Everything about The Parkes Observatory totally explained
The
Parkes Observatory is a
radio telescope observatory, 20 kilometres north of the town of
Parkes,
New South Wales,
Australia. It was one of several radio antennas used to receive images of the
Apollo 11 moon landing in July 1969.
The radio telescope
The
Parkes Radiothermal Telescope, completed in 1961, was the brainchild of
E.G. (Taffy) Bowen, chief of the
CSIRO's Radiophysics Laboratory. During the
Second World War, he'd worked on radar development in America and had made some powerful friends in the scientific community. Calling on this old boy network, he persuaded two philanthropic organisations, the
Carnegie Corporation and the
Rockefeller Foundation to fund half the cost of the telescope. It was this recognition and key financial support from America that persuaded then Prime Minister
Robert Menzies to agree to fund the rest of the project.
The primary observing instrument is the 64-metre movable dish telescope, second largest in the Southern Hemisphere, and one of the first large movable dishes in the world (DSS-43 at
Tidbinbilla was extended from 64 m to 70 m in 1987, surpassing Parkes). After its completion it has operated almost continuously to the present day. The dish surface was physically upgraded by adding smooth metal plates to the central part to provide focusing capability for centimetre and millimetre length
microwaves. The outer part of the dish remains a fine metal mesh, creating its distinctive two-tone appearance.
The 18m dish antenna in the foreground of the photo was transferred from the Fleurs Observatory (
Mills Cross) in 1963. It was used as a transmit uplink antenna in the Apollo program and has been abandoned since the early 1980s.
The telescope has an
altazimuth mount. It is guided by a small mock-telescope placed within the structure at the same rotational axes as the dish, but with an
equatorial mount. The two are dynamically locked when tracking an astronomical object by a
laser guiding system. This primary-secondary approach was designed by
Barnes Wallis.
The success of the Parkes telescope led
NASA to copy the basic design in their
Deep Space Network, with matching 64 m dishes built at
Goldstone,
Madrid and
Tidbinbilla.
The receiving cabin is located at the focus of the parabolic dish, supported by three struts 27 metres above the dish. The cabin contains multiple
radio and
microwave detectors, which can be switched into the focus beam for different science observations.
The observatory is a part of the
Australia Telescope National Facility network of radio telescopes. The 64m dish is frequently operated together with the
Australia Telescope Compact Array at
Narrabri and a single dish at
Mopra, to form a
very long baseline interferometry array.
During the
Apollo missions to the
moon, the Parkes Observatory was used to relay communication and telemetry signals to
NASA, providing coverage for when the moon was on the Australian side of the Earth.
The observatory has remained involved in tracking numerous space missions up to the present day, including those of the
Voyager,
Giotto,
Galileo and
Cassini-Huygens probes. It is also a major world centre for research into
pulsars, with more than half of those currently known today discovered at the Parkes Observatory. Between
1997 and
2002 it conducted the
HIPASS neutral hydrogen survey, the largest blind survey for galaxies in the neutral hydrogen line to date.
The observatory and telescope were featured in the
2000 film
The Dish, a fictionalised account of the observatory's involvement with the
Apollo 11 moon landing.
Apollo 11 broadcast
Contrary to popular belief generated by the film
The Dish, the Parkes Observatory wasn't the first station to broadcast images from the Apollo 11 moon landing. The
Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex in California was initially used to receive the signals, but, due to problems experienced at the Goldstone complex, NASA switched the main feed to the
Honeysuckle Creek station outside Canberra. Honeysuckle Creek transmitted the images for about 10 minutes until NASA switched the feed to Parkes. Due to the impressive quality of the images being received, the feed stayed with Parkes and "The Dish" transmitted the remaining footage to the rest of the world. Parkes' control name was PKS.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Parkes Observatory'.
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