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ALMA Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Passes Milestone Test
January 11, 2010
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array (ALMA) has passed a key milestone crucial to producing the
high-quality images that will be the trademark of this revolutionary new
tool for astronomy. A team of ALMA astronomers and engineers
successfully linked three of the observatory's advanced antennas at the
16,500-foot-elevation observing site in northern Chile. Linking three
antennas to work in unison for the first time allowed the ALMA team to
correct errors that can arise when only two antennas are used, thus
paving the way for precise, high-resolution imaging.
3 Antennas at ALMA's
high-elevation Array Operations Site
The three-antenna linkup was a key test of the full electronic and
software system now being installed at ALMA. Its success shows that the
completed ALMA system of 66 high-tech antennas will be capable of
producing astronomical images of unprecedented quality at its designed
observing wavelengths.
"This successful test shows that we are well on the way to providing the
clear, sharp ALMA images that will open a whole new window for observing
the Universe. We look forward to imaging stars and planets as well as
galaxies in their formation processes," said Fred Lo, director of the
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), which leads North America's
participation in the ALMA project.
A multi-antenna imaging system such as ALMA uses its antennas in pairs,
with each antenna working with every other antenna. Each pair
contributes a unique piece of information about the region of sky under
observation. The contributions of all the pairs are collected and
computer-processed into a completed image following the observation.
Earlier ALMA tests, at the ALMA Test Facility in New Mexico, at ALMA's
lower-elevation Operations Support Facility, and at the high observing
site, had successfully linked pairs of antennas. This demonstrated the
proper functioning of the antennas and electronic systems as what
scientists and engineers call interferometer pairs.
However, the information from one pair of antennas may be affected by
errors in the system itself or by atmospheric effects. In order to
remove such errors and ensure accurate imaging, a third antenna is
needed. With the third antenna included, the system is said to have
achieved "phase closure." The ALMA phase closure came as part of an
ongoing series of tests beginning in late November.
ALMA
is designed to provide scientists with the ability to study the Universe
using the shortest radio wavelengths at which the Earth's atmosphere is
transparent. With sensitivity and imaging capability at these
wavelengths never before available, ALMA is expected to make major
advances in our understanding of such phenomena as star and planet
formation, the birth of the first stars and galaxies in the Universe,
the end stages of stellar life, and the chemistry of the Universe, among
others.
"With the successful achievement of phase closure, we now know we have a
fully-functioning system, and we'll proceed to add more antennas as they
are completed and brought to the observing site," said Al Wootten, North
American ALMA Project Scientist.
ALMA, an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of North
America, Europe, and East Asia, in cooperation with the Republic of
Chile. |