
of the LOFAR station Effelsberg can be seen in the foreground.
Photo: Wolfgang Reich, MPIfR (Please click for higher resolution
image). |
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Following the start of the measurements
with the LOFAR station in Effelsberg, it is only a matter of time
before the first observations at high resolution for detailed investigations
of the radio Universe through connection over fast data links become
routine. The researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy
are particularly interested in magnetic phenomena in the Universe
and have taken the lead in this international research programme.
With LOFAR, a new age has dawned and research of the Universe at
the very longest wavelengths of the electro-magnetic spectrum has
begun. LOFAR will attract astronomers from all over the world, eager
to explore this little-explored frequency range for studies ranging
from highly energetic phenomena in the Earth's upper atmosphere,
through the nearest planets, to the extremely distant first stars
and galaxies forming at the earliest observable times in the Universe.
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Further information and images:
- Signing
the Acceptance at the start of the observations with the first international
LOFAR station (IS-DE1) on 20 November 2007. The photo
shows Wolfgang Reich (left) and Mark Bentum (right) immediately
after signing the acceptance in the library of the
radio observatory Effelsberg.
- The
LOFAR sky from Effelsberg, ASTRON/JIVE Daily Image, November
15, 2007.
- MPIfR (Max-Planck-Institut
für Radioastronomie) and ASTRON
(Netherlands Foundation for Research in
Astronomy), partners in the LOFAR project.
- Homepage
LOFAR in Germany (in German).
- Homepage LOFAR international.
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LOFAR is funded by the Netherlands
government in the BSIK programme for interdisciplinary research
for improvements of the knowledge infrastructure. Additional funding
is being provided by the European Community, European Regional Development
Fund and the “Northern Netherlands Assembly (SNN)” EZ/KOMPAS.
ASTRON is an institute of the Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research, NWO.
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More information:
Rene Vermeulen, directeur Radiosterrenwacht ASTRON, Oude Hoogeveensedijk
4, 7991 PD Dwingeloo, tel. 0521 595100, rvermeulen@astron.nl.
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