Radio Astronomy at Dover Heights

Jessica Chapman, CSIRO

Introduction

Rodney Reserve, on the cliff tops at Dover Heights in the eastern suburbs of Sydney, was one of the most remarkable and important astronomical sites in New South Wales.

In the later years of the second world war the Dover Heights site was used by the Australian Army as a coastal defence radar station. The site was also used by scientists from the CSIRO Division of Radiophysics (at that time known as the CSIR) for experimental radar work. After the war ended, the Division of Radiophysics developed the site as a field station for radio astronomy.

Radar station at Dover Heights
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
This photograph, taken in 1943, shows a panoramic view of the cliff tops at Dover Heights, looking north towards the Sydney Heads. On the right of the image is the radar array used during WWII. This was installed on the top of a block house and operated at a frequency of 200 MHz.

In the mid-1940s almost nothing was known about radio waves from space. From 1946 to 1954 scientists and engineers from the CSIRO Division of Radiophysics built a range of radio telescopes at Dover Heights and developed new ways of collecting radio data. Many major discoveries were made at Dover Heights. These established Australia as a world leader in the emerging new science of radio astronomy.

The Dover Heights discoveries revolutionised space exploration and heralded a new era in astronomy. By looking at the radio waves emitted from objects in space, we can probe deeper and reveal the very distant universe. Since the first discoveries at Dover Heights, radio waves have been used to explore the entire cosmos, from the Sun and planets in our solar system, to stars and gas in our Galaxy, and beyond to other galaxies and the most distant reaches of the Universe.

Photo: Sunrise at Dover Heights
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
'It is difficult to comprehend the emotional impact of an observation which took us from a partially explicable solar system and galactic radio emission phenomena into the realms of phenomena with inexplicably high energy outputs, no matter where they were located. Neither of us ever approached such an emotional high again in out work.' Gordon Stanley, a member of the team that discovered radio waves from extragalactic objects.

Astronomers at Dover Heights

Some of the scientists and engineers who worked at Dover Heights included John Bolton, Bruce Slee, Gordon Stanley, Kevin Westfold and Dick McGee. They belonged to the radio astronomy group at the CSIRO Division of Radiophysics. Other people in this group worked at a number of field stations around New South Wales. The group was led by Joe Pawsey, while Taffy Bowen was the Chief of the Division.

Photo: Gordon Stanley
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
Gordon Stanley working in electrical equipment.
Photo: Bolton, Stanley & Pawsey
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
From left to right: John Bolton, Gordon Stanley and Joe Pawsey.
Photo: Bruce Slee, 1989
©CSIRO, (click on image for larger version)
Radio astronomer Bruce Slee in 1989, with a commemorative plaque at Dover Heights

Yagi Antennas at Dover Heights

Many astronomical observations at Dover Heights were carried out using Yagi antennas that were initially constructed using left over materials from the second world war. In 1946 the first simple Yagis were mounted on the roof of the WWII block house. As shown in the pictures below, successively more elaborate Yagi antennas were built and these were used to survey the sky for sources of radio emission.

Photo: A 2-element yagi antenna, built in 1947
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
This two-element Yagi array was erected on a blockhouse at Dover Heights in February 1947. Operating at 100 MHz, this was first used by Ruby Payne-Scott, Don Yablsey and John Bolton to study solar radio emission, and later by John Bolton, Gordon Stanley and Bruce Slee for an investigation into compact sources of radio emission. At the time of the photograph the antenna was being used for solar observations.
Photo:    An 8-element Yagi antenna,    built in 1951
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
This eight-element Yagi antenna was built in 1951. This array was later dismantled and the parts used to build the large 12-element antenna shown below.
Photo: A 12-element Yagi antenna, built in 1952
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
This 12-element Yagi antenna was used in 1952 to 1953 at Dover Heights to continue the survey for new radio sources at 100 MHz. Here is it seen looking south along the coast. This was the last of the Yagi antennas to be used at Dover Heights. By the end of the survey, the number of known sources had jumped from a mere handful to more than 100!

