Tags:
view all tags
---+ May 26, 2023 8-10PM *Event Type*: [[PublicLectures][Lecture and Stargazing]]<br> *Title*: Seeing the Invisible: Astronomical Radio Waves<br> *Lecturer*:Nitika Yadlapalli<br> *Position*: Phd Candidate<br> *Institution*:Caltech<br> *Abstract*: <br> Humans can only see a narrow range of wavelengths of light, but the electromagnetic spectrum of light covers a much broader range. Radio telescopes can "see" many objects in space that our eyes cannot, including flashes given off by highly magnetic stars, energetic jets erupting from black holes, and radiation emitted from supernovae. But how do these radio telescopes work and how can we build one? Over the last several years, I have been working on a new radio telescope called SPRITE in the desert north of Los Angeles. I will discuss how this telescope works, how we built it, and how we can use it to make new astronomical discoveries. <br><br> <img src="%ATTACHURLPATH%/20230526V.jpg" alt="20230526V.jpg" width="768" height="1024" />
Edit
|
Attach
|
Watch
|
P
rint version
|
H
istory
:
r3
<
r2
<
r1
|
B
acklinks
|
V
iew topic
|
Raw edit
|
More topic actions...
Topic revision: r2 - 2023-05-06
-
OutreachAdmin
Home
Site map
Main web
Sandbox web
TWiki web
Main Web
Users
Groups
Index
Search
Changes
Notifications
RSS Feed
Statistics
Preferences
P
View
Raw View
Print version
Find backlinks
History
More topic actions
Edit
Raw edit
Attach file or image
Edit topic preference settings
Set new parent
More topic actions
Account
Log In
Register User
Edit
Attach
Copyright © 2008-2025 by the contributing authors. All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
Ideas, requests, problems regarding TWiki?
Send feedback