4.15.2009

the very large array

the drive there is relaxing and the conversation is upbeat, with expanse of the plains of san agustin stretching out before us. we have recently shed our winter coats in favour of our summer skin. life is good.

my mind wanders on the drive. i can't help but think about the countless super-facilities that have existed out here in the desert. the manhattan project, area 51, and of course, the very large array. perhaps this is where the american government wants to keep all the physicists...

about 30 minutes outside of socorro we see a mountaintop glimmer. being an astronomer, sean immediately knows what it is: the magdelena ridge observatory, currently under construction. more physicists for the desert! next we pass through a very out-of-place forest which removes me from my daydreaming. runoff from the surrounding mountains undoubtedly keep this forest alive: the stifling heat of the desert is weathered by the bitter cold of winter for the life here. another desert contrast added to the list.

eventually we pass a narrowing point of sorts, and the plains open up in front of us, revealing the VLA in the distance. like a desert mirage, they exist only as wavy-images, the light refracting through the hot air wafting up from the ground, mere speckles in the distance. yet we know better. these are no ordinary speckles, and there is an oasis where that mirage lies. the trickery of the coyote will have to wait for another day.

turning off highway 60, we enter the national radio astronomy observatory (nrao) site. we pass over the train tracks used to move the individual telescope dishes, catching our first postcard-glimpse of the array, shown to the left. note that each of these dishes is 25m in diameter! the train tracks are not merely for postcards though; that is how the antennae are moved from place to place. by putting the antennae in different geometric patterns and factoring in the motion of the earth as it spins on its axis throughout the day, different resolutions and observing capabilities are possible.

after pulling into the main parking lot (which was eerily empty), we find our way into bob's office, one of sean's old climbin' buddies and an employee at the VLA. as far as i could tell, bob was also a post-office box service for sean, as he had a trunk full of thunderbirds toys ordered from the UK for sean to bring back to his young son, and a digital-SLR camera he had been holding for sean. toys for everyone! bob is much thinner than santa though. plus he knows way more than santa about the VLA. this is important as bob is to be our guide on this fair day.

as we make our way across the compound the dry desert air wisps playfully in front of me, gently throwing up dust, as if to simply remind us of it's presence. the desert never lets you forget where you are. with any luck though, it will tolerate our presence for the day.

moving further, the proverbial kid-in-a-candy-shop moment begins for me. it's really something else when a textbook, something that seems so foreign and abstract lying amongst the ivory towers, comes alive in front of your eyes in Dust Bowl XXVI. heading towards one of the large dishes we pass a dusty graveyard, containing a maligned melange of broken-down telescopes, busted radiators, and surplus army equipment that never found any use here either.

lady luck is with us today, as bob informs us one of the dishes is smack in the middle of an equipment retrofitting and is non-operational. this means we can walk right into the heart of the machine. donning our incredibly dorky orange hard-hats, we approach the dish. it towers over me like a massive monument, one that will leave a footprint for the remainder of civilization. in this year, the 400th anniversary of galileo first using a telescope to expand the vision of humanity into the heavens, i stand before the device that completely changed the way we look at the heavens.

climbing the industrially-inclined metal steps winding up the base of the antenna, we encounter a strange looking box with a multitude of brass fittings, pneumatic tubes and electrical wires coming out. this is the cryogenic cooling system, patiently awaiting its return to duty as its larger-than-life master undergoes a makeover. i am told the cooler temperatures reduce the amount of radio interference the dish will detect and generate. this is particularly important as the typical radio detection is tens to hundreds of times fainter than a typical cell-phone signal.

leaving the cold sentry to its duty, we continue up the stairway, passing beneath the grease-tinged dish moving mechanism, eventually reaching the electronics room. i am utterly surprised. when seeing an image of one of these dishes, one never imagines they contain full rooms within the base-structure, chock-full of ultra-specialized electronics. the scale of this thing is just incredible.