Sea Interferometry

Several of the Yagi antennas at Dover Heights were used to take radio observations using a special technique known as sea interferometry. In this technique, the antenna detects radio waves that come directly from a source in the sky. At the same time it detects other radio waves from the source that are reflected off the sea. The two sets of waves are combined and give an 'interference' pattern. The strength and size of the source can be measured from the intensity fluctuations recorded on the interference patterns. These were recorded on paper charts.

 

Diagram showing the principle of the    sea interferometer
© CSIRO (click on image to see a larger version)
This diagram illustrates the principle of the Sea Interferometer as used at Dover Heights.

Radio Waves from the Sun and Nebulae

The Sun was the first object observed with the radio telescopes at Dover Heights. Strong bursts of radio emission were received during times of sunspot activity.

© CSIRO
A chart recording obtained in 1947, showing an outburst of radio waves from the Sun at three different radio frequencies (200 MHz, 100 MHz and 60 MHz). Note the different arrival times of the signals at the Earth.

When the radio telescopes were pointed towards the sky they revealed areas of concentrated radio emission. Further investigations showed that the radio waves came from gas clouds in our Galaxy. One of the earliest detections was the radio emission from the supernova remnant known as the Crab Nebula.

Photo credit: NASA/CXC/SAO
An optical photograph of the Crab Nebula. This is the remains of a star that exploded in AD 1054. The Dover Heights observations showed that this nebula is also a strong radio source.

Radio waves from Galaxies

More than 110 sources of radio emission were discovered using the radio telescopes at Dover Heights. A wonderful and unexpected discovery was that many distant galaxies are hugely powerful sources of radio waves. We now know that in some galaxies the radio waves are generated by black holes that are hundreds of millions of times more massive than the Sun. The first extragalactic radio sources to be identified as galaxies were Virgo A, Centaurus A and Cygnus A, all millions of light-years away.

Diagram showing a chart recording of Cyg A
© CSIRO (click on image to see a larger version)
This photograph shows a sea interferometer chart recording of the strong extragalactic radio source, Cygnus A. This was observed at Dover Heights on 22 October 1948 using a four-element Yagi antenna operating at 200 MHz. From the interference fringes it was possible to calculate that the angular size of Cygnus A was less than eight arcminutes. Cygnus A was the first compact extragalactic radio source to be detected at Dover Heights. The observations had a huge impact on radio astronomy. The interference fringes from Cyg A seen here show unusual intensity fluctuations.

What is a radio galaxy?

Galaxies contain billions and billions of stars just like our sun. At night we can see the galaxy that we live in stretching across the sky - we call it the Milky Way. Many galaxies contain massive black holes at their centres, sometimes weighing billions of times more than our sun.

In some galaxies these black holes are sucking in the material around them, spinning it up fast and then squirting it away from the black hole at close to light speed, as a jet. These jets produce radio waves that radio telescopes like the one that was operating at Dover Heights can detect - galaxies such as these are called radio galaxies.

Images of the radio galaxie Centaurus A
Image credit: Steven Tingay
This picture is a montage using images from various sources, and shows one of the very first radio galaxies to be identified, right here at Dover Heights, a radio galaxy called Centaurus A (the name means that it is the brightest radio source in the constellation of Centaurus, the half man and half horse creature of Greek mythology).

On the left hand side is a complete image of the radio emission from the Centaurus A radio galaxy (made by the "Dish" at Parkes). The other images in the picture, moving from left to right, zoom in closer and closer to the black hole that lies at the centre of the radio galaxy. In the last images you can see the jet of material being produced from near the black hole.

The Hole-in-the-Ground Antenna

In 1951, the leading radio astronomers at Dover Heights, John Bolton, Gordon Stanley and Bruce Slee, wanted a more powerful instrument than the 12-Yagi array, but the CSIRO Division of Radiophysics could not supply the necessary funding. They therefore decided to build a new radio telescope themselves, using a novel design. With considerable ingenuity, they spent their lunchtimes, over a three-month period excavating a 21.9-m diameter dish-shaped hole in the sand a little to the north-west of the block house. The surface was consolidated with ash, metal strips from packing cases were laid across the surface to provide reflectivity, and a mast with a dipole was erected at the centre of the antenna in order to receive the reflected radio signals. This instrument was the second-largest radio telescope in the world at the time, and by using the rotation of the Earth and altering the positioning of the aerial mast it was possible to observe different regions of the sky.

