Brazil Builds World's Second Largest Astronomy Camera
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follows an article published today (04/08) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Brazil builds World's Second Largest Astronomy Camera.
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Falcão
NEWS
Brazil
Builds World's Second
Largest Astronomy Camera
By Elton Alisson
April 08,
2015
(Photo: Aragón Astrophysics & Cosmology Research Center, CEFCA)
The
Javalambre Astrophysics Observatory in Spain.
|
Agência FAPESP – In the next few months, the Javalambre
Astrophysical Observatory in the region of Aragón, Spain, will begin a
multiyear survey of the universe observable from the northern hemisphere to produce
a three-dimensional map showing hundreds of millions of galaxies and
corresponding to about one-fifth of the entire sky.
The survey will use two wide-field telescopes, one
with a mirror 80 cm in diameter and an 85-megapixel camera and the main telescope
with a 2.5-m mirror and a 1.2-gigapixel camera capable of producing images in
59 colors of every star, galaxy, quasar and supernova, as well as other objects
in the observable solar system.
JPCam, the 1.2-gigapixel optical camera, will be the
world’s second largest camera used in astronomy. The largest is a 1.4 gigapixel
camera at the University of Hawaii as part of its Panoramic Survey Telescope
& Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS). A 3.2-gigapixel camera, now being
built for use with the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) in Chile, is
scheduled to go live in 2022.
Both JPCam and the 85-megapixel camera are being
constructed with the participation of Brazilian researchers, within the
framework of the Thematic Project “The 3D universe: astrophysics with large galaxy surveys,”
supported by FAPESP.
“JPCam will produce 59-color images of almost every
pixel of the observed sky, which is absolutely new,” said Laerte Sodré Junior,
a professor at the University of São Paulo’s Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics
& Atmospheric Sciences (IAG-USP) and the Thematic Project’s principal
investigator.
“There are astronomy instruments that do this, but in
a tiny region of the sky and not with the number of image filters JPCam will
have. This will open up a new window in astronomy,” Sodré told Agência FAPESP.
The Brazilian researchers are responsible for the
mechanical components of the camera, including a device to control light intake
and the 14-detector image filtering trays. The instrument’s optical subsystem
will be fabricated by a UK company engaged by the astronomy collaboration, a
consortium of Brazilian and Spanish universities and research institutions.
Brazil’s participation in the project is funded by
FAPESP and other Brazilian research funding agencies. “The Spanish government
is funding construction of the observatory and telescopes. Brazil is
responsible for construction of the cameras,” Sodré said.
JPCam is only one of the instruments under development
by Brazilian researchers for use in large-scale astronomical observation
projects that will be placed into service in the coming years.
Another group of researchers affiliated with IAG-USP,
in collaboration with the National Space Research Institute (INPE), the
National Observatory (ON) and the National Astrophysics Laboratory (LNA), are
also developing an 85-megapixel camera that will be attached to a new 87-cm
telescope now being installed at the Cerro Tololo International Observatory in
Chile with FAPESP’s support.
The Cerro Tololo telescope will be used in a three- to
four-year survey of the observable universe in the southern hemisphere,
complementing the observations made by the Javalambre Astrophysical
Observatory’s smaller telescope.
This will be equivalent to another one-seventh of the
entire sky, covering the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum, say
researchers in the field. “The Cerro Tololo International Observatory’s
telescope should start producing data as early as August,” Sodré said. “This
survey will result in discoveries of the greatest importance to astronomy.”
Sodré took part in the “Workshop on Advanced
Instrumentation for Astronomy” held by FAPESP in partnership with the Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) on March 16 in FAPESP’s auditorium.
One of the workshop’s goals was to explore
opportunities for collaboration between Brazilian and Dutch scientists and
engineers related to the development of advanced scientific instrumentation for
astronomy, as a contribution to the research programs funded by the two
agencies in the field.
New Age
According to Sodré, the first scientific instruments
for astronomy projects developed in Brazil were for the telescopes of the Pico
dos Dias Observatory in Minas Gerais, which was unveiled in 1980 and is
operated and maintained by the LNA.
At that time, most instruments were developed by
universities or research institutions, and there was no cooperation with
industry, explained João Steiner, a professor at IAG-USP.
