Keeping a telescopic eye on the Soviets
Publisher |
Physics World
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Physics
Science
Technology
Publication Date |
May 23, 2014
Episode Duration |
00:12:23
How Jodrell Bank Observatory became entangled in the Space Race
How Jodrell Bank Observatory became entangled in the Space Race

The podcast provides a history of Jodrell Bank, explaining how the observatory was created in 1945 using the radar technologies and expertise developed during the Second World War. The observatory was founded by Bernard Lovell, whose primary goal was to detect cosmic rays, though this initial aim never come to pass. Jodrell Bank’s associate director Tim O’Brien looks back on these early years and how the enthusiasm of the first Jodrell astronomers led to them to commission what would be the world’s largest radio telescope – a giant steerable dish, 250 feet in diameter, now named the Lovell Telescope.

Having moved away from the military applications of radar technology to refocus on fundamental science, Lovell and his colleagues were soon drawn back in as the Cold War escalated. In 1957 the British government asked whether Jodrell Bank’s new giant radio dish could be used to track the rocket used to launch Sputnik I, the world’s first artificial satellite. The fear at the time was that the Soviets would use the same rocket technology to fire an intercontinental ballistic missile at the West. For a brief period in the early 1960s, Jodrell Bank was placed on stand-by to look out for such a dire eventuality, given that it was the only location in the West that could accurately track the missile.

Photograph of Bernard Lovell in the control room at Jodrell Bank Observatory"When it was constructed in the 1950s, the telescope in this image (now named the Lovell Telescope) was the largest radio telescope in the world – a giant steerable dish some 250 feet in diameter. It played a role in tracking several major missions during the Space Race. (Courtesy: Jodrell Bank Observatory)"Bernard Lovell (right) in the control room at Jodrell Bank Observatory.

Dacey also meets a former director of Jodrell Bank, Francis Graham-Smith, who describes how the observatory teamed up with the Daily Express newspaper in 1966 as the two organizations collaborated to interpret a mysterious signal being beamed back to Earth by the Soviet mission Lunar 9. To find out how this unlikely pairing came about and what it discovered, give the podcast a listen.

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