Title: Southern African Large Telescope
1Southern African Large Telescope
2Introduction
- Presenters
- Dr Matutu (Chief Director, Human Capital and
Science Platforms), Department of Science and
Technology - Dr Gatsha Mazithulela (Vice-President, National
Research Facilities, National Research
Foundation) - Professor Phil Charles (Director of the South
African Astronomy Observatory) a national
facility of the National Research Foundation
3Introduction
- The National Research and Development Strategy
(NRDS) identified astronomy as an area where
South Africa has an obvious geographical
advantage - South Africa provides a geographical and climate
advantage for global astronomy because of its
clear, dark skies in areas of limited light and
radio-frequency pollution
4Introduction
- Astronomy facilities are best located in very low
population density areas to minimise their impact
on the community, and to reduce interference with
telescope operations by human activities - A parallel investment in infrastructure for
capacity development and increasing
technological competitiveness was motivated by
the growth of these facilities
5Introduction
- The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) near
Sutherland in South Africa is the largest single
optical-infrared telescope in the southern
hemisphere - The primary mirror measures 11 metres across
(diameter) and is constructed from 91 hexagonal
segments, each 1 metre in diameter - The SALT can access approximately 70 of the sky
observable from Sutherland
6Introduction
- Part of the infrastructure investment is the
Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) - Hosted by the South African Astronomical
Observatory (SAAO) in Sutherland, in the Northern
Cape Province - There was no need to establish a new institution
to accommodate the SALT as SAAO was already
established under the NRF
7Introduction
- The SALT is an outcome of multilateral
partnership between - South Africa,
- Germany,
- New Zealand,
- Poland,
- the United Kingdom and
- the United States.
- India and the
- American Museum of Natural History joined after
SALT construction was completed in 2005.
8Infrastructure
- The bandwidth requirement was determined jointly
by the researchers and the SANReN design team - The connection will be provided by Telkom SA Ltd
on a long-term lease for five years, after which
the requirements will be reassessed. The link
will be on existing Telkom optic fibre
infrastructure - The cost is within the budgeted amount of R10
million for the SALT connection
9Infrastructure
- South Africa contributed a third of the total of
36 million to finance SALT for its first 10
years (20 million for the telescope, 6 million
for instruments, 10 million for operations) - The South African National Research Network
(SANReN) has commissioned Telkom to provide a 155
Mbps (Megabits per second) datalink from SALT to
SAAO in Cape Town - The datalink to SALT is within the current SANReN
budget
10Human Capital Development at SALT
- SALT is accessible to local and international
scientists for research - The DST funded Postgraduate students access SALT
through the National Astrophysics and Space
Programme (NASSP) and the Multi-wavelength (MWL)
Astronomy programme - SALT is a sophisticated computer-controlled
precision instrument and truly a telescope of the
internet era
11Human Capital Development at SALT
- Astronomers submit their observing requests over
the Internet and eventually receive their data by
the same route without travelling to Sutherland - The establishment of SALT and the High Energy
Stereoscopic System (HESS) in Namibia, together
with the construction of the Karoo Array
Telescope near Caernarvon, have made South Africa
a strong contender to host the Square Kilometre
Array Telescope - This will benefit South Africa tremendously as
international scientific and engineering minds
are attracted to this world-class,
multi-wavelength capability
12SALT Social Impact
- SALT benefits South Africa and Africa in the
provision and development of highly technical
expertise in the study of the origins and history
of the universe - Astronomy will also provide us with a platform
that generates scientific human capacity to drive
new discoveries in physics, chemistry biology,
as has happened in developed countries. - In addition SALT provides South Africa with a
competitive advantage in Astronomy - The SALT optical system development was a major
South African achievement that was far superior
to the American prototype, and a demonstration of
South African ability to innovate in advanced
optical technologies
13Social Impact on the Sutherland Community
- Through the NRF, installation of Digital
Doorways and a wireless mesh network will enable
the Sutherland school and local community to
access the SALT internet connection - This will also provide a gateway to the wider
internet network hence allow the community
business access to the internet, other
web-based services - This will also enable entrepreneurs to establish
internet-based businesses
14SALT Current status
- 3 yrs commissioning, testing and analysing
detailed performance (2006 -2008) revealed 2
serious problems - Image quality poor, suffered from a focus
gradient - Was due to misaligned optics in SAC (corrector)?
- Badly designed mounting of SAC on Tracker
- Main spectrograph had very poor sensitivity in
blue/UV - Manufacturing flaw found in lens coupling fluid
used
15SALT Current Status
- SALT/SAAO team has developed solutions to both
- SAC removed from SALT mid-April, alignment and
testing rig constructed at Sutherland, work
underway, going well - Spectrograph optics returned to California, now
repaired, reassembled and blue performance vastly
improved - Repairs expected to complete before end 2009
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17SALT Current status
From SAAO Director's report to SALT Board in New
York, May 28 This is without doubt the most
radical surgery and intervention that SALT has
undergone since its completion. That it is taking
place entirely in our own facilities in SL is a
dramatic event worthy of note in its own right,
as it takes SALT technical operations to a
potentially new level. This brings the entire
SALT opto-mechanics now within the capability of
the Operations Team to be able to adjust,
maintain and repair. This is a far better
situation than that envisaged at the beginning of
SALT operations, and bodes well for future
developments and new instrumentation projects.
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