Contact 07

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IN BRIEF The rooftop observatory at The University of Western Australia. Credit: ICRAR/ UWA.

SKA SYNCHRONISATION TECHNOLOGY LEADS TO WORLD’S MOST STABLE LASER TRANSMISSION BY ICRAR COMMUNICATIONS TEAM In a study published in the journal Nature Communications, ICRAR researchers have teamed up with colleagues from the French National Centre for Space Studies (CNES) and the French metrology lab Systèmes de Référence Temps-Espace (SYRTE) to set a world record for the most stable transmission of a laser signal through the atmosphere. “By combining our phase stabilisation technology with advanced self-guiding optical terminals we were able to send a laser signal from one point to another without interference from atmospheric turbulence,” said lead author Benjamin Dix-Matthews, a PhD student at ICRAR and The University of Western Australia. “It’s as if the moving atmosphere has been removed and doesn’t exist. It allows us to send highly-stable laser signals through the atmosphere while retaining the quality of the original signal,” he added. In 2017, a similar optical fibre-based synchronisation distribution system designed by the team was selected for SKA-Mid dishes in South Africa. The long distances between the SKA antennas mean radio waves from the sky reach each antenna at different times. To achieve the performance demanded by the SKA science cases, the signals must be

aligned with extreme precision so they can be successfully combined by the SKA’s supercomputers. It has now led to the world’s most precise method for comparing the flow of time between two separate locations using a laser system transmitted through the atmosphere. ICRAR-UWA senior researcher Dr Sascha Schediwy said the technology’s precise measurements also have practical uses in earth science and geophysics. “This technology could improve satellite-based studies of how the water table changes over time, or to look for ore deposits underground,” Dr Schediwy said. There are further potential benefits for optical communications, an emerging field that uses light to carry information. Optical communications can securely transmit data between satellites and Earth with much higher data rates than current radio communications. “Our technology could help us increase the data rate from satellites to ground by orders of magnitude,” Dr Schediwy said. “The next generation of big data-gathering satellites would be able to get critical information to the ground faster.” Above: Members of the project team standing in front of a telescope dome located at the CNES campus in Toulouse, containing one of the self-guiding optical terminals. Credit: ICRAR/UWA. Far Left: A schematic view of our point-to-point atmosphericstabilised optical link between two buildings at the CNES campus in Toulouse. Left: One of the self-guiding optical terminals on its telescope mount, and the phase-stabilisation Transmitter Module and Receiver Module. Credit: ICRAR/UWA.

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C O N TA C T | M A R C H 2 0 21


Articles inside

News from SKA pathfinder telescopes

13min
pages 27-32

Red sand in our shoes: The inspiring international story behind SKA-Low

22min
pages 8-13

SKA JOBS

2min
page 39

Cartoon corner

1min
pages 38-39

LOFAR community readies for sixth Data School

1min
page 37

East Asian SKA Science Workshop 2021

1min
page 37

Indo-French meeting for the promotion of advanced research, diversity and inclusion in multiwavelength astronomy

1min
page 36

Countdown to the 2021 SKA Science Conference

1min
page 36

Team SKA: Dr Anna Bonaldi

9min
pages 33-35

Life cycle of supermassive black hole revealed

2min
page 32

uGMRT probes stellar magnetospheres through study of stars with rare emission

2min
page 31

100M Radio Telescope Effelsberg: The first 50 years

2min
page 30

ASKAP continues countdown to full survey science

1min
page 29

ASKAP team wins prestigious American science prize

1min
page 28

Outcomes of MeerKAT call for observing proposals

1min
page 28

Cosmic beasts and where to find them

1min
page 27

When the brain meets the stars: Knowledge made visible to the naked eye

4min
pages 25-26

CARTA - A new astronomy visualisation tool for the era of Big Data

3min
page 24

In conversation: Dr Catherine Cesarsky and Prof. Philip Diamond

7min
pages 22-23

First Council meeting marks birth of SKAO

1min
page 21

Review season begins as preparations ramp up for procurement

2min
page 20

2 minutes with Hao Qiu - SKAO Postdoctoral Fellow

2min
page 20

Featured image - The eagle has landed: radio telescopes front and centre for the show

2min
pages 18-19

Let's talk about... SETI

11min
pages 14-17

The Spanish SRC prototype: Supporting the community beyond radio astronomy

2min
page 7

Europe's radio and optical astronomy communities team up in new EC-funded project

1min
page 6

Cambridge SKALA antenna becomes part of South Pole observatory

1min
page 5

SKA sychronisation technology leads to world's most stable laser transmission

1min
page 4

Foreword by Prof. Philip Diamond

2min
page 3

The cover

1min
page 1
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