Fast Radio Bursts, GPUs, and the largest telescope in the Southern Hemisphere
Title: Fast Radio Bursts, GPUs, and the largest telescope in the Southern Hemisphere
Speaker: Dr. Chris Flynn(Swinburne University of Technology Hawthorn, Australia)
Location: Lecture Hall, 3rd floor
Time: July 20th (Thursday) 15:00
Abstract:
The UTMOST project is the Swinburne University / University of Sydney / ANU upgrade of the Molonglo Radio Synthesis Telescope, the largest in the Southern Hemisphere. By installing new receivers and a bank of GPUs - aka video games machines - we have increased the the bandwidth by a factor of ~5, the field of view by a factor of ~4, and given it much higher time and spectral resolution -- all in order to find Fast Radio Bursts. FRBs are bright, very short (few ms) bursts at radio wavelengths, known to be of celestial origin, but otherwise quite mysterious. If they are at cosmological distances, as seems likely, they will allow us to probe the Intergalactic Medium in completely new ways, quite apart from the puzzle over what they are. To date, no FRB has been seen at other than radio wavelengths, and finding a host galaxy for an FRB remains a major challenge, to which UTMOST could be the key. I will report on the commissioning which is ongoing and science operations which are well underway, with timing of over 300 pulsars weekly and our first Fast Radio Burst discoveries.
附件下载:
Speaker:9:30am, August 01th, Tuesday
Time:Yan Gong (Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:9:30 am July 27th (Thursday)
Time:Junhao Liu (East Asian Observatory)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:Wednesday, July 26th 3:00pm
Time:Dr. Pinghui Huang (黄平辉)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:7月14日,星期五,上午10点
Time:闫大海(云南大学)
Location:1715
Speaker:3:00 pm July 13th (Thursday)
Time:Shuang Zhou (University of Nottingham)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor
Speaker:1:30 pm July 6th (Thursday)
Time:Prof. Wen-Ping Chen (National Central University)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor