Department of Mathematics and Statistics at the Faculty of Science
Imagine a telescope that can see back almost to the beginning of time.
A telescope that is 50 times more powerful than any other, one that can
scan the skies 10,000 times faster than ever before. A telescope that
will lead to endless discoveries and help unravel some of the biggest
mysteries of the universe.
The University of Calgary is the lead Canadian institution on a
C$3-billion international project called the Square Kilometre Array
(SKA). It will be the largest radio telescope ever built and will be
used to study naturally occurring radio emissions from the edge of the
universe to a distant time before stars and galaxies were formed.
The telescope will be made up of an array of tens of thousands of radio
antenna receiving stations with a total area of one million square
metres collecting radio waves from the universe. One of the big
challenges will be processing the scads of signals from deep space
collected by the radio receivers and analyzing the data.
http://www.ucalgary.ca/news/utoday/feb12-09/SKA
Schedule:
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Calgary Place Tower I (330 5th Avenue SW), Room 1104 and 1106.
Other Information:
The Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences is grateful for the
support of Shell Canada Limited, Alberta Advanced Education and
Technology, and the University of Calgary for their support of this
series of lectures.
More info: http://www.pims.math.ca/industrial/lunchbox-lecture/square-kilometre-array