Australia and New Zealand announced a joint bid yesterday for a giant radio telescope project which will seek out the earliest traces of the universe in a search for intelligent life.
The Pacific neighbours said their joint $2.1 billion bid was one of two on the shortlist for the international Square Kilometre Array (SKA), a project which will use 4,000 telescopes as a single device to tap into deep space.
"The SKA project promises to be a top global science project of the 21st century, using one of the world's most powerful computers to explore fundamental questions in science," said New Zealand Economic Development Minister Gerry Brownlee.
The array, which will be able to see back to the formation of the first stars,was one of the world's most significant "mega-science" projects, said Mr Brownlee, who signed the formal agreement in Sydney yesterday.
Australia's Science Minister Kim Carr said the joint bid proposed erecting 4,000 antennas that would stretch 5,000km from Australia's west coast to New Zealand, and described the trans-Tasman involvement as "crucial".
A final decision on whether Australia and New Zealand or rival bidder South Africa will host the SKA will be made in 2012, and construction will take between six and eight years, the ministers said.
Australia has already outbid Argentina,China and the US to make the final two.
A global consortium involving more than 50 institutions from 19 countries was driving the SKA programme, and money for the project was expected to come from international partner governments, they added.
The SKA would be 10,000 times more powerful than current instruments and will try to determine whether there is intelligent life beyond Earth and what happened after the Big Bang.
Monday, August 24, 2009
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