the tour comes to a peak when we climb up into to the dish itself. i can't explain why this is such an exciting affair, but it is. perhaps it is the novelty of it; perhaps it is that we are bathing in the radio waves of some far-off land; or perhaps it is simply the amazing photo-op we know we are about to get. nevertheless, i am fortunate enough to have a well-connected and very well-liked supervisor to catalyze something like this. walking around like little boys first discovering a hidden tree-fort, we check out our new perch from every possible angle and frantically take pictures like desperate tourists atop the eiffel tower. my flip-flops don't hold up very well on the slippery slope, but i still manage to get up the edge of the dish and experience something i will likely never forget: a vista of the entire array with the beautiful new-mexico desert as a backdrop, standing inside one of the dishes!

leaving our lookout, we come back to earth to witness a giant in slumber. one of the antennae is in the repair hanger, which is used for longer-term upgrades and repairs. again, it's the scale of the thing that makes my jaw drop. next to it lies the mule that the giant relies on, a huge, diesel powered, specialized machine used to move the antennae along the train tracks. shown to the right is the machine (orange thingy), next to the massive hanger. note the size of the door in the lower left corner!

next on the tour is the backup electrical generator. bob leads us into a cramped building dominated by two massive diesel engines. when the VLA experiences brown or blackouts (which it apparently does often), these bad-boys can power the entire facility for over a day with the fuel reserves they have on site. quite intimidating.

the final stop on the tour brings us into the control room and surrounding rooms. sean is of course treated like royalty once we enter, one of the benefits he gets for building a supercomputer for the VLA. this allows us to explore a nefarious web of broken-down computers that entangles the facility, gently mixed in with their much, much more advanced descendants. in fact, the first thing we see is a room full of banks of old computers with dials and switches that made me feel like i was in an apollo capsule. it takes every ounce of will-power to not start flipping random switches and taking off panels to look inside; the past is right before me and my curiosity grows into a swell. musing aloud, i discuss the possibility of turning the room of computers into an mp3 player. some mild defensiveness creeps into our guide's voice, my cue to stop. these old computers are what made the radio astronomy buzz and whir back in the 80's. without them, many great science projects would not have been completed. of course, the dinosaurs once ruled the earth, a fact that did not save them from extinction.

the contrast is enhanced even further when we are shown the new clean room, destined to house the WIDAR corellator, the previously referenced supercomputer DRAO is building for the VLA. sterile and brightly lit like an operating theatre, a man greets us at the door in full scrubs, booties and a hair-net. my imagination yearns to see an alien through the door, perhaps with 5-10 more people in scrubs surrounding it, running any number of diagnostic tests, dissecting every part of the thing. but my imagination is disappointed, as it usually is. sean seems to know this man though, so if there are any aliens, sean will eventually let the secret slip. the "disappointing" reality is still pretty cool, as racks and racks of equipment are already being installed in the clean room, and that's without the actual computer itself being there yet!

as the desert heat begins to get to sean and i, our tour peters out with a stop at the gift shop where we pick up trinkets and pieces of paper verifying our visit to this grand facility. the laziness that begins to take hold translates into sitting around in bob's office drinking warm, acidic diet grapefruit soda. mmmm....

next up, rock climbing in the desert.

3.20.2009

on the edge of chaos...

this is one of the coolest neuroscience articles i have read in a while...

the human brain is on the edge of chaos

and this one on schizophrenia...

blocked enzyme reverses schizophrenia-like symptoms

3.19.2009

impressions of new mexico

leaving the pressurized cabin of the canadair regional jet into the terminal of the albequerque airport, i immediately noticed something different about the air. sure it was hygenic, ventilation system air, but it was naturally warm. hopping into a rental car and hitting interstate 25 south this thought popped into my head again and again. it was very noticable outside, with the air being saturated with the various smells of spring. it's almost as if i was put into a coma and awoke in penticton in june.

