Skip to main content

New LOFAR station for Univ. Hamburg and Bielefeld University

On Wednesday 9 April at the Hannover Messe (the world’s largest industrial fair), ASTRON, the University of Hamburg and Bielefeld University will sign a contract for construction of a new German station close to Hamburg for the International LOFAR Telescope (ILT).

Published by the editorial team, 4 April 2014

LOFAR is a transformational radio telescope, that is uniquely powerful and versatile for studies at the lowest frequencies that can be observed from Earth. The German LOng Wavelength consortium (GLOW) already has five operational LOFAR radio astronomy antenna stations, making it ASTRON’s largest international partner in the ILT.

The overall sensitivity and the ability of the ILT to image fine details in celestial objects are increased by adding more LOFAR stations at greater distances from the core (located in the northeast of the Netherlands). Production of hardware for a LOFAR antenna station, which consists of hundreds of antennas and advanced electronics, is contracted out to industry to a value of more than 1 million euros.

With LOFAR, astronomers can look back billions of years to a time before the first stars and galaxies were formed (the so-called ‘Dark Ages’), they can survey vast areas of the low-frequency radio sky, and they can be constantly on the lookout for some of the most energetic and burst-like events in the Universe. Researchers at the University of Hamburg, led by Prof. M. Brüggen, specialize in studying the formation and evolution of clusters of galaxies from the early Universe to the present era. The group at Bielefeld University, led by Prof. D.Schwarz, studies the distribution of galaxies on the largest observabledistances in the Universe, which carry imprints from the era of cosmological inflation.

LOFAR is also a recognized science and technology pathfinder facility for the next-generation radio telescope, the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), which is being prepared by a global collaboration of countries and institutes, including the Netherlands and Germany. ASTRON has been an initiator and principal player in the SKA throughout. ASTRON is now taking many concepts of LOFAR, in particular the (real-time and off-line) handling of huge data streams, to the next level in preparation for the SKA.

Signing of the contract will take place on Wednesday 9 April at the Holland High Tech Pavilion at the Hannover Messe, in Hall 2 booth D10 from 12:00 – 12:30 hours.

For more information please contact:

University of Hamburg:

Marcus Brüggen, Professor of Extragalactic Astrophysics and Observational Cosmology, University of Hamburg. Phone: +49 40 42838 8537, e-mail: mbrueggen@hs.uni-hamburg.de

 

Bielefeld University:

Jörg Heeren, Press Office of Bielefeld University. Phone: (+49) (0) 521 106 4199 (+49) (0) 521 106 4199, e-mail: jheeren@uni-bielefeld.de

 

ASTRON:

Femke Boekhorst, PR& Communication. Phone: (+31) (0) 521 595 204 (+31) (0) 521 595 204, & (+31) (0) 6 21 23 4243, e-mail: boekhorst@astron.nl

Sources
Related

@astron

Subscribe to our newsletter. For previous editions, click here.

searchcloseprintchevron-downlinkedin-squarefacebookbarsenvelopelinkedinxingyoutube-playinstagrampaper-planefacebook-officialpinterest-pwhatsappcommentingcross