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Jodrell Bank

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The 76m Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank Observatory.
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The 76m Lovell Telescope at Jodrell Bank Observatory.

The Jodrell Bank Observatory (originally the Jodrell Bank Experimental Station, then the Nuffield Radio Astronomy Laboratories from 1966-1999) is located near Goostrey, Cheshire in the north west of England. The observatory is part of the University of Manchester and has played an important role in the research of quasars and pulsars. In 1979, scientists at Jodrell Bank announced the first detection of a gravitational lens; which confirmed Einstein's theory of general relativity.

The observatory was established in 1945 by Dr. Bernard Lovell, who wanted to investigate cosmic rays after his work on radar in World War II. One of the telescopes of the observatory honours his name.

The current director is Professor Andrew Lyne.

General information

The Jodrell Bank site was first used for academic purposes in 1939, when the University of Manchester's horticultural botany department purchased eleven acres of farmland from a local farmer. The first use of the site for astrophysics was in 1945, when Bernard Lovell wished to use some radar equipment left over from World War II to investigate cosmic rays. Electrical interference prevented him from doing so in Manchester, so he moved the equipment to Jodrell Bank, 25 miles (40 km) south of the city. The first radio telescope, a wire paraboloid 218ft (66m) in diameter, was built in 1947. The famous "Mark I" telescope, at the time the largest steerable dish radio telescope in the world, 76.2 m (250 ft) in diameter, was constructed in the mid 1950s and became operational in the summer of 1957, just in time for the launch of Sputnik 1, the world's first artificial satellite. Jodrell Bank was the only installation in the world able to track Sputnik's booster rocket by radar, and the fame and income this brought in enabled the considerable construction debts to be paid off.

In February 1966, Jodrell Bank tracked the USSR unmanned moon lander Luna 9 and listened in on its facsimile transmission of photographs from the moon's surface. The photos were sent to the British press and published before the Soviets themselves had made the photos public.

The Mark I telescope has been updated twice, to allow greater sensitivity and make structural repairs. At the time of its construction in 1957, it was the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope and was only expected to have an operational lifespan of 10 years. It was therefore upgraded in 1970-71 and 2001-2003. In 1987, on its 30th anniversary, the telescope was renamed The Lovell Telescope in Sir Bernard's honour. In 1988, the telescope became a Grade I listed building. The telescope is part of the MERLIN array of radio telescopes.

A second radio telescope, the Mark II, was built at Jodrell Bank in 1964, with a diameter of approximately 25 metres (it's elliptical, not circular), while a third telescope, the Mark III, located some 20 miles away near Nantwich is part of the Jodrell Bank Observatory. Other radio telescopes are also located at the Jodrell Bank Observatory - one which is 42ft (13m) in diameter, and a 7m one which is generally used for undergraduate teaching purposes for students of the University. Webcams of these are available for viewing on the Jodrell Bank webpage.

Jodrell Bank Observatory is also the base of the Multi-Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN), a National Facility run by the University of Manchester on behalf of PPARC.

Visitor facilities

A view of the telescope from the Arboretum.
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A view of the telescope from the Arboretum.

The much-visited site was planted as an arboretum. Jodrell Bank Arboretum houses the UK's national collections of Malus and Sorbus species and the Heather Society's Calluna collection, on 35 acres (140,000 m²). The arboretum also features a small scale model of the solar system, the scale being approximately 1:5,000,000,000. In 2005, as part of the [SpacedOut] project, Jodrell Bank became the location of the Sun in a 1:15,000,000 scale model of the solar system covering the UK.

There is an educational visitors' centre at the site. In 2003 the old science centre was demolished to make way for a new one, for which the plans are currently in development. In the interim, visitor facilities are more limited. However, visitors have access to a new path wrapping around the telescope, approximately 20 m from the telescope's outer railway, complete with many information boards explaining how the telescope works and the research that is done with it.

Statistics of the Lovell Telescope

Location: Lat./Long. 53° 14′13.2″N / 2°18′25.74″W
Mass of telescope: 3200 t
Mass of bowl: 1500 t
Diameter of bowl: 76.2 m = 250 feet
Surface area of bowl: 5270 m² = 1.3 acres
Collecting area of bowl: 4560 m² = 1.127 acres
Height of elevation axis: 50.5 m = 165.68 feet
Maximum height above ground: 89.0 m = 292 feet
Radius of wheel girders: 38.5 m = 126.31 feet
Outer diameter of railway track: 107.5 m = 352.690 feet
Amount of paint for 3 coats of the bowl: 5200 L

Timeline

Slang

The name Jodrell Bank has been immortalised in Cockney rhyming slang.

See also

References

External links

 


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