Visit our new topic page about National Radio Astronomy Observatory

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), federal observatory for radio astronomy , founded in 1956 and operated under contract with the National Science Foundation by Associated Universities, Inc., a group of major universities. The headquarters are at Charlottesville, Va.; the original observatory site is in Greenbank, W.Va., where the antennas, or radio telescopes, include a fully steerable 140-ft (43-m) paraboloid; an interferometer consisting of three steerable 85-ft (26-m) paraboloids; a horn-shaped antenna 120 ft (37 m) in length that is fixed in place; and two smaller, steerable paraboloids; a modern 328-ft (100-m) fully steerable telescope is under construction. At Kitt Peak, near Tucson, Ariz., NRAO has a 36-ft (11-m) steerable paraboloid; near Socorro, New Mexico, the NRAO's Very Large Array (VLA) consists of 27 parabolic dishes, each 82 ft (25 m) in diameter, mounted on a Y-shaped track with arms up to 14 mi (21 km) long. Finally, the observatory operates the Very Baseline Array (VLBA) consisting of ten radio telescopes placed around the earth that operate in unison. Principal research programs of the NRAO include the study of galactic structure, extragalactic radio sources, molecules in space, pulsars, quasars, and the evolution of stars and galaxies. Astronomers using the VLA have discovered filaments, jets, and high-temperature features in the center of our own galaxy and in extragalactic radio sources that may help explain the high energy of quasars. The system allows the study of the nuclei of active galaxies and helps determine distances to radio sources more accurately.

Author not available, NATIONAL RADIO ASTRONOMY OBSERVATORY., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

OBITUARY: Peter Scheuer.(Obituaries)
The Independent (London, England); 3/22/2001; Longair, Malcolm; 787 words ; PETER SCHEUER was a theoretical astrophysicist of outstanding gifts who played a central role in many of the key developments in radio astronomy and high energy astrophysics from the mid-1950s until the time of his death. He will be best remembered for his remarkable contributions to radio Read more
OBITUARY: Peter Scheuer
The Independent - London; 3/22/2001; Malcolm Longair; 787 words ; PETER SCHEUER was a theoretical astrophysicist of outstanding gifts who played a central role in many of the key developments in radio astronomy and high energy astrophysics from the mid-1950s until the time of his death. He will be best remembered for his remarkable contributions to radio Read more
20071
The Washington Post; 11/2/1997; 576 words ; LISTENING AND LEARNING THE ARTICLE "ORBIT WARS" {AUGUST 3} mentions the potential damage to radio astronomy that a constellation of low-Earth orbit satellites could produce. Why is this so? Astronomical radio sources, by and large, are incredibly faint. It has been estimated that all of the energy Read more
Radio Waves Carry Messages on Invisible Light
Albuquerque Journal; 7/6/2006; Milky Way Chronicles RAE ANN KUMELOS PHILIP MAHON For the Journal; 787 words ; "I open the scuttle at night and see the farsprinkled systems Wider and wider they spread, expanding, always expanding, Outward and outward and forever outward. -- Walt Whitman In the fall of 1967, astronomers Jocelyn Susan Bell Burnell and Anthony Hewish held their collective breath as they Read more
Waves from a parallel universe; preparing a stunningly detailed map of the radio sky. (little overlap between sources of radio waves and those of visible light)
Science News; 5/7/1994; Peterson, Ivars; 693 words ; Preparing a stunningly detailed map of the radio sky Stretched across the Plains of San Agustin in New Mexico, the composite ear known as the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope listens to the sky. The whispers overheard by this gargantuan radio receiver reveal a universe quite unlike the one Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

National Radio Astronomy Observatory - Green Bank, WV