After Bolton, Stanley and Slee demonstrated that the design concept worked, the `hole-in-the ground' antenna was extended, in 1953, to a diameter of 24.4 metres and the surface was coated with concrete and lined with wire mesh to provide a reflecting surface.

Photo: Construction work on the hole-in-the-ground antenna in 1953.
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
Construction work in February 1953 on the upgraded hole-in-the-ground antenna. South and North Head of Sydney Harbour can be seen in the background.
Photo: Gordon Stanley adjusting the antenna mast.
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
The hole-in-the ground antenna in 1953. In this photograph the position of the antenna mast is being adjusted.
Photo: Gordon Stanley checking the position of the aerial mast.
© CSIRO (click on image for larger versions)
Gordon Stanley is seen using a theodolite to pin-point the position of the antenna mast.

This radio telescope was used to survey the sky for radio sources, and for a detailed study of a strong radio source that was detected in the constellation of Sagittarius. The radio astronomers realised that this source (called Sagittarius A) was located at the very centre of our Galaxy! These observations gained further fame for Australia and Dover Heights when in 1958 the International Astronomical Union decided to adopt the position of Sagittarius A as the coordinate centre for the system of galactic `latitude' and `longitude' that is still used today by all astronomers.

Radio emission from the Galactic Centre
© CSIRO (click on image for larger version)
This diagram was obtained from observations taken with the Hole-in-the ground antenna in 1954. It shows contours of radio emission detected at a frequency of 400 MHz, in the region of the Galactic Centre. The strong source near the centre is Sgr A. Note that the position of Sgr A does not coincide with the centre of the coordinate reference frame at 360 degrees longitude and 0 degrees latitude. The coordinate frame was first determined by optical astronomers, but the Dover Heights investigations revealed the true position of the galactic centre. This new position was subsequently adopted by the International Astronomical Union and the reference frame for all astronomical observations of our Galaxy was adjusted to reflect this.

In 1954 the focus of the Division of Radiophysics shifted to the Fleurs field station, and the Dover Heights facility was closed down, bringing to an end a remarkable decade of scientific breakthroughs and achievement. More than any other field station, Dover Heights helped establish Australia's reputation as the world's leading nation in the emerging field of radio astronomy.

The Dover Heights Memorial

To celebrate the history and achievements of the Dover Heights site, the Australia Telescope National Facility, with support from the Waverley Council, has installed a scientific memorial at Rodney Reserve on the original site. This includes a full-size replica of the 8-element Yagi used in 1951 and a display panel with detailed information. The memorial was opened on 20 July 2003 by Her Excellency, Professor Marie Bashir, Governor of New South Wales. The opening ceremony was timed to coincide with a General Assembly meeting of the International Astronomical Union, and many distinguised radio astronomers from around the world attended.

Photo: Replica atenna at Dover Heights
Photo: Barnaby Norris (click on image for larger version)
A full size replica of the 8-element Yagi antenna that was used at Dover Heights during 1951 to 1952. The replica has been installed on the cliff top next to the original mount.
Photo: Professor Marie Bashir and Professor Ron Ekers at Dover Heights
Photo: David Smyth (click on image for larger version)
Professor Marie Bashir, Governor of New South Wales with an aide, and Professor Ron Ekers (ATNF) at the Dover Heights celebration in July 2003.

Further Reading 

Here are some references for further reading.

Bolton, J., 1982. Radio astronomy at Dover Heights. Proceedings of the Astronomical Society of Australia, 4, 349-358.

Orchiston, W., 2004. From the solar corona to clusters of galaxies: the radio astronomy of Bruce Slee. Publication of the Astronomical Society of Australia, 21, 23-71.

Orchiston, W., and Slee, B., 2002. Ingenuity and initiative in Australian radio astronomy: the Dover Heights 'hole-in-the-ground' antenna. Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage, 5, 21-34.

Pain, S., 2003. Two men and a wheelbarrow. New Scientist, 13 September: 50-51.

Slee, O.B., 1994. Some memories of the Dover Heights field station, 1946-1954. Australian Journal of Physics, 47, 517-534.

Stanley, G.J., 1994. Recollections of John G. Bolton at Dover Heights and Caltech. Australian Journal of Physics, 47, 507-516.

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