Amazing to have this happening in our backyard in WA. Also have a second hand connection with my daughter helping to develop some of the Ai required to get through the sheer amount of data that will be generated.
SKA director-general Professor Phil Diamond said, when fully operational, the radio telescope will transmit a 10 terabit-per-second data feed to Perth, via 800km of fibre optic cable, which is roughly 10 times greater than any other science project has ever produced.
Brent in Qld said.. Amazing to have this happening in our backyard in WA. Also have a second hand connection with my daughter helping to develop some of the Ai required to get through the sheer amount of data that will be generated.
SKA director-general Professor Phil Diamond said, when fully operational, the radio telescope will transmit a 10 terabit-per-second data feed to Perth, via 800km of fibre optic cable, which is roughly 10 times greater than any other science project has ever produced.
Sorry Carantoc, but engineers have been making building sites flat for ages. We have laser guided scrapers and bulldozers now. Obviously you can't use a "level", you have to use a "straight" and lasers are good at that. 8cm over kM, not a problem.
And you don't even have to worry about the ground, just adjust the height of each tower.
It's a very international collaboration that appears to have full funding locked in. So it would be doubtful it will be mothballed or hamstrung. Currently estimated completion is 2028 but like the James Webb, I'm sure it will have a lengthy shake down. All in all, it has had far more than 30seconds of thought applied to it.