India Gets Robotic Telescope To Keep An Eye On Dynamic Cosmos - Eastern Mirror
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India gets robotic telescope to keep an eye on dynamic cosmos

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By EMN Updated: Feb 08, 2018 10:20 pm
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Dome of the new telescope coming up at Hanle. The Himalayan Chandra Telescope is in the background.


Hyderabad, Feb. 8 (India Science Wire):
Stars and galaxies in theuniverse may appear to be static to us as they are located millions oflight years away. But the universe is actually dynamic with eventsoccurring in timescales much shorter – years, days and even hours.India is now joining a global network to monitor the dynamic cosmos.

A new telescope is getting ready for commissioning at the IndianAstronomical Observatory at Hanle in Ladakh, as part of aninternational network specifically designed to watch dynamic events ortransient objects in the universe. The programme is called GlobalRelay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH).

Observatories in this network are located in a way that will allowuninterrupted observation of transient events.

“A lot of interesting objects and events occur in the universe whichneed to be caught very young and soon after they happen, such assupernovae, gamma ray bursts, active galacticnuclei, and many more. They are called transients becauseelectromagnetic signature radiated as a result is transient in nature.Gravitational wave events too fall in this category,” explained G CAnupama, the Indian principal investigator of the project at the Indian Instituteof Astrophysics, while speaking to India Science Wire here.

The facility will also track asteroids. “Near-earth asteroids arenot transients in the sense of their light emitting capability, butthey do come close to the earth and that is when you need totrack them. This time period is very short. In this sense, they are transient in terms of time,” said Anupama.

The new 70 cm telescope is much smaller than the 2 meter HimalayanChandra Telescope at Hanle. “HCT is already over-booked, whilethe new telescope will be purely for observing transients. It isdifferent from HCT in the sense that it will only be an imagingtelescope and all spectroscopy will happen at HCT,” Anupama said.

The fully robotic telescope costing Rs. 3.5 crore has been funded by theScience and Engineering Research Board (SERB) of the Department ofScience and Technology. “The telescope is equipped with a sensitivecamera that can detect some of the faint transients found by ourpartner survey telescopes like the Zwicky Transient Facility at Palomar, California,” she added. The new facility will becommissioned this summer.

The telescope will be remotely operated from IIA’s Centre ForResearch and Education in Science and Technology near Bangalore. Thefacility houses the control room for remote operations of the HCTand is the data hub for the telescope. The new telescope will beprogrammed to directly communicate with various ground-based andspace-based surveys that are searching for transient sources.

Transient events in the universe are caused due to several factorssuch as relatively benign flares on stars, accretion of matter oncompact objects, stellar mergers and explosions. All this results in aflash in the sky for a period and then slowly fades away. By capturingthese electromagnetic signatures, astronomers try to gain an insight about cosmic objects as well as physical processes that govern theirevolution. Finding such objects requires continuous monitoring oflarge areas of the sky. Telescopes deployed for ‘transientsurveys’ are usually small, wide-field instruments but they can’t see very faint objects.

According to Dr. Mansi Kasliwal, who is heading GROWTH project atCaltech, the project is “primarily looking at optical transientsfrom a host of different observatories to build a more completepicture of the physical processes of their evolution. The network has18 observatories in the Northern Hemisphere. As the earth rotates anddaylight creeps, the network switches observations to facilitieswestward that is still enjoying night-time.”

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By EMN Updated: Feb 08, 2018 10:20:49 pm
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