 ‘We’ve detected the radio emissions given out by objects in space,’ says Dr Tim O’Brien of the e-Merlin project, ‘that’s equivalent to the sharpness of view that the Hubble space telescope gets.’ The e-Merlin project, based at the University of Manchester’s Jodrell Bank Observatory, has just received its first signal from space. With new 600km of high-speed optical fiber cables, e-Merlin connects the data received from seven telescopes spread over a distance of 217km across England, to generate incredibly detailed images from space. It’s significant for the community of astronomers worldwide as it is an international facility that researchers from around the world use on a regular basis
‘The reason we use a number of telescopes spread across distances,’ explains Dr O’Brien, who is a Senior Lecturer in astrophysics at Manchester, ‘is that when we use them all to look at the same object, at the same time, and then we bring the signals back together and combine them, it effectively makes a zoom lens. The sharpness and the detail you can see is increased as you separate the telescopes by larger and larger distances.’
|