Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
Astronomers from CSIRO, the Swinburne University of Technology (SUT) and the University of Tasmania have made the first broadband hook-up between Australian radio telescopes, completing in just hours an experiment that would previously have taken weeks.
Data from four telescopes - near Parkes,
Narrabri, Coonabarabran and Hobart - were streamed to CSIRO's Parkes
Observatory where it was processed by software developed at SUT.
"Broadband networks are revolutionising astronomy," says VLBI
Operations and Development Manager at CSIRO's Australia Telescope
National Facility, Dr Tasso Tzioumis. "We can now do experiments on
very short time-scales with real-time transfer of data between
telescopes."
This experiment was the first to make extensive use of dedicated 1 Gbps
(gigabit per second) networks that now link the CSIRO observatories in
NSW to Sydney and beyond. Installed in 2006, the links were funded by
CSIRO and provided by AARNet (the Australian Academic Research Network).
Called VLBI (Very Long Baseline Interferometry), this technique
traditionally produced results very slowly, usually taking at least a
few weeks. Data would be recorded on tapes or disks at each telescope,
along with time signals from atomic clocks. The tapes or disks would
then be shipped to a central processing facility to be combined.
The VLBI-over-broadband (e-VLBI) technique has also been tested and is used in Europe and the USA, at similar data rates.
Past VLBI experiments have used special-purpose hardware, called a
correlator, to combine the various data streams. But in this experiment
a sophisticated software correlator was used, running on a cluster of
computers - a world first for e-VLBI.
The software correlator was developed at Melbourne's SUT, by a group
led by Associate Professor Steven Tingay in the Centre for Astrophysics
and Supercomputing.
Being able to ship data around in vast quantities will be crucial to
the operation of future radio telescopes such as the Mileura
International Radio Array (MIRA) soon to be built in Western Australia,
where each of the facility's 30 dishes will be delivering a terabyte of
data per second.
Broadband networks are also transforming astronomy by allowing telescopes to be operated remotely.
David Bass
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