China launches remote sensing to monitor operation of FAST telescope


GUIYANG - Southwest China's Guizhou province has used remote sensing to monitor the operation of China's Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST), the world's largest single-dish radio telescope.
The provincial natural resources department said that remote sensing has been launched in the radio-quiet zone, to ensure the operation of FAST will not be affected by the electromagnetic environment.
The radio-quiet zone was set up around FAST with a perimeter of 30 kilometers, where the frequencies and radio power are strictly limited. The monitoring scope covers 15 towns in three Guizhou counties and two counties of neighboring Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.
Radio stations, communication facilities and high voltage substations scattered in the area will be monitored.
The monitoring will be conducted four times per year.
FAST will start formal operation and open to Chinese astronomers in 2019. It has discovered 44 new pulsars since its trial operation began in September 2016.
- Frozen persimmon dessert drives local economic growth in Hebei
- New law strengthens China's atomic energy oversight
- Pujiang forum highlights global science collaboration
- Western Qing Tombs reopen to public
- New energy buses account for 82.7 percent of public buses in China
- AI requires compassion, not just speed, historian warns