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The CSIRO’s Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder telescope at an observatory in outback Western Australia. It has mapped the sky in unprecedented speed and detail.
The CSIRO’s Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder telescope at an observatory in outback Western Australia. It has mapped the sky in unprecedented speed and detail. Photograph: Dragonfly Media/PR IMAGE
The CSIRO’s Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder telescope at an observatory in outback Western Australia. It has mapped the sky in unprecedented speed and detail. Photograph: Dragonfly Media/PR IMAGE

Australian telescope maps new atlas of the universe in record speed

This article is more than 3 years old

Scientists use powerful new instrument in outback WA to map three million galaxies in 300 hours, unlocking deepest secrets of the universe

A powerful new telescope developed by Australian scientists has mapped three million galaxies in record speed, unlocking the universe’s deepest secrets.

The Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (Askap) broke records as it conducted its first survey of the entire southern sky, mapping approximately three million galaxies in 300 hours.

Scientists used the telescope at an observatory in outback Western Australia to observe 83% of the sky.

The result is a new atlas of the universe, according to the telescope’s developer and operator, Australian science agency the CSIRO.

The survey – the Rapid Askap Continuum Survey – has mapped millions of star-like points; most are distant galaxies, the CSIRO says. About a million of those distant galaxies have never been seen before.

The CSIRO’s chief executive, Larry Marshall, said the survey had unlocked the deepest secrets of the universe.

“Askap is applying the very latest in science and technology to age-old questions about the mysteries of the universe and equipping astronomers around the world with new breakthroughs to solve their challenges,” Marshall said in a statement.

Scientists expect to find tens of millions of new galaxies in future surveys, lead author and CSIRO astronomer David McConnell said.

The telescope mapped the sky in unprecedented speed and detail. The CSIRO says the result proves that an all-sky survey can be done in weeks rather than years.

The instrument has a particularly wide field of view, enabling it to take panoramic pictures of the sky in high detail. The quality of the telescope’s receivers means the team only needed to combine 903 images to form a full map of the sky.

Other major world telescopes have required tens of thousands of images to put together an all-sky survey.

The CSIRO’s custom-built hardware and software then processed the 13.5 exabytes (13.5bn gigabytes) of raw data generated by the telescope.

That raw data was generated at a faster rate than Australia’s entire internet traffic, Marshall said.

Astronomers will be able to statistically analyse large populations of galaxies the same way social scientists use information from a national census.

The federal science and technology minister, Karen Andrews, said Askap was an example of Australia’s world-leading radio astronomy capability.

“This new survey proves that we are ready to make a giant leap forward in the field of radio astronomy,” she said.

The initial results were published on Tuesday in the journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia.

Australians can take their own virtual tour of the map on the CSIRO’s website.

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