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  Wikipedia: National Radio Astronomy Observatory

Wikipedia: National Radio Astronomy Observatory
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) is an institution set up by the United States government for the purpose of radio astronomy. NRAO designs, builds, and operates its own high-power radio telescopes for use by scientists around the world.

Locations

Charlottesville, Virginia

Located on the University of Virginia campus.

Green Bank, West Virginia

NRAO is the constructor/owner of the worlds largest fully mobile radio telescope, the GBT, which resides in Green Bank, West Virginia. Green Bank is also the home of NRAO's prinicipal observatory as it is the center of a United States national radio quiet zone, which NRAO is also responsible for maintaining. It resides on a 13,000 square mile piece of land void of electromagnetic pollution. The land was set aside by the FCC in 1958, as a Quiet Zone. It is hard to keep the site free of radio pollution. At one point, the obsrvatory faced the problem of North American flying squirrels tagged with US Fish & Wildlife Service telemetry transmitters.

Socorro, New Mexico

Home of the
Very Large Array (VLA), and base of the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). VLBA telescopes are located throughout the world. This is also the setting for the movie Contact.

Tucson, Arizona

Offices are located on the
University of Arizona campus. Formerly operated the 12 meter telescope on Kitt Peak. That telescope has been shut down and funding rerouted to the Atacoma Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) instead.

Santiago, Chile

The Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) site in Chile is at 5000 m altitude near Cerro Chajnantor in northern Chile. This is about 40 km east of the historic village of San Pedro de Atacama, 130 km southeast of the mining town of Calama, and about 275 km ENE of the coastal port of Antofagasta.

External link


  

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 
Modified by Geona