Arecibo

The world's largest radio telescope consists of a 305 meter fixed dish located at Arecibo, Puerto Rico. It was constructed in 1963. The radius of curvature of the dish is also about 305 m. It has been used for observations at wavelengths as short as 4 cm. At this wavelength the Rayleigh criterion gives a limiting angular resolution of 1.6 x 10-4 radians or about 30 seconds of arc.

The receivers which detect the radiation focused by the large dish are suspended 300 m above the surface. As upgraded in 1997, the telescope can collect data at frequencies up to 5 GHz (wavelength 6 cm) with an angular resolution of 1 minute of arc. The fixed dish is restricted to about 20° from the vertical.

One of Arecibo's contributions has been detailed mapping of the surface of Venus. It can obtain a resolution of a few kilometers on the surface and was combined with data obtained by the Venus spacecraft to provide the most accurate mapping of Venus until the Magellan spacecraft was deployed.

Index

Solar System Illustration

Solar System Concepts

Telescopes

Arecibo official site
 
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Very Large Array

Image courtesy of NRAO/AUI and NRAO/AUI Photographer: Bob Tetro

The Very Large Array is a radio telescope operated by the Naval Research Laboratory near Socorro, New Mexico. It consists of 27 radio telescopes arranged along the arms of a Y. The north arm of the array is 19 km long and the southwest and southeast arms are 21 km long. Each of the parabolic dishes is 26 meters in diameter. It produces radio views of the sky with resolution comparable to the best optical telescopes.

References:
NRAO Very Large Array
Index

Solar System Illustration

Solar System Concepts

Telescopes
 
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