The US National Science Foundation has just announced it is going to begin decommissioning the famous Arecibo Observatory, the 1,000-meter-long, 900-ton radio telescope located in Puerto Rico. It’s a huge blow to the astronomy community that used Arecibo for 57 years to conduct an enormous amount of space and atmospheric research.
What happened: Arecibo has withstood decades of wear and tear by various major hurricanes and storms, including damage by Hurricane Maria in 2017 and a smattering of earthquakes in January. But in August, a support cable slipped out of its socket and caused a 100-meter-long tear in the dish. Engineers deemed the problem stable and reparable, but a second cable outright snapped on November 6. This new cable had been connected to the same tower as the previous one: after dealing with the extra weight on its own for several months, it finally broke.
Engineer evaluations of the damage found the telescope’s structure is “in danger of a catastrophic failure” and could collapse at any moment. The NSF (which oversees the telescope) decided trying to repair Arecibo would be too dangerous for construction workers and staff. Even if the repairs were successful, there is no way to guarantee long-term stability of the telescope from future problems.
Legacy cut short: For most of its life, Arecibo was the largest single-dish radio telescope in the world (a feat surpassed in 2016 with the completion of China’s Five hundred meter Aperture Spherical Telescope, or FAST). For decades, Arecibo was uniquely capable of studying the atmosphere and objects in space in ways no other instruments could, especially when it came to making radar observations of distant planets, moons, and near-Earth asteroids. Arecibo is one of the few facilities on the planet that can blast radar beams to objects in the solar system and successfully pick up a bounce back that could be used to ascertain the structure and movement of those objects.
Some of its most notable discoveries were finding evidence for the existence of neutron stars, directly imaging an asteroid for the first time in history, and detecting a pulsar that was home to the first exoplanets ever to be identified.
It also played a huge role in popularizing the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). IN 1974, scientists used Arecibo to fire off the Arecibo message, a 1,679 bit interstellar radio message directed toward globular star cluster M13 (21,000 light-years away) to communicate with any intelligent life that might be there.
What’s next: To be fair, Arecibo’s significance has waned in recent years with the rise of newer facilities, especially FAST. Its decommission will create a hole in radio astronomy, but many other instruments should be able to pick up where Arecibo left off. And the NSF’s decommissioning plan only extends to the 1,000-meter telescope. Other parts of the Observatory will remain intact, such as the LIDAR facility that’s important to studying space weather and magnetosphere interactions.
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