From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Mon Nov 06 2006 - 08:49:55 PST
World-class radio telescopes face closure
00:46 04 November 2006
NewScientist.com news service
Jeff Hecht
Two of the world's best-known radio observatories – the 305-metre Arecibo
dish in Puerto Rico and a widespread collection of telescopes called the
Very Long Baseline Array – face the budgetary axe.
Despite rising budgets, the astronomy division of the US National Science
Foundation realised it could not afford to continue operating all its
existing instruments while also building the new cutting-edge telescopes
requested by astronomers, division director Wayne Van Citters said at a
press conference on Friday.
So the agency commissioned a committee of leading astronomers headed by
Roger Blandford of California's Stanford Linear Accelerator Center to slash
$30 million from its annual operations budget, amounting to about a quarter
of the budget now spent on facilities. Their proposals cut across all of
astronomy, and Blandford told the press conference "they were all extremely
painful". But those in radio astronomy are likely to be the most
controversial.
The panel told the NSF it should shut down Arecibo and the VLBA by 2011 if
it cannot get other organisations to share their operating budgets of about
$8 million and $10 million, respectively.
http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn10449-worldclass-radio-telescopes-face-closure.html
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