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May.06
German astronomers have made an important
step towards LOFAR
On May 3, the first meeting of the
German LOng Wavelength Consortium (GLOW) took place at the Astrophysical
Institute Potsdam. On this occasion, the members elected Prof. Anton
Zensus, Director of the Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie
in Bonn as chairman and Prof. Marcus Brüggen, Professor of Astrophysics
at the International University Bremen as deputy chairman.
Members of this consortium are the
astronomical institutes of the universities Bochum, Bonn, Cologne,
the Max-Planck-Institut for Radioastronomy in Bonn, the International
University Bremen, the Max-Planck-Institut for Astrophysics in Garching,
the Sternwarte Hamburg, the Forschungszentrum Jülich, the Astrophysical
Institute Potsdam and the Thüringer Landessternwarte in Tautenburg.
LOFAR is the first telescope of its
kind: it is the first digital radio telescope and has no moving
parts. In contrast to classical dish-like radio antennae, LOFAR
consists of a set of simple, small radio antennae. One of the worlds
fastest supercomputers, IBM's 'blue gene' located in Groningen,
correlates all incoming data. Its computing power of 27 Teraflops
and its memory of 1 Petabyte are needed to digest the huge data
rate of 500 Gbits/second that comes in from hundreds of stations.
The computer combines the data from the different antennae such
that LOFAR acts as a giant radio-telescope with an equivalent dish-size
of several hundred kilometres. Thus, astronomers will be able to
observe the sky with unprecedented resolution in an almost unexplored
part of the electromagnetic spectrum. Also, the digital nature of
the telescope allows astronomers to observe in several directions
at the same time. LOFAR is
currently under construction by the radio-astronomical institute
ASTRON in Dwingeloo in the Netherlands. In Western Frisia, the assembly
of the first of 77 core stations has started. The capabilities of
LOFAR can be increased tremendously by extending it to a European
level, thus creating a European Sensor Network. The GLOW consortium
plans to build a total of twelve LOFAR stations at sites in Germany
- of which six are planned in more detail already (Bremen, Effelsberg,
Garching, Hamburg, Jülich, Tautenburg and Tremsdorf). The first
LOFAR station outside the Netherlands with a size of 110 times 60
metres will be constructed this year near the Effelsberg 100m radio
telescope in collaboration by ASTRON and the Max-Planck-Institut
für Radioastronomie in Bonn.
+ More
German
LOFAR White Paper
<
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or comments regarding LOFAR, or about these web pages, please contact
lofar@astron.nl
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