


Such huge numbers indicate a 50-year life span of the project. SKA antennas will be installed in places very far from cities in order to reduce the amount of radio interference, which will allow detecting very weak signals created by sources billions of light years away from us. This will be only a tenth of the final goal, involving the installation of a million antennas. Balloon-Borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope. Large Millimeter Telescope (ToITEC camera) Fred Young Submillimeter Telescope. The first phase of the project is expected to be completed in 2028. Ali CMB Polarization Telescope (AliCPT) Simons Observatory. The result will be a radio telescope so susceptible that it can detect the smartphone signal in an astronaut’s pocket on Mars at a distance of more than 200 million km, says Danny Price of the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy. The 1.

It will combine thousands of antennas in Western Australia with a network of antennas in a remote region of South Africa to create one large unified “virtual dish” system. Sky Eye, which is offically known as the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST), is the the largest and most sensitive single-dish radio telescope in the world. Soon, more than 130 thousand antennas will be installed in Western Australia. According to its CEO, SKA can become one of the greatest scientific achievements of mankind. Hence the name of the project - Square Kilometer Array (SKA). In Australia, the construction of an array of 130 thousand radio telescopes covering an area of more than a square kilometer has begun. The HST has a relatively small 2.4-metre primary mirror, in comparison to the largest ground-based telescopes of over 10 metres, yet its view of the universe.
