astronomical facilities of the university of tasmania decadal review – facilities meeting 17...
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![Page 1: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Astronomical Facilities ofthe University of Tasmania
Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004
Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey
![Page 2: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
Mt Pleasant 26 m
Mt Canopus 1m
Ceduna 30 m
![Page 3: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
Overview• The University of Tasmania operates three
major astronomical research facilities :– The Mt Pleasant 26 m radio telescope.– The Ceduna 30 m radio telescope.– The Mt Canopus 1 m optical telescope.
• All of these are used in undergraduate and postgraduate student training.
• The radio telescopes also operate as part of a national facility instrument - the Australian Long Baseline Array.
![Page 4: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
Mt Pleasant
• Southern-most radio telescope in the world, provides all long north-south baselines in LBA
• Only Australian telescope to regularly participate (~40 per year) in geodetic VLBI.
• Other major projects :– Monitoring Vela pulsar for glitches.– Monitoring of IntraDay Variable sources (IDV’s).– Searching and monitoring of molecular masers.
![Page 5: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
Ceduna
• Provides all the east-west baselines in the LBA, significantly improving image quality.
• When not involved in VLBI is used for the COSMIC project (since March 2003) which continuously monitors a small sample of IDV sources.
![Page 6: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
Mt Canopus
• Member of the PLANET collaboration since 1996.
• Equipped with a ccd camera and a high-speed photometer, with a multi-fibre spectrograph under construction
• Other projects include observations of low-mass x-ray binaries and optical monitoring of radio IDV sources.
![Page 7: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
The Future (1-3 years)• 10 Gbps fibre optic link to Mt Pleasant funded
through ARC LIEF for 2005, to tie in with eLBA developments at ATNF/Swinburne.
• Complementary fibre link for Ceduna is being sought, but logistically more difficult (unfunded).
• Wide band feed upgrade for Mt Pleasant/Ceduna (unfunded).
• Single baseline interferometer for IDV monitoring being investigated for Mt Pleasant (unfunded).
• Involved in DIVA discussions/planning.
![Page 8: Astronomical Facilities of the University of Tasmania Decadal Review – Facilities Meeting 17 December 2004 Simon Ellingsen and John Dickey](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062714/56649d245503460f949fb09e/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
University of Tasmania Facilities
The Future (3-5 years)
• DIVA telescope (phase 1 - one baseline, and phase 2 - dedicated array)
• eVLB array (wideband, real time correlation)• upgraded optical telescope for PLANET (gravitational
lensing)
U Tas is a minor partner in:• PILOT 2m Antarctic telescope (UNSW et al.)• MWA (Search for 21-cm line from the Epoch of Reionization
- MIT/Melbourne Uni/Harvard CfA)• NTD (20-50cm survey array - ATNF)