China October 28 unveiled Asia's biggest radio telescope to be used in collecting accurate data from satellites and space probes.
The 65 meter diameter telescope was unveiled at the foot of Sheshan Mountain in Shanghai.
The sprawling telescope with the size of about 10 basketball courts can
pick up eight different frequency bands and also track Earth
satellites, lunar exploration satellites and deep space probes.
The telescope will be used for Very Long
Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), a type of astronomical interferometry
used in radio astronomy, as it can collect accurate data and increase
its angular resolution during astronomical observation, state run Xinhua.
China's VLBI system is made up of four telescopes in the cities of Shanghai, Beijing, Kunming, Urumqi, respectively, as well as a data center in Shanghai.
Radio telescopes differ from optical ones in that they use radio
antennae to track and collect data from satellites and space probes.
The first radio antenna used to identify astronomical radio sources was built by American radio engineer Karl Guthe Jansky, an engineer with Bell Telephone Laboratories, in the early 1930s.
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