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Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland 20771

ENGINEERING COLLOQUIUM

Monday, September 22, 2008 / 3:30 PM, Building 3 Auditorium

photo of the Green Bank Telescope

Dr. Karen O'Neil

"The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope"

ABSTRACT -- The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) is the world's largest fully steerable telescope. The GBT has a 100 by 110 meters diameter dish. The overall structure of the GBT is a wheel-and-track design that allows the telescope to view the entire sky above 5 degrees elevation. The track, 64 m (210 ft) in diameter, is level to within a few thousandths of an inch in order to provide precise pointing of the structure while bearing 7300 metric tons (16,000,000 pounds) of moving weight.

The GBT is of an unusual design. Unlike conventional telescopes, which have a series of supports in the middle of the surface, the GBT's aperture is unblocked so that incoming radiation meets the surface directly. This increases the useful area of the telescope and eliminates reflection and diffraction that ordinarily complicate a telescope's pattern of response. To accommodate this, an off-axis feed arm cradles the dish, projecting upward at one edge, and the telescope surface is asymmetrical. It is actually a 100-by-110 meter section of a conventional, rotationally symmetric 208-meter figure, beginning four meters outward from the vertex of the hypothetical parent structure.

The GBT's lack of circular symmetry greatly increases the complexity of its design and construction. The GBT is also unusual in that the 2,004 panels that make up its surface are mounted at their corners on actuators, little motor-driven pistons, which make it easier to adjust the surface shape. Such adjustment is crucial to the high-frequency performance of the GBT in which an accurate surface figure must be maintained.

In this talk I will discuss the GBT, the science it enables, and the development plan for the GBT and the Green Bank site.

SPEAKER -- Dr. Karen O'Neil is the Interim Assistant Director for the National Radio Astronomy Observatory's site in Green Bank, West Virginia. There she oversees the running and development of the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT), the world's largest fully steerable telescope. In addition, the Green Bank site hosts both a range of other telescopes, from 20 feet to 140 feet in diameter and a wide variety of developmental and educational activities, all of which are under Dr. O'Neil's direction.




Engineering Colloquium home page: https://ecolloq.gsfc.nasa.gov