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Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre

Coordinates: 57°33′13″N 21°51′18″E / 57.553493°N 21.854916°E / 57.553493; 21.854916
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Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Center
The RT-32 radio telescope
LocationLatvia Edit this at Wikidata
Coordinates57°33′13″N 21°51′18″E / 57.553493°N 21.854916°E / 57.553493; 21.854916
Websiteen.venta.lv/science/ventspils-international-radio-astronomy-centre Edit this at Wikidata
Telescopes
Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre is located in Latvia
Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre
Location of Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre
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Ventspils International Radio Astronomy Centre (Latvian: Ventspils Starptautiskais radioastronomijas centrsVIRAC) is an ex-Soviet radio astronomy installation 30 km north of Ventspils, Latvia, on the coast of the Baltic Sea in Ance parish. The installation was secret until 1993 after Latvia regained independence. It was taken over by the Latvian Academy of Sciences after the withdrawal of the Soviet Army in 1994. Since then, the two of the three radio telescopes have been repaired and renewed.[1]

Description

Located in woodlands near Irbene, in Ventspils Municipality, Latvia, the centre was founded in 1974 by the Soviet military.[2] It originally consisted of a 32-metre telescope, along with two smaller telescopes and a communications centre, and was known as Zvezdochka, meaning "Little Star". It was possibly used by the KGB during the Cold War to spy on communications between Europe and the United States.[3]

It became a scientific research facility in the 1990s,[2] established on 22 July 1994 as part of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, before becoming an independent organisation on 24 April 1996.[4] It is now known as the Ventspils International Radioastronomy Center[2] ("Ventspils Starptautiskais radioastronomijas centrs"),[3] or the Irbene Astronomy Center.[5]

RT-32

RT-32 is a 32-metre (105 ft) parabolic radio telescope.[3] It is made up of over 20,000 components,[2] and the central cone weighs 80 tonnes.[5] The fully steerable telescope observes at centimetre wavelengths. The combination of size and precision engineering makes the larger dish especially valuable to scientists. The structure was built by a naval factory in Ukraine, and the interiors are reminiscent of a ship.[6]

The telescope is mounted on a 25-metre-high (82 ft) tower. It has an 11.45-metre (37.6 ft) focal length, and a 2.5-metre (8.2 ft) secondary mirror.[7]

In its first upgrade since being constructed,[5] RT-32 was temporarily dismantled towards the end of 2014, and moved to a purpose-built shelter for restoration. The restoration includes re-welding the panels, replacing rusted parts, and repairing damage caused by the passage of time, water ingress and lightning strikes. The telescope will also be upgraded to enable it to be controlled remotely, and to be able to make more precise and sensitive observations. The telescope will be used in Very-long-baseline interferometry. The restoration cost around €16 million overall, with the restoration of the telescope panels costing around €1.5 million; the restoration was funded by the European Union and Latvian state and Ventspils district governments.[2] The dish of the telescope was remounted in June 2015, with the restoration due to be completed in October 2015.[5]

RT-16

The centre also has a 16 metres (52 ft) parabolic radio telescope.[3]

LOFAR

Since 2019, the VIRAC observatory in Irbene includes a LOFAR station.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Johannes Bach Rasmussen, Travel Guide: Traces of the Cold War Period, Nordic Council of Ministers, 2010, ISBN 978-92-89-32121-1, p. 106.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Radiotelescope gears up for new age". LSM.lv. 22 January 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d Stephen Baister, Chris Patrick (2007). Latvia. Bradt Travel Guides. p. 177. ISBN 978-1-84162-201-9.
  4. ^ "VIRAC - About Us". VENTA. Archived from the original on 9 September 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d Čunka, Judīte (10 June 2015). "Radiotelescope to point skyward again for space science". LSM.lv.
  6. ^ Howard Jarvis; Tim Ochser, Estonia, Latvia & Lithuania, Dorling Kindersley Ltd, 2011, ISBN 978-14-05-36929-9, p. 177.
  7. ^ "VIRAC - Technical details". VENTA. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  8. ^ "Radio astronomy centre in Irbene celebrates 25th anniversary and opens LOFAR-LATVIA antennae array". izm.gov.lv. 25 October 2019.