The radio telescope also took a toll on local communities. Nine thousand people - each compensated roughly $1,800 (roughly Rs. 1.2 crores) - had to be uprooted to make room for the construction. The telescope is almost a mile in circumference and covers an area equivalent to 30 soccer pitches, embedded in a depression that acts as a natural noise shield.
But, to hear Chinese experts tell it, the radio telescope will be worth every yuan.
"As the world's largest single aperture telescope located at an extremely radio-quiet site, its scientific impact on astronomy will be extraordinary, and it will certainly revolutionize other areas of the natural sciences," the scientist spearheading the project, Nan Rendong, told the Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
Known as the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope, or FAST, the telescope claims the title of world's largest from the Arecibo Observatory, a 300-meter device in Puerto Rico. FAST is so large that, were the dish filled to the brim with merlot, it would hold five bottles of wine per person on the planet, a scientist boasted to the Guardian in February. Construction on the Chinese telescope began in 2011, though the delicate arrangement of 4,450 reflector panels meant slow progress - just 20 installations per day. Workers placed the last of the triangle-shaped panels on Sunday.
Radio telescopes may look quite a bit different than backyard telescopes pointed at the moon, but their operating principle is more or less the same. Instead of magnifying visible light, FAST channels and amplifies radiation in the form of radio waves.
FAST is, essentially, a giant radio dish. There is a direct relationship between size and sensitivity: The more space a dish covers, the weaker the signals it can detect. Signals are funneled into receivers and then boosted several orders of magnitude for analysis. Because the incoming signals are so weak, cellphone chatter can overwhelm the cosmic waves. (Hence the relocation of residents living near the dish in Guizhou province.)
"The bigger the telescope, the more radio waves it collects and the fainter objects it will be able to see," University of Manchester astrophysicist Tim O'Brien told the New Scientist.
With such a fine-tuned ear, FAST will listen for the radio emissions from gravitational waves, black holes and the blinking neutron stars known as pulsars. Even distant molecules, like amino acids, may be found with radio telescopes; the devices are able to identify specific molecules as though they had "fingerprints," according to Caltech astronomers, based on the way they tumble through space.
The telescope should be fully operational for scientists by September, and it will be capable of sensing radio waves from pulsars up to 1,000 light-years away.
And FAST will look for aliens. Earthlings, of course, have been leaking radio transmissions from our planet for about a hundred years, which means our detectable bubble is about 200 light-years across. Should there be extraterrestrial radio waves being transmitted within 1,000 light years, the South China Morning Post argued that the telescope might very well be the device that finds them.
"The telescope is of great significance for humans to explore the universe and extraterrestrial civilizations," said sci-fi author Liu Cixin (once described as China's answer to Arthur C. Clarke), whom Xinhua reported was on hand to witness FAST's completion.
FAST's completion comes at a time when China is expanding its cosmic ambitions. In 2015, China announced its intention to land a probe on the far side of the moon, a feat that has yet to be performed by any nation's space program.
The telescope should outclass anything else constructed for the next two decades, Chinese Academy of Sciences astronomer Zheng Xiaonian argued. For the initial few years, time on the machine will be allotted only to Chinese scientists, before opening up to international researchers later in the telescope's lifespan.
© 2016 The Washington Post
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