driving that highway was fairly uneventful and uninteresting as it was dark and i was tired. the most immediate thing one might notice though is the brightness of the stars. once we had left the albequerque area the sky lit up with a brilliance i have not seen in a long time. god's gift to the desert i suppose.

arriving into socorro at 1am, thoughts had shifted from spring-time air to food. the wonderfully romantic symphony of my frontal lobe was muted, being replaced by the dull thud of my brainstem beating me over the head with a steak. probably a rare steak, fleshy and bloody.

the steak beatings eventually brought us into a roadside diner. my initial reaction upon entering was a feeling of deja-vu. this was undoubtedly due to the diner's look of classic americana. in fact, every single horror movie, modern-day western, or drama set in the midwest could have been filmed in there. the next thing i noticed: 5 19-20 year olds covered in green body paint, celebrating their 1/64th irish heritage, waitresses wearing paisley-patterned aprons, and a gruff man sitting up front simply enjoying having a fu manchu and a cowboy hat. sean and i sat up at the counter drinking decaf coffee at 1am, listening to the drunken college kids, and discussing our favorite movies until we got tired enough to drag our feet down to the NRAO guest houses.

waking after a meagre 4.5 hours of sleep, sean and i trekked over to a posh coffee shop in downtown socorro. after ordering my americano, i peek out the window and notice a slightly unfit man booking it down the road, shortly followed by an even more unfit cop. the runner took a sharp turn into one of the businesses along the road: a hardware store. everyone went back to business-as-usual after that. a common occurrence i suppose.

after breakfast, we are travelling across the desert, through explosive test fields, up to 7000ft in altitude to visit the VLA. more on that later...

3.18.2009

more extremophiles!

I was perusing my daily science news feed and came across this super-cool article:

New Microorganisms Discovered In Earth's Stratosphere

Ya, that's right, life living up in the stratosphere! Apparently they are highly resistant to UV radiation. Apparently the scientists had done the experiment previously, but wanted to repeat it to ensure ground-based contamination was not the source of detections.

Now, if these little guys can live more than 20 km above the surface of the Earth with such extreme temperatures and radiation exposure, life is definitely possible on other planets.

Very cool.

3.17.2009

new mexico

Today is the first day of my trip to New Mexico to visit the Very Large Array, one of the largest radio telescope arrays in the world! The trip begins in a Timmy Ho's in Vancouver International, pauses for a brief interlude in Los Angeles, and finishes in the desert of New Mexico. From the stars of Hollywood North, to the stars of Hollywood, to the stars for the rest of humanity.

To be honest, I have no idea what to expect. No doubt I will be impressed as hell when I stand underneath one of the massive 25 metre-diameter dishes. I'm sure my sense of boyhood wonder will be awoken from its slumber, rub it's clear blue eyes and just stare. Like most things in life though, this is ephemeral, and the regular hue of melancholic ocean-blue will return to those eyes. For that moment, my mind will soar through the heavens, paying no heed to the rigid laws of physics that keep me where I am: on the ground but not grounded.

A bit of positivity is warranted though. After all, there's nothing like travelling through the stars to help lift your feet off the ground.

2.07.2009

the coolest video of all time

this is probably one of the coolest things i have ever seen in my life: the millenium simulation. apparently the simulation used over 10 billion particles, with a supercomputer chugging away for over a month on it.



the project's aim was to simulate the distribution of dark matter in the universe over a long time scale. this simulation tests theories of what the conditions of the universe immediately after the big bang were like. these results are then compared to modern-day observations.

important points:
  • a parsec, or pc, is equal to 3.26 light years or 30 000 billion kilometers!
  • a light year means that if one were travelling at the speed of light, ~30 000km/s, it would take an entire year to travel that distance. note that the velocity rockets need to escape the earth is only 11km/s, 0.036% the speed of light!
  • a megaparsec, or Mpc, is one million parsecs, or approximately 3 million light years
  • a gigaparsec, or Gpc, is one billion parsecs, or appriximately 3 billion light years
  • each point of light in the video essentially represents an entire galaxy!

notice how the structure seems to repeat itself as the view zooms in? this is typical of a fractal.

of course the video wouldn't be complete without the pink floyd soundtrack. classic.

