Posts Tagged ‘Allen Telescope Array’

h1

An extraordinary time to be conducting SETI observations

December 8, 2011

by tte-77

SETI

The Allen Telescope Array (ATA) - Credit: SETI

Telescopes at SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Life) are once again operational and searching planetary systems for signals of possible extraterrestrial intelligence. Great news I know, better still some of its first targets are the exoplanet candidates recently discovered by NASA’s Kepler space telescope.

SETI’s Alan Telescope Array (ATA) had been in hibernation since April following the withdrawal of the SETI Institute’s former partner, U.C. Berkeley – the operator of the observatory in California where the ATA is located – due to budgetary shortfalls (yawn yawn).

New funding has recently been acquired for observatory operations allowing the ATA to resume observations and work to examine the thousands of new candidate planets found by Kepler, with the highest priority given to the worlds discovered that are located in their star’s habitable zone.

Resuming observations was possible thanks to the interest and generosity of the public who supported the institute’s research via the SETI website with additional funds being provided by the United States Air Force as part of their formal assessment of the instrument’s utility for Space Situational Awareness.

From Jill Tarter, Director of SETI Research: We are exploring once again, with renewed enthusiasm.  While our work with the US Air Force to try to avoid future collisions in space will insure that the array is maintained in good operating condition, we will continue to have to raise the funds to conduct our SETI observations.

Awesome news! visit SETI here to find out more, donate too should you support the cause.

Source: SETI

h1

Yay yay – the Allen Telescope Array!

August 16, 2011

by tte-77

skywatching Allen Telescope Array SETI

The I#impressive Allen Telescope Array - Credit: SETI

Telescopes looking for extra terrestrial intelligence should re-open within weeks after donors replaced income lost in public funding cuts.

The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) Institute, had to shut the £18m Allen Telescope Array in April but donors have since raised more than £120,000 with more than 2,400 people contributing to the fund. Donors include the likes of actress Jodie Foster who played the lead role of an astronomer looking for evidence of aliens in the 1997 film Contact. Amongst other donors was the Apollo 8 astronaut, Bill Anders.

The 42 radio telescopes, in northern California, search space for potential signals from alien life forms.

The SETI Institute says the fund should be enough to keep the telescopes operating until the end of 2011.  The plan is still dependent on the institute receiving money from the US Air Force to help track space debris that could damage satellites.

SETI is hoping to raise more money to contribute to the £1.5m annual operating and staffing costs of the telescopes and keep them going beyond the end of this year. Ultimately the plan is to use the array to observe planets outside our own Solar System.

The array also contributes to research into black holes, pulsars and magnetic fields in the Milky Way.

Source: BBC News

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,872 other followers

%d bloggers like this: