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National
Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)
On
August 24,1989 Voyager 2 flew by Neptune, giving us our first real
look at this distant planet. Skimming a mere 3,000 miles above Neptune's
cloud tops, Voyager 2 sent back images of the planet that orbits
the Sun at an average distance of 3 billion miles. Even at the speed
of light (186,000 miles per second), it took four hours and six
minutes for Voyager's radio transmissions to reach Earth. And when
they arrived on Earth, those images were received and processed
by a most unusual antenna-the Very Large Array (VLA) radio telescope.
Although its powerful signal reception capabilities were trained
on the Voyager mission, normally the VLA observes far more distant
celestial objects, including many undetectable in the visible light
range. The VLA represents the latest generation of radio observatories-
radio interferometers, and according to Bob Havlen, head of observatory
services "The VLA is the premier instrument for radio astronomers
throughout the world."
Running the VLA is an incredibly complex control task. Nothing ever
stops. Twenty-seven antennas located on a continually revolving
and rotating Earth, in a moving Solar System, are aimed at moving
objects many light years away. To keep those objects in focus, each
antenna must be minutely adjusted every few milliseconds. Additionally,
every ten seconds, a radio "snapshot" of the sky is taken.
This requires compilation and analysis of massive amounts of data.
These tasks are far beyond the capabilities of human operators,
so the VLA was designed to be computer driven.
Specialized systems process the raw data from the 27 antennas, converting
it into a single image that can be further processed and enhanced
into a form usable by astronomers. Other computers run the actual
drive motors and electronic equipment that control the antennas.
Yet all of these systems must answer to the same master-a 32-bit
CLASSlC superminicomputer from MODCOMP, Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
"The MODCOMP computers are absolutely essential to the operation
of this array since they run it. One cannot conceive us running
such a complex instrument without computers," says Perley "They
are the on-line, real-time computers responsible for control of
the antennas, and the collection and recording of the data."
"To control the VLA, there are many real-time tasks in the
MODCOMPs, many of which must be executed with strict and severe
time constraints," says Kenneth Sowinski, who runs on-line
systems at Socorro. "They must run to completion in 10 or 20
milliseconds or when they are told to-not just anytime."
The success of the VLA has led scientists to pursue the next logical
step, a Very Long Base Line Array (VLBA) interferometer using the
same principles as the VLA, but linking antennas located around
the world. The experience of the VLA team in using powerful real-time
processors such as MODCOMP's CLASSIC system in combination with
specialized signal and image processing machines has laid the groundwork
for the VLBA design. The JPL-NRAO-MODCOMP partnership is successfully
forging ahead with ensuring present and future space exploration
and radio astronomical observations.
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