2.06.2009

News that is actually of interest

Some interesting news stories I read recently:

A new "super-Earth" has been discovered. (Technically referred to as an exoplanet)

Van Gogh has left his mark among the heavens.

Crazy mind-blowing: the whole universe is a hologram (supposedly).

That is all.

2.03.2009

mars at your fingertips

Check this out: NASA and Google have teamed up to make a Mars mode in Google Earth. Sweeeeet.

I will certainly be giving it a test run tonight.

1.30.2009

take that eddington

first check out the required reading.

i remember learning about extremophiles (literally meaning extreme-lovers), ancient organisms that survive in very extreme environments, adapting to crazy things such as underwater sulphuric outflows, extremely saline-rich waters, Antarctic temperatures, etc. they fascinated me because of their ability to survive in such ridiculously extreme situations. although still carbon-based, they also expanded the definition of life.

it is in this same spirit of extremism that i find these ultra-massive stars so fascinating. these stars are the ones your grandfather told you bedtime stories about: spewing out ultra-hot plasma at velocities on the order of thousands of metres per second, erupting in supernovae near the end of their lives, and spending there (assumed) final days as exotic stellar objects such as neutron stars, pulsars or black holes. studying these types of objects usually result in some sort of modification or restructuring of the laws of physics, as these extreme-etoiles are usually at the limit of our understanding of the universe.

1.27.2009

a silly little straw

It's amazing how long we can spend building walls. The Great Wall of China; The Berlin Wall; Fortress America; these are all wondrous examples of man keeping man out. None are more malicious and destructive than the wall protecting the every-day man however. It is this wall that truly hinders humanity from fulfilling it's true potential. Food and medicine flow are not hindered by this wall, but love and affection are. Perhaps they are not so different.

Yet, despite this pessimism I hold, it never ceases to amaze me how easily these walls will tumble if one pushes it at the right spot. Just this very evening, the simple act of listening to a song entangled in a mess of old emotional strings tore my walls down in an instant, affording me an excellent viewpoint.

1.07.2009

When history beckons you onward, what do you do?

My dilemma: I'm pretty sure I was born to be a doctor. Everything about my personality points me in that direction. I am passionate, my reflex to help people in need is as strong as ever, I enjoy solving problems, my primary source of motivation comes from people, I can relate to people from nearly every walk of life, and all of my friends and family repeatedly tell me what a great doctor I would make (to further add to the emotional complication of it all).

Yet here I am, age 24, holder of a newly minted B.Sc. in Biology/Psychology and I am happily toiling away on my second degree, an B.Sc. in Astronomy/Physics. It's not that I think I would want to do research for the rest of my life. Really, I don't think I'm cut from that cloth. However, astronomy is in the middle of a fantastic golden age; one that is certainly unprecedented and perhaps only even touched by the great astronomers of the Enlightenment and the philosophical and scientific golden age of ancient Persia. What a time to be alive! All of the subject matter simply fascinates me and gives me that "wow" feeling. I am addicted to it.

Yet the constant, nagging questions persist. Do I spend a few more years of my life exploring the universe? Won't that waste some of my precious professional development years? But is it wasted time if I am truly enjoying myself? If I love it so much, why do I not enjoy the research as much as the learning?

The key is to be confident in my direction, which is to become a doctor. Perhaps I will make a detour through the cosmos on the way though. That might be nice. If I am presented with an opportunity to be a part of the Golden Age of Astronomy, should I not take it? Most people toil through their lives, never becoming a part of something like that.

"Not all those who wander are lost." - JRR Tolkien

If I had a quarter for every time I have had to tell my self that. Here's to wandering.