Campbell, Donald B. (Author)
In 1946 the Microwave Astronomy Project was initiated by the School of Electrical Engineering at Cornell University, the first university in the United States to enter the new field of radio astronomy as it was later called. While the Engineering School's Director, Charles Burrows, led the project, the initiative came from Charles Seeger, a faculty member in Electrical Engineering, and two instructors in the Department of Astronomy - Ralph Williamson and Donald McRae - both of whom left Cornell in 1946. With funding from the U.S. Office of Naval Research, two World War II SCR-268 radar systems, which operated at 200 MHz, were acquired and plans made to construct a 6-m diameter parabolic antenna that would operate at frequencies up to 10 GHz. A site was chosen about 8 km from the Cornell university campus. The parabolic antenna was completed in 1948 although using a borrowed 5-m reflector that, initially, could only operate up to 200 MHz. Its completion in October was in conjunction with the first conference on radio astronomy held in the United States, which attracted considerable publicity for this new research field. Initial observations of the Sun were made in June 1948 using the two receiving 4x6 dipole arrays from the SCR-268 radars mounted on the elevation arm of one of the radar systems. This was followed by routine solar observations from July 1948 to December 1949. Initial results were published by Martha Stahr, Assistant Professor of Astronomy at Cornell. During the summer and fall of 1948 two more observational programs were started. Charles Seeger and Ralph Williamson determined the direction of the radio pole of our Galaxy using the SCR-268 mattress array and Seeger did extensive observations of the strong variable source Cygnus A using, initially, the mattress array and, later, the 5-m antenna. In late 1949 Leif Owren joined the project to pursue a doctoral degree based on solar radio observations. These started in mid-1950 and continued until December 1952, initially with the 5-m antenna and, later, with the mattress array while the 5-m antenna was being resurfaced to allow operation at 1,420 MHz. Owren also built a two element interferometer to study the relationship between solar radio bursts andoptically observed plages and sunspots. Charles Seeger left Cornell in 1950 and Owren in 1952, leaving no astronomers with a strong interest in the radio astronomy program until Marshall Cohen joined the faculty in 1954. Cohen initiated studies of the polarization properties of solar radio emission with the 5-m antenna that continued into the 1960s both at the original site and, after 1962, at a new site south-east of Cornell University in the town of Danby. Only the 5-m antenna was moved to this site and it was decommissioned when the radio astronomy technical group, which by this time was primarily working in support of the newly built Arecibo 305-m telescope, was again moved to a site closer to Cornell University.
...More
Article
Wayne Orchiston;
Tsuko Nakamura;
Masato Ishiguro;
(2016)
Highlighting the history of Japanese radio astronomy. 4: Early solar research in Osaka
Article
Wayne Orchiston;
Harry Wendt;
(2017)
The contribution of the Georges Heights Experimental Radar Antenna to Australian radio astronomy
Article
Martin George;
Wayne Orchiston;
Richard Wielebinski;
(2017)
The history of low frequency radio astronomy in Australia. 7: Philip Hamilton, Raymond Haynes and the University of Tasmania's Penna Field Station near Hobart
Article
Wayne Orchiston;
(2022)
Govind Swarup, Potts Hill and the Kalyan Array: India's first radio telescope
Article
Wayne Orchiston;
Masato Ishiguro;
(2019)
Highlighting the history of Japanese radio astronomy. 6: Early solar monitoring at the Radio Research Laboratories of the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, Hiraiso
Article
Wayne Orchiston;
Peter Robertson;
(2017)
The origin and development of extragalactic radio astronomy: The role of CSIRO's Division of Radiophysics Dover Heights Field Station in Sydney
Book
David Leverington;
(2017)
Observatories and Telescopes of Modern Times: Ground-Based Optical and Radio Astronomy Facilities since 1945
Article
K. T. Chyży;
J. Kijak;
A. Kus;
M. Soida;
R. Wielebinski;
(2023)
The History of Radio Astronomy in Poland: From Solar Patrols to Pulsars and VLBI
Article
Martin George;
Wayne Orchiston;
Richard Wielebinski;
(2017)
The history of early low frequency radio astronomy in Australia. 8: Grote Reber and the 'Square Kilometre Array' near Bothwell, Tasmania, in the 1960s and 1970s
Article
Orchiston, Wayne;
Slee, Bruce;
(2002)
Ingenuity and Initiative in Australian Radio Astronomy: The Dover Heights “Hole-in-the Ground” Antenna
Article
Orchiston, Wayne;
Steinberg, Jean-Louis;
(2007)
Highlighting the History of French Radio Astronomy, 2: The Solar Eclipse Observations of 1949--1954
Article
Nakajima, Hiroshi;
Ishiguro, Masato;
Orchiston, Wayne;
Akabane, Kenji;
Enome, Shinzo;
Hayashi, Masa;
Kaifu, Norio;
Nakamura, Tsuko;
Tsuchiya, Atsushi;
(2014)
Highlighting the History of Japanese Radio Astronomy. 3: Early Solar Radio Research at the Tokyo Astronomical Observatory
Thesis
Gavrus, Delia Elena;
(2011)
Men of Strong Opinions: Identity, Self-Representation, and the Performance of Neurosurgery, 1919--1950
Article
Harry Wendt;
Wayne Orchiston;
(2018)
Contribution of the AN/TPS-3 Radar Antenna to Australian radio astronomy
Article
Wendt, Hardy;
Orchiston, Wayne;
Slee, Bruce;
(2008)
W. N. Christiansen and the Development of the Solar Grating Array
Thesis
Jackson Pope;
(2016)
Listening at the Lab: Bird Watchers and the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology
Article
Débarbat, Suzanne;
Lequeux, James;
Orchiston, Wayne;
(2007)
Highlighting the History of French Radio Astronomy, 1: Nordmann's Attempt to Observe Solar Radio Emission in 1901
Book
Christina Helena da Motta Barboza;
Sérgio Tadeu de Niemeyer Lamarão;
Cristina de Amorim Machado;
(2015)
Da Serra da Mantiqueira às Montanhas do Havaí – A História do Laboratório Nacional de Astrofísica
Article
Bohning, James J.;
(2001)
Opposition to the Formation of the American Chemical Society
Book
José Alberto Silva;
(2019)
A Academia Real das Ciências de Lisboa (1779-1834): Ciências e hibridismo numa periferia europeia
Be the first to comment!