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Science

China will relocate 9,000 people to build world's biggest radio telescope

More than 9,000 people in southwest China will need to leave their homes in order to make space for the world's largest radio telescope. Here's why.

Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST) will be completed in September

The Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical Telescope, or FAST, is the size of 20 Canadian football fields and has been hewed out of a mountain in the poor southwestern province of Guizhou. (FAST)

More than 9,000 people in southwest China will need to leave their homes in order to make space for the world's largest radio telescope.

Residents living within five kilometres of the Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST) being built in Guizhou province will need to relocate in order to create a "sound electromagnetic wave environment," a government officialtold China's state-run news agency Xinhua.

Devices such as cellphones, microwave ovens and garage door openers all generate radio waves that can be detected by a radio telescope and interfere with scientific measurements.

The telescope is expected to be completed in September.

Li Yuecheng, secretarygeneral of the Guizhou Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, said relocated residents will be resettled in two nearby counties by the end of September, and each will receive 12,000 yuan ($2,556) in compensation from the government. Ethnic minority households with housing difficulties will get an extra 10,000 yuan ($2,129).

Radio telescopes are designed to detect radio waves emitted by distant astronomical objects such as galaxies, supernovas, pulsars and quasars, providing information about their masses and how far away they are. Such signals are extremely weak, so many radio telescopes are enormous.

Someradio telescopes also do radar studies they bounce radio signals off objects such as asteroids and other planets in our solar system to detect the signal that comes back to Earth in order to generate an image.

FAST, which began construction in 2011, is managed by the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in partnership with the government ofGuizhouprovince. It's being funded by 1.2 billionyuan($260 million) from China's National Development and Reform Commission.

According to the official FAST website, the new telescope is similar to the Arecibo radio observatory in Puerto Rico, currently the world's largest single-dish radio telescope at 305 metres in diameter.

Unique landscape required

Such enormous, immovable single-dish radio telescopes need to be built inrare and unique landscape forms that are already large and dish-shaped, says Mark Halpern, a radio astronomer and astronomy professor at the University of British Columbia. That's why the telescope is being built in an area where people are now livingrather than a remote region.

In Canada,the much smaller andpointable Dominion Observatory in Penticton, B.C., which is just 26 metres in diameter, is surrounded by hills, and located in a nature preserve, far from people's homes.

"We can see a single cellphone on Mars, so a cellphone nearby is a bad thing," Halpern said.

Signs on the nearest highway to the observatory warn people they're in an electromagnetic protected zone and can't use a cellphone, he added. The nearest houses can't have microwave ovens or garage door openers.

Such rules would be hard to enforce if too many people live near the telescope, Halpern said, which is likely why China wants to move them.

The Algonquin Radio Observatory, a 46-metre dish telescope inPembroke, Ont., which is operated privately by ThothTechnology Inc., is 50 kilometres from the nearest building, says Brendan Quine, chief technical officer for the companyand an engineering professor at York University.

The facility bans cellphones, has no Wi-Fi, and keeps cars at a distance, as their sparkplugs could potentially produce signals that interferewith measurements of objects such as pulsars. Those are neutron stars that give off regular pulses of radio waves.

"We're looking at objects which might be right at the edge of the universe," Quine said. "Any local sources which are broadcasting at similar frequencies would just totally swamp that type of measure...So I understand why the Chinese are planning to move people five kilometres away from their antennas."

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story stated that the Dominion Observatory was the largest dish-shaped radio telescope in Canada. In fact, the Algonquin Radio Observatory is larger.
    Feb 16, 2016 3:57 PM ET