Brazil Will Participate in Largest Gamma-Ray Observatory
Hello reader!
It follows one article published day (01/30) in the english
website of the Agência FAPESP highlighting
that Brazil will participate in largest Gamma-Ray Astronomy Observatory.
Duda
Falcão
Brazil Will
Participate in Largest
Gamma-Ray Astronomy Observatory
By Elton Alisson
January 30, 2013
Researchers from USP, UFSCar and other institutions develop film for mirrors and metal structures that will support the 100 telescopes in the Cherenkov Telescope Array |
Agência FAPESP – A group of some 1,000 researchers from
28 nations, including ten Brazilians, are working to build the world’s largest
observatory dedicated to the study of celestial bodies that emit gamma rays—the
radiation with the highest energy—by 2015.
Called the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), the observatory will be
installed at two different locations—one in the Southern Hemisphere and the
other in the Northern Hemisphere.
Chile, Argentina and Namibia are potential sites for the experiment. In
the Northern Hemisphere, the United States and Spain have already shown
interest. The sites will be chosen by the end of 2013.
The observatory will have 100 land-based gamma-ray telescopes equally
distributed between the two hemispheres. The instruments will operate together,
aimed at observing single bodies, such as supernova remnants, active galactic
nuclei and quasars that emit gamma rays. With the observatory, studies on these
celestial bodies will become much more precise than they are today.
“The only gamma-ray astronomy observatory functioning today—the Hess [High
Energy Stereoscopic System] Observatory in Namibia—has five telescopes working
together. The CTA will be able to measure gamma rays produced by astrophysical
phenomena with ten times greater sensitivity,” Luiz Vitor de Souza Filho,
professor at the Universidade de São Paulo’s São Carlos Physics Institute
(IFSC-USP), and one of the Brazilian researchers participating in the project,
told Agência FAPESP.
According to Souza Filho, the Brazilian researchers are greatly
interested in the type of astrophysics the CTA will study, which connects
traditional astrophysics with particle (or cosmic ray) astrophysics.
The experiment will make it possible to increase understanding about how
this radiation is emitted, how the particles propagate themselves and can be
detected and how the celestial bodies that emit gamma rays, with charges
between 10 GeV and 100 TeV, are formed, among other questions. Aside from
producing knowledge, the Brazilian scientists also intend to contribute to the
construction of the CTA instruments.
“It is nearly mandatory that a member nation wanting to have access to
the data generated by the experiment along with the other members contribute to
its construction. For this reason, we are developing two projects for the
instruments at CTA,” said Souza Filho.
Carried out through FAPESP funding, one of the projects is to develop the film
for the mirrors that will cover the telescopes. This film will reflect light
and at the same time protect the equipment from bad weather.
Because they will be exposed to the atmosphere, the reflective film for
the telescopes will have to be highly durable and well made so as not to come
loose from the glass and affect the reflective and protective properties of the
mirror.
To ensure that this does not happen, a group of researchers from the
IFSC under the coordination of Souza Filho is investigating aluminizing and
application techniques for the reflective and protective surfaces of the CTA
telescope mirrors together with the company Opto Eletrônica.
“The mirrors won’t need to be as precise as those in the optical
telescopes installed in the observatories in Chile operated by the European
Southern Observatory (ESO), but they will have to be much more durable,”
explained Souza Filho.
Another CTA equipment project in which the Brazilian researchers are
participating is the development of metal structures to support the telescopes.
Approximately 16 meters long, these structures must support a group of
electronic instruments weighing 2.5 tons at their extremities, and they cannot
flex more than 20 millimeters without harming the images produced by the
telescopes.
In a project carried out together with the company Orbital Engenharia in
São José dos Campos, located in upstate São Paulo, the researchers designed a
structure that was approved by the international collaboration building the
CTA. Orbital has received FAPESP Innovative Research in Small Businesses grants
(PIPE) for a number of projects.
“We already had the know-how for building this type of equipment because
we already developed similar technology for the Pierre Auger Observatory in
Argentina,” said Souza Filho.
The IFSC researchers are currently developing the prototypes for the
reflective film for the mirrors and the mechanical structure for the
telescopes, which should be completed in 2013 so the CTA construction can begin
in 2013 for operation in 2015.
Aside from the IFSC group, researchers from the Universidade Federal de
São Carlos Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences (IAG-
UFSCar), the Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Físicas (CBPF) [The Brazilian
Center for Physics Research] and the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
(UFRJ) are also participating in the construction.
Broad Scope of Research.
According to Souza Filho, the CTA’s scope of research will be quite
broad. In the field of astrophysics, topics that may be explored at the new
observatory include black holes and star-forming regions.
In the field of particle physics, it will be possible to carry out
studies on Lorentz covariance violation—a very specific restricted relativity
test. “With this observatory, we will be able to carry out the most restricted
relativity test performed to date over long distances and at a long scale,”
projected Souza Filho.
In addition, the observatory is expected to search regions that are
candidates for having concentrations of dark matter and to identify new
extraterrestrial sources of high-energy gamma rays. Today, approximately 100
sources are known. This number is expected to multiply with the CTA.
“The new observatory has an impressive scientific scope and a double
function. While it will be possible to study the most important questions in
astrophysics, the experiment will also increase knowledge of elementary
particle physics,” evaluated Souza Filho.
For the observatory site selection process, a call for proposals was made
defining the minimal conditions needed to host the experiment. These conditions
require that the region must have a clean atmosphere, be at least 2,000 meters
above sea level, have no light contamination and have minimum cloud and rain
formation. There are no regions in Brazil with these characteristics.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
Falando em raios gama e tecnologia nacional, um projeto na USP, está conseguindo fazer o envelhecimento da cachaça usando raios gama.
ResponderExcluirCom isso, o processo natural de envelhecimento em barris que pode levar de 3 a 4 anos, fica reduzido a alguns poucos minutos, além de adicionar qualidades positivas do raio gama como baixar o colesterol e os aldeídos (responsáveis pela ressaca), por exemplo.
Como não poderia deixar de ser, ela já está sendo chamada de "cachaça do Hulk". Interessante, como o compromisso com um objetivo pode gerar resultados...
Abs.