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Thread: Legendary Arecibo telescope will close forever —scientists are reeling

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  1. #1
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    Unhappy Legendary Arecibo telescope will close forever —scientists are reeling

    Legendary Arecibo telescope will close forever — scientists are reeling

    New satellite image reveals the damage that shut down the facility, ending an era in astronomical observation.

    Florida/Arecibo Observatory

    One of astronomy’s most renowned telescopes — the 305-metre-wide radio telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico — is closing permanently. Engineers cannot find a safe way to repair it after two cables supporting the structure broke suddenly and catastrophically, one in August and one in early November.

    It is the end of one of the most iconic and scientifically productive telescopes in the history of astronomy — and scientists are mourning its loss.

    “I don’t know what to say,” says Robert Kerr, a former director of the observatory. “It’s just unbelievable.”

    “I am totally devastated,” says Abel Méndez, an astrobiologist at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo who uses the observatory.

    The Arecibo telescope, which was built in 1963, was the world’s largest radio telescope for decades and has historical and modern importance in astronomy. It was the site from which astronomers sent an interstellar radio message in 1974, in the hope that any extraterrestrials might hear it, and where the first confirmed extrasolar planet was discovered, in 1992.

    It has also done pioneering work in exploring many phenomena, including near-Earth asteroids and the puzzling celestial blasts known as fast radio bursts. All those lines of investigation have now been shut down for good, although limited science will continue at some smaller facilities on the Arecibo site.

    Assessing the damage
    The cables that broke helped to support a 900-tonne platform of scientific instruments, which hangs above the main telescope dish. The first cable slipped out of its socket and smashed panels at the edge of the dish, but the second broke in half and tore huge gashes in a central portion of the dish.

    A high-resolution satellite image, produced at Nature’s request by Planet, an Earth-observation company based in San Francisco, California, shows the extent of the damage wrought by the second cable: the green of the vegetation below shows through large holes in the dish. A second photograph, released this week by observatory officials, also reveals the destruction. These are some of the only public glimpses of the damage so far.

    Florida/Arecibo Observatory

    One of astronomy’s most renowned telescopes — the 305-metre-wide radio telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico — is closing permanently. Engineers cannot find a safe way to repair it after two cables supporting the structure broke suddenly and catastrophically, one in August and one in early November.

    It is the end of one of the most iconic and scientifically productive telescopes in the history of astronomy — and scientists are mourning its loss.

    “I don’t know what to say,” says Robert Kerr, a former director of the observatory. “It’s just unbelievable.”


    Arecibo telescope wins reprieve from US government
    “I am totally devastated,” says Abel Méndez, an astrobiologist at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo who uses the observatory.

    The Arecibo telescope, which was built in 1963, was the world’s largest radio telescope for decades and has historical and modern importance in astronomy. It was the site from which astronomers sent an interstellar radio message in 1974, in the hope that any extraterrestrials might hear it, and where the first confirmed extrasolar planet was discovered, in 1992.

    It has also done pioneering work in exploring many phenomena, including near-Earth asteroids and the puzzling celestial blasts known as fast radio bursts. All those lines of investigation have now been shut down for good, although limited science will continue at some smaller facilities on the Arecibo site.

    Assessing the damage
    The cables that broke helped to support a 900-tonne platform of scientific instruments, which hangs above the main telescope dish. The first cable slipped out of its socket and smashed panels at the edge of the dish, but the second broke in half and tore huge gashes in a central portion of the dish.

    A high-resolution satellite image, produced at Nature’s request by Planet, an Earth-observation company based in San Francisco, California, shows the extent of the damage wrought by the second cable: the green of the vegetation below shows through large holes in the dish. A second photograph, released this week by observatory officials, also reveals the destruction. These are some of the only public glimpses of the damage so far.

    A satellite image of the Arecibo Observatory on 17 November 2020 shows a hole in the dish.
    A high-resolution satellite image of the Arecibo dish shows gashes in the main dish through which green vegetation below is visible.Credit: Planet Labs, Inc.

    If any more cables fail — which could happen at any time — the entire platform could crash into the dish below. The US National Science Foundation (NSF), which owns the Arecibo Observatory, is working on plans to lower the platform in a safe, controlled fashion.

    But those plans will take weeks to develop, and there’s no telling whether the platform might crash down uncontrollably in the meantime. “Even attempts at stabilization or at testing the cables could result in accelerating the catastrophic failure,” said Ralph Gaume, director of the NSF’s astronomy division, at a 19 November media briefing.

    So the NSF decided to close the Arecibo dish permanently. “This decision is not an easy one to make, but safety is the number-one priority,” said Sean Jones, head of the NSF’s mathematical and physical sciences directorate.

    The closure comes as a shock to the wider astronomical community. A social-media campaign with the hashtag #WhatAreciboMeansToMe sprung up almost immediately, with astronomers, engineers and other scientists — many from Puerto Rico — sharing stories of how the observatory had shaped their careers. “Losing the Arecibo Observatory would be a big loss for science, for planetary defence and for Puerto Rico,” said Desireé Cotto-Figueroa, an astronomer at the University of Puerto Rico Humacao, in an e-mail before the closure was announced.

    NSF officials insist that the cable failures came as a surprise. After the first, engineering teams spotted a handful of broken wires on the second cable, which was more crucial to holding up the platform, but they did not see it as a major problem because the weight it was carrying was well within its design capacity. “It was not seen as an immediate threat,” says Ashley Zauderer, programme director for Arecibo at the NSF.

    But that main cable, which was installed in the early 1960s, had apparently degraded over time. Over the years, external review committees have highlighted the ongoing need to maintain the ageing cables. Zauderer said that maintenance in recent years had been completed according to schedule.

    Before this year, the last major cable problems at the observatory were in January 2014, when a magnitude-6.4 earthquake caused damage to another of the main cables, which engineers repaired. The ageing structure has suffered other shocks in recent years, including damage to an antenna and the dish caused by Hurricane Maria in 2017.

    There is no estimate yet for the cost of decommissioning the telescope.

    A legendary site
    The science that has ground to a halt includes Arecibo’s world-leading asteroid studies. The telescope pinged radio waves at near-Earth asteroids to reveal the shape and spin of these threatening space rocks. Not having it “will be a big loss”, says Alan Harris, an asteroid scientist in La Canada, California. (China’s 500-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), which opened in 2016, does not currently have the ability to do such radar studies.)

    Some of the observatory’s scientific projects could be transferred to other facilities, Gaume said — and he expects scientists to propose where to move their research. Much of the work conducted at Arecibo, however, could be done only with its unique array of astronomical instrumentation. “The Arecibo Telescope is irreplaceable,” said a statement from two major US radio-astronomy organizations, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, Virginia, and the Green Bank Observatory in West Virginia.

    Small amounts of science will continue at other portions of the Arecibo observatory, which encompasses more than the 305-metre dish. For instance, two lidar facilities shoot lasers into the atmosphere to study atmospheric phenomena.

    The Arecibo telescope had been upgraded regularly, with several new instruments slated for installation in the coming years. “The telescope is in no way obsolete,” says Christopher Salter, an astronomer at the Green Bank Observatory, who worked at Arecibo for years.

    Planned upgrades are now presumably on hold, including a US$5.8-million antenna that was being developed for the telescope’s platform and would have massively increased its sensitivity. Brian Jeffs, an engineer at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, who heads the project, says his team expects to discuss options for its future with the NSF eventually. “Our greatest concerns are for the wonderful scientific, technical, management and support staff” of the observatory, he says.

    The observatory is a major centre for science education in Puerto Rico, where it has fostered the careers of many astronomers and engineers. And it has become a part of the pop-culture lexicon, featuring in major movies such as Contact (1997), which was based on a novel by astronomer Carl Sagan, and the 1995 James Bond film GoldenEye.

    The most recent major radio-telescope disaster happened in 1988, when a 300-foot-wide antenna at the Green Bank Observatory collapsed one night, owing to structural failure.

    https://www.nature.com/articles/d415...ntent=deeplink

    https://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=301674

    https://www.nsf.gov/news/mmg/media/i...7_12-42-16.jpg

    https://bit.ly/2IU6ctZ

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