GPS News  
Despite Chill Antarctica Offers Heavenly View To Astronomers

On site at Dome C.
by Guy Clavel
Concordia Base (AFP) Antarctica, Feb 9, 2007
To be perched under pollution-free, open skies on the Antarctic Plateau 3.2 kilometers (10,400 feet) above sea level is a professional stargazer's dream come true, even if the cold is deep enough to freeze your blood. Armed with a small telescope and a photometer to measure light intensity, Herve Trinquet, from the University Astrophysics Laboratory in the southern French city of Nice, gazes out on an unblemished celestial vault.

With other colleagues from France and Italy, Trinquet is assessing the optical qualities of the Antarctic sky.

It is part of the groundwork for the AstroConcordia Observatory, the toughest yet possibly the most rewarding place on the planet from which to view the cosmos.

At the Franco-Italian base of Concordia, also called Dome C, atmospheric turbulence which muddies the view from most other spots on the planet is reduced to a minimum.

"It's at a height of about 30 meters (100 feet) in winter, which is unique in the world," says Trinquet.

What's more, he adds, 90 percent of that turbulence is near ground level, rather than distributed in several different layers ascending toward the heavens.

Besides the purity of the atmosphere, Dome C is also well suited for an infrared telescope, which collects long-wave radiation emitted by faint celestial objects.

Djamel Mekarnia, from the French Center for Scientific Research's observatory in the Cote d'Azur, is observing a star with a pair of 30-centimetre (12-inch) optical telescopes, one on the ground, the other on a platform eight meters (25 feet) high.

As the Antarctic summer subsides, Mekarnia has a telescope trained on the never-setting sun. In the looming winter, when night will descend for three months, he will target the Moon. Next year, he will power up by several magnitudes, with a new telescope that he hopes will be able to detect planets outside the Solar System.

Nearby, Italian teams are installing six telescopes to detect light in the infrared and millimetric part of the energy spectrum.

Antarctic's forbiddingly hostile temperatures are both an advantage and an impediment.

Average temperatures ranging from -30 C (-22 F) in summer to -60 C (-76 F) in winter make for clear viewing to due lowered thermal emissions.

But they can also frost up the mirror in the telescopes and make for arduous working conditions. Contact lenses are banned, and just to place your ungloved hand on naked metal will cause agonising frostbite.

The big goal is to build something called the Keops Project, a network of 36 telescopes with 1.5-meter (60-inch) mirrors, spaced evenly in a circle one kilometer (1,400 yards) across. It could be in place in 2008, Trinquet says. The light will be combined by an instrument called an interferometer, to produce a cleaner, sharper and wider image than could be achieved by a single telescope.

The task faces a twin logistical challenge of transporting tonnes of material across a vast frozen wasteland, and building a world-class observatory on a sheet of ice thousands of kilometers (miles) from the nearest natural human habitat.

The French first set up a scientific base at Concordia in 1992. In the summer months of November through March, the station -- a pair of snow-white three-storey cylinders connected by a passageway along with several technical structures -- can accommodate more than 30 scientists and staff.

But they can only reach the base by an arduous voyage, through wave-tossed seas full of icebergs, aboard the supply ship Astrolabe, and then overland by helicopter and snow tractor. In the Sun-deprived winters, with their long days of 24-hour darkness, the population plummets to 16 or fewer.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Hubble Illuminates Cluster Of Diverse Galaxies
Baltimore, MD (SPX) Feb 12, 2007
This image from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope shows the diverse collection of galaxies in the cluster Abell S0740 that is over 450 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Centaurus.







  • Anger As Britons Face Air Tax Hike
  • Bats In Flight Reveal Unexpected Aerodynamics
  • Lockheed Martin And Boeing Form Strategic Alliance To Promote Next-Gen Air Transportation System
  • Time to test the Guardian Missile Defense System For Commercial Aircraft

  • EU proposes 25 percent cut in new car emissions
  • EU Reaches Compromise On New Car Emissions Plan
  • London Council Votes For Emissions-Related Parking Charges
  • Multimedia Car Radio Of The Future

  • Raytheon Demonstrates Satellite Communications Alternative
  • Northrop Grumman Delivers Payload For First Advanced EHF Military Communications Satellite
  • Defense Support Program Flight 23 Sees Integration Of Satellite And Launch Vehicle Payload Adapter
  • KVH Receives 5-year Sole-source Contract From US Military

  • Russia Protests US Missile Shield But Vows To Avoid Arms Race
  • Congressional Research Service Skepticism On BMD Grows
  • Raytheon Completes Patriot Live-Fire Test With 3-for-3 Successes
  • Iran Threat Behind Polish Interest In Missile Defense

  • Doomsday Vault Will Protect Millions Of Seeds
  • Canadian Farmer On Global Crusade Against GM Seeds
  • New Management Tool For East Australian Graziers
  • Ancient Genes Used To Produce Salt-Tolerant Wheat

  • Japan Launches Alert System For Tsunamis And Missiles
  • Call To Move Indonesian Capital After Deadly Floods
  • Catastrophe Bonds A Market Answer To Hail Or High Water
  • UN Warns Of Natural Disasters Linked To Global Warming

  • In Tiny Supercooled Clouds Physicists Exchange Light And Matter
  • Liquid Crystals Stabilised
  • Ultra-Dense Optical Storage On One Photon
  • Nanocomposite Research Yields Strong And Stretchy Fibers

  • Robotic Exoskeleton Replaces Muscle Work
  • Robotic Arm Aids Stroke Victims
  • Scientists Study Adhesive Capabilities Of Geckos To Develop Surveillance Or Inspection Robots
  • Japanese Women To Try Lipstick With Touch Of Button

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement