areciboobservatory

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  • DAVID PARKER/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images

    Puerto Rico's Arecibo Observatory saved from uncertain fate

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    02.22.2018

    Arecibo Observatory, which is the second-largest radio telescope in the world, is under new management. A group led by the University of Central Florida will take over the operations of the telescope from the National Science Foundation, which was considering shutting down the observatory.

  • Xavier Garcia/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Hurricane Maria wreaks havoc on Arecibo radio telescope

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.23.2017

    Puerto Rico is suffering on an unimaginable scale in the wake of Hurricane Maria. Many have been displaced from their homes, and the entire territory may go without electricity and reliable communication for months. And while the human tragedy is clearly the most important concern, it's also having a terrible effect on the scientific community. Researchers have learned that the Arecibo Observatory and its signature radio telescope took significant damage when the hurricane passed over. All staff members are thankfully safe for now, but an atmospheric radar line feed and a 39-foot dish (used for Very Long Baseline Interferometry) were lost in winds that reached up to 155MPH. The gigantic central dish is intact, although the line feed's collapse punctured it in places.

  • Estate of Stephen Laurence Strathdee

    Listening to starlight: Our ongoing search for alien intelligence

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    05.25.2017

    Six hours a day, seven days a week, for four straight months. That's how long radio astronomer Frank D. Drake pointed the 26-meter telescope at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) research facility in Green Bank, West Virginia, toward the heavens, looking for signs of intelligent life beyond Earth. He dubbed his efforts Project Ozma, in honor of the Queen of Oz from L. Frank Baum's famed children's book series.

  • Alt-week 8.18.12: Graphene sponges, zero-g athletics and tweets in space

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    08.18.2012

    Alt-week peels back the covers on some of the more curious sci-tech stories from the last seven days. We see a lot of crazy stories here at Engadget, especially when we spend our week poking around in dark and scary corners of the internet specifically in search of them, just so you don't have to. We consider it a service almost. One that we're delighted to provide, we must add. When else would we be able to share such delights as an astronaut triathlete, soft, color-changing robots and a recent response to a thirty-year-old alien broadcast? Exactly. This is alt-week.

  • Save Arecibo: because aliens don't do voicemail

    by 
    Paul Miller
    Paul Miller
    07.07.2008

    The folks at SETI@home have put out a desperate plea for the community to bust out those quill pens and start writing strongly-worded letters to congress persons. Apparently the Arecibo Observatory, the world's largest radio telescope and SETI@home's data source, is being threatened with some massive budget cuts. Given that a replacement for Arecibo won't be online until 2020 at best, folks are understandably upset. Turns out Arecibo is also one of the best shots we have at detecting an earth-threatening asteroid before it's too late and we have to sit through another Elijah Wood movie on the subject. You know what you have to do.[Thanks, Brian]