Title: The Radio Milky Way and The Green Bank Telescope
1The Radio Milky Way and The Green Bank Telescope
- Ronald MaddalenaNational Radio Astronomy
Observatory
2National Radio Astronomy Observatory
- National Laboratory
- Founded in 1954
- Funded by the National Science Foundation
3Telescope Structure and Optics
4Telescope Structure and Optics
- Large 100-m Diameter
- High Sensitivity
- High Angular Resolution wavelength / Diameter
5GBT Telescope Optics
- 110 m x 100 m of a 208 m parent paraboloid
- Effective diameter 100 m
- Off axis - Clear/Unblocked Aperture
6Telescope Optics
- High Dynamic Range
- High Fidelity Images
7Telescope Optics
8Telescope Optics
9Telescope Optics
Prime Focus Retractable boom Gregorian Focus
8-m subreflector - 6-degrees of freedom
10Telescope Optics
Rotating Turret with 8 receiver bays
11Telescope Structure
- Fully Steerable
- Elevation Limit 5º
- Can observe 85 of the entire Celestial Sphere
- Slew Rates Azimuth - 40º/min Elevation - 20º/min
12Telescope Structure
Blind Pointing (1 point/focus) Offset
Pointing (90 min) Continuous Tracking
(30 min)
13Telescope Structure
14Active Surface
Surface Deformations from Finite Element Model
15Active Surface
16Active Surface
- Main Reflector 2209 actuated panels with 68 µm
rms. - Total surface rms 400 µm
17Receivers
Receiver Operating Range Status
Prime Focus 1 0.290.92 GHz Commissioned
Prime Focus 2 0.9101.23 GHz Commissioned
L Band 1.151.73 GHz Commissioned
S Band 1.732.60 GHz Commissioned
C Band 3.955.85 GHz Commissioned
X Band 8.210.0 GHz Commissioned
Ku Band 12.415.4 GHz Commissioned
K Band 1826.5 GHz Commissioned
Ka Band 2640 GHz Partially Commissioned
Q Band 4050 GHz Commissioned
W Band 6892 GHz Under Construction
Penn Array 8694 GHz Under Construction
18Backends
19National Radio Quiet Zone
20National Radio Quiet Zone
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22Science with the GBT
23Current Science Projects
24Milky Way
- Our Home Galaxy
- Projected image on the night sky is the Milky Way
- Dust in the Interstellar Medium obstructs our
optical view. - Need Radio observations to peer through the
dust - Our perspective is from a star in the outer Milky
Way. - Serves as a nearby example of the 100 billion
other galaxies
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26Interstellar Medium The Material Between the
Stars
- Constituents
- Gases
- Hydrogen (92 by number)
- Helium (8)
- Oxygen, Carbon, etc. (0.1 )
- Dust Particles
- 1 of the mass of the ISM
- Average Density 1 H atom / cm3
- Place where stars planets form
- The byproduct of the death of stars
27Interstellar Medium Properties
State of Hydrogen Temperature Densities (H/cm3) Percent Volume
HII Regions Planetary Nebulae Ionized 5000 K 0.5 lt 1
Diffuse ISM Ionized 1,000,000 K 0.01 50
Warm ISM Atomic 3000 K 0.3 30
Cold ISM Atomic 300 K 30 10
Molecular Clouds Molecular lt 30 K gt 300 10
28HII Regions
- Isolated regions where H is ionized.
- UV from hot (20,000 50,000 K), blue stars
produces ionization. - HII Regions
- Formed around young, massive, short-lived (lt
few x 106 years) stars. - Near regions where they formed
29Scientific Results - Imaging
30Scientific Results - Imaging
31Scientific Results - Imaging
32Diffuse ISM Galactic Center
33Diffuse ISM Galactic Center
34Atomic HydrogenSpectral-Line Radiation
- Discovered by Ewen and Purcell in 1951.
- Found in regions where H is atomic.
- 300 K, 30 H/cm3
- Spin-flip (hyperfine) transition
- Electron protons have spin
- In a H atoms, spins of proton and electron may be
aligned or anti-aligned. - Aligned state has more energy.
- Difference in Energy h v
- v 1420 MHz
- An aligned H atom will take 11 million years to
flip the spin of the electron. - But, 1067 atoms in Milky Way so 1052 H atoms per
second emit at 1420 MHz
35Spectral-Line Radiation- What do they tell us?
- Width of line ? Motion of gas within the region
- Height of the line ? Maybe temperature of the gas
- Area under the line ? Maybe number of atoms in
that direction.
36Doppler Affect
- Frequency Observed Frequency Emitted / (1
V/c)
37Spectral-Line RadiationMilky Way Rotation and
Mass
- For any cloud
- Observed velocity difference between projected
Suns motion and projected cloud motion. - For cloud B
- The highest observed velocity along the line of
site - VRotation Vobserved Vsunsin(L)
- R RSun sin(L)
- Repeat for a different angle L and cloud B
- Determine VRotation(R)
- From Newtons law, derive M(R) from V(R)
38Scientific Results Milky Way Gas
39Scientific Results Milky Way Gas
40Interstellar Molecules
- Hydroxyl (OH) first molecule found with radio
telescopes (1964). - Molecule Formation
- Need high densities
- Lots of dust needed to protect molecules for
stellar UV - But, optically obscured need radio telescopes
- Low temperatures (lt 100 K)
- Some molecules (e.g., H2) form on dust grains
- Most form via ion-molecular gas-phase reactions
41Interstellar Molecules Ion-molecular gas-phase
reactions
- Starts with a cosmic ray that ionizes a H atom
- All exothermic reactions
- Charge transfer
- Two-body interactions
42Interstellar Molecules
- About 90 of the over 129 interstellar molecules
discovered with radio telescopes. - Rotational (electric dipole) Transitions
- Up to thirteen atoms
- Many carbon-based (organic)
- Many cannot exist in normal laboratories (e.g.,
OH) - H2 most common molecule
- No dipole moment so no rotational transition at
radio wavelengths. - Only observable in UV (rotational) or Infrared
(vibrational) transitions from space. - Use CO, the second most common molecule, as a
tracer for H2
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46 47Interstellar Molecules
- A few molecules (OH, H2O, ) maser
48Scientific Results - Molecules
49Molecular Clouds
- Discovered 1970 by Penzias, Jefferts, Wilson
and others. - Coldest (5-30 K), densest (100 106 H atoms/cm3)
parts of the ISM. - Where stars are formed
- 50 of the ISM mass
- A few percent of the Galaxys volume.
- Concentrated in spiral arms
- Dust Clouds Molecular Clouds
50Molecular Clouds
- Discovered 1970 by Penzias, Jefferts, Wilson
and others. - Coldest (5-30 K), densest (100 106 H atoms/cm3)
parts of the ISM. - Where stars are formed
- 50 of the ISM mass
- A few percent of the Galaxys volume.
- Concentrated in spiral arms
- Dust Clouds Molecular Clouds
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52Scientific Results Lunar Radar
53Scientific Results Galaxy Formation
54Scientific Results - Pulsars
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