“In those days, the possibility didn’t exist. Each
university and research institution had its own mechanical and electronics
workshops and its own engineers. They developed everything in house. Service
agreements and cooperation with outside firms only began in the mid-1980s,”
Steiner said.
According to the researchers, a new age in the
development of scientific instrumentation for astronomy projects began in the
first decade of the current millennium with the Gemini Observatory, which went
live in 2004 with twin telescopes, one in the Chilean Andes and the other in
Hawaii, and the Southern Observatory for Astrophysical Research (SOAR), which
was put into operation in the Andes in 2005.
Brazil has a 6.5% share in observations recorded by
Gemini, whose telescopes are equipped with mirrors 8.1 m in diameter, and a 30%
share in SOAR, which has a 4.2-m mirror. The participation of Brazilian
researchers in both observatories is supported by FAPESP and other Brazilian
research funding agencies.
“Despite the scientific success of Brazil’s 6.5% share
in observations and 12% share in publication of articles resulting from
research done at the observatory in 2014, we weren’t very successful in our
strategies to develop scientific instrumentation for Gemini. Nevertheless, we
learned several lessons about how not to do certain things,” Steiner said. “In
the case of SOAR, we found that partnering with industry to develop scientific
instruments is the best way.”
The Brazilian researchers collaborated on the
construction of three optical spectrographs for the SOAR telescope.
The first, a high-resolution spectrograph equipped
with an integral field unit, was developed as part of the project “Construction of two optical spectrographs for the SOAR telescope.”
The second is the Brazilian Tunable Filter Imager
(BTFI), developed under the aegis of the project “The Brazilian tunable filter imager for SOAR: phase 1.” The
third is STELES, Brazil’s first high-resolution spectrograph, developed as part
of the project “STELES: a high resolution spectrograph for SOAR” (read more at http://agencia.fapesp.br/19924).
“We’ve developed many fiber-optic spectrographs, which
have enabled us to acquire experience in Brazil with the construction of
scientific instruments that use this material,” Sodré said. “This has also
equipped us to participate in international projects of a far larger scale than
we were used to.”
One of these large-scale projects is the development
of the fiber-optic subsystem for a new spectrograph for Japan’s Subaru
telescope, which has an 8.2-m mirror and is located on the summit of Mauna Kea
in Hawaii.
Between 2019 and 2023, the Japanese telescope will map
the galaxies with the aim of understanding the nature of dark matter, which is
responsible for the accelerating expansion of the universe, and of extending
scientists’ knowledge of how the first star clusters were formed.
In addition to this project, researchers at Brazilian
universities and research institutions have participated in the development of
scientific instrumentation for a radio telescope that is to be part of the Long
Latin American Millimeter Array (LLAMA) in Argentina, which is scheduled to
start operating in 2021 (read more at http://agencia.fapesp.br/19573).
Other astronomy projects in which Brazil is
participating include the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA), which will be the
world’s largest observatory dedicated to the study of celestial bodies that
emit gamma rays and is to be built by 2020 in both the southern and northern
hemispheres, and the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) in Chile. Construction of
the GMT, which will be one of the largest telescopes on earth, begins this
year. The telescope is scheduled to see first light in 2021 (read more about the CTA at http://agencia.fapesp.br/16755).
FAPESP will invest US$40 million in the project, or
the equivalent of approximately 4% of its estimated total cost, thus
guaranteeing that 4% of the GMT’s operating time will be available for
researchers from São Paulo as well as securing a seat on the consortium’s board
(read more at http://agencia.fapesp.br/19572).
“Brazilian industry will have an opportunity to
participate in fabrication of the telescope dome, a structure that will
comprise 4,000 metric tons of steel,” Steiner said.
“Also, we’ve assumed responsibility for developing
some scientific instruments that involve technologies highly typical of the
aerospace industry.”
According to Steiner, development of scientific
instrumentation for the GMT by Brazilian researchers has been a requirement
since the start of negotiations regarding Brazil’s participation in the
project.
“It isn’t enough to use the telescopes and scientific
instruments developed in other countries,” he said. “We need to learn to make
these instruments and continually acquire more experience in developing
technology relating to astronomy but also applicable in other fields.”
(Photos: Aragón Astrophysics & Cosmology Research Center, CEFCA)
The Javalambre Astrophysical Observatory in Spain. |
(Illustration: GMT)
The Giant Magellan Telescope, to be
built in Chile.
|
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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