The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) is a radio telescope operated by the CSIRO at the Paul Wild Observatory, 25 kilometres (16 mi) west of Narrabri, New South Wales, Australia. Its opening ceremony took place on 2 September 1988.

Overview

The telescope is an array of six identical diameter dishes, which commonly operate in aperture synthesis mode to produce radio images. Five of the dishes can be moved along a three-kilometre (2 mi) railway track oriented east-west. The sixth antenna is situated three kilometres west of the end of the main track. Each dish weighs approximately .

The Compact Array is a part of the Australia Telescope National Facility network of radio telescopes. The array is frequently operated together with other CSIRO telescopes, the dish at the Parkes Observatory and a single dish at Mopra near Coonabarabran, to form a very long baseline interferometry array.

The children's/teen's television adventure series Sky Trackers was filmed in this facility in 1993, with the radio telescopes being prominently featured.

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CSIRO ScienceImage 227 Five Antennas at Narrabri.jpg|Five of the antennas (2000)

ATCA Radio Telescope Narrabri 2005 12 21.jpg|One antenna vertically aligned (2005)

CSIRO ScienceImage 104 Closeup of Australia Telescope Compact Array Construction.jpg|The array under construction in 1988

ATCA night observers 2013 09 01.JPG|Star gazing beside the array, as part of its 25th anniversary celebrations on 1 September 2013.

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Space tracking

Whilst remaining a telescope predominantly dedicated to radio-astronomy,

Key results

Highlights of the scientific work done by the ATCA include:

:1991 the first image of a radio supernova remnant as it formed (SNR 1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud)

:1992 observe the longest galactic radio jets to date (galaxy 0319-453).

:1995 create the first 3-D models of Jupiter's radiation belts, showing properties of its magnetic field closer to the planet than spacecraft could measure.

:1996 create the most detailed maps of hydrogen in the Magellanic Clouds, by a factor of 20.

:1998 first evidence that gamma-ray bursts are linked to supernovae.

:2000 observations suggest that radio beams from the giant radio galaxy B0114-476 may have turned off, then restarted.

:2001 observations suggest that Abell 3667, a cluster of about 500 galaxies, was produced by two smaller clusters merging. This is the first observational evidence for this process.

:2001 (with Parkes telescope) the first three-dimensional structure of a face-on galaxy (the Large Magellanic Cloud).

:2002 (with Chandra X-ray space telescope) for the first time capture the entire life-cycle of jets from a microquasar, XTE J1550-564, seeing jets erupt at relativistic speeds, slow down and fade away.

:2003 show that gamma ray bursts release similar total energy, and so probably have a common origin.

:2004 first observations of a neutron star emit a jet at relativistic speed. This challenged the idea that only black holes can create the conditions needed to accelerate jets to such extreme speeds.

See also

  • List of radio telescopes
  • Radio Galaxy Zoo

References

  • Australia Telescope Compact Array Home Page contains links for the general public and for professional astronomers
  • Australia Telescope Compact Array at CSIROpedia
  • ATCA Live! website shows current observations
  • ATCA sky camera shows the sky above the ATCA