Frank Drake and the 12-ft, 5-ft, and 3-ft Telescopes
In 1962, Dr Frank Drake in Green Bank became interested in experiments happening in telescope and receiver designs for detecting millimeter wavelengths, a shorter form of radio waves that is closer to infrared radiation. With them, he hoped to pursue observations of moons, comets, and the planets in our Solar System from the Observatory in Green Bank.
The old 12-foot telescope, originally used a receiver-testing telescope for the Tatel Telescope, was repurposed as a millimeter-wave telescope. Millimeter waves are higher-frequency radio waves and require a near-mirrored dish surface to reflect the smaller waves accurately into receivers. The 12-foot’s surface was coated in gold to improve its smoothness. The dish was taken off of its control building and erected on a modified surplus radar mount behind the Janksy Lab. A 3-foot, gold-coated telescope was built to design and test new receivers for it.
Successful observations with these small millimeter-wave gathering telescopes convinced the National Science Foundation to budget construction of a 36-foot millimeter-wave telescope on the 6,000-foot high, dry site of Kitt Peak, Arizona. The dryness of Arizona’s skies is critical to millimeter-wave observations, because water vapor is a millimeter-wave static signal.
Later, Drake arranged for a 5-foot telescope to be erected on the old 12-foot’s small control building. Its pointing could be remotely controlled from this building or by closed-circuit television from the more climate-controlled Jansky Lab.
With the 5-foot telescope, Drake studied the Sun’s changing atmosphere, the temperatures on the Moon, and the clouds of Jupiter and Venus. He found puzzling temperatures on Venus that would later be explained as a runaway greenhouse effect, also intensity fluctuations of Jupiter that Drake proposed as evidence of Van Allen-type belts. Both of his theories would be proven correct. This little telescope also told astronomers that the dark maria on the Moon are colder than the highlands.
Calibrating Antennas
The radio signals we pick up from objects in the Universe are a billionth of a billionth the strength of a cellphone signal. This is one of the reasons why our telescopes are so very large. However, a large collecting area is not enough to make good interpretations of these data.
Astronomers need to know how much of their astronomical data has been contaminated by radio waves given off by air molecules, the telescope’s own electronics, and other sources of interference.
When the Green Bank, West Virginia site was first purchased in 1957, large telescopes were still being planned, and the first would not come into operation until 1959. The handful of astronomers on staff worked with the engineers and machinists to construct calibration antennas to measure the site’s atmospheric and manmade radio environments.
These investigations would help astronomers and engineers design and plan for the most efficient receivers best suited to the large telescopes that now dominate the Green Bank site.
Corner Reflector Interferometer
Frank Drake built a corner reflector interferometer from surplus telephone poles and wire mesh. This antenna had three planes of mesh joined at 90 degrees to each other to form a pyramid-like corner in the center. When aimed at a source (for Drake, it was Jupiter), the radio waves hit one side, bounced 90 degrees to the other side, and then bounced 90 degrees to come right back out to a receiver.
Drake’s radio measurements for Jupiter were consistent with those from more sophisticated antennas, and he soon abandoned the device; however, his corner reflector interferometer helped him discover a high level of radio interference from vehicles and other electronics that the Observatory would need to tackle.
A Mini-Tatel
In 1958, before new receivers were used on the 85-foot Tatel Telescope, they were tested on a scaled-down 12-foot dish antenna. This little telescope had its own 9-foot square control building a few acres away from the Tatel. After a period of testing and acceptance on the 12-foot, a new receiver would graduate for use on the Tatel.
By 1962, the 12-foot test telescope was repurposed to try a new method of radio astronomy called millimeter-wave astronomy.
Little Big Horn
A Calibration Horn Antenna, nicknamed the “Little Big Horn,” was built by John Findlay in Green Bank in 1959 at the same time that our first large telescope, the 85-foot dish Tatel, came online.
As its name implies, the 120-foot long horn antenna was used to gather data that could be used to compare with observations made by the big dish telescopes. In particular, this horn measured the intensity of radio waves coming from the sky’s strongest non-solar radio source, Cassiopeia A.
The Calibration Horn was built on a 30-degree hillside in order for it to aim at this source as it rose up the sky. For 50 minutes every day, radio waves from Cas A would pour into the 13-foot x 17.5-foot opening of this horn and be tapered to the 3-inch x 6-inch feed to enter the L-band (21-cm wavelength tuned) receiver. A chart recorder kept record of the quality of the signal.
The Calibration Horn measured a total power output for Cas A, and thus provided astronomers with a standard reference point on the sky against which they could measure other hydrogen sources.
The Sugar Scoop
A 4-foot parabolic horn reflector antenna, which received radiation on a wavelength of 3 cm, stuck out of the side of the Nutbin, research lab. It was called the “Sugar Scoop,” and it helped astronomers gather information about man-made radio interference on the site.
20-foot
In 1961, a 20-foot parabolic antenna was installed at the Beard House, an existing farmhouse that served as our first office and laboratory on site in Green Bank. It was used to study 6-cm radio waves coming from water in the atmosphere, vapor clouds, and rain. The results of these investigations influenced the choice of suitable receiver frequencies for the 300-foot and 140-foot telescopes that were being built at the time.