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This stamp shown above, which was an IPY release by Australia Post, has a wealth of information about Polar Astronomy. The telescope is the SPIREX telescope at the South Pole and the image behind is of organic molecules in space - an infrared image that resulted from data taken by this telescope when at the Pole. Professor Michael Burton wrote a paper which discusses this image! The base to lower right is Dome C, with the foreground building being the AASTINO observatory. All these activities actually took place a few years before IPY, but they reflect the endeavour to develop the science of astronomy in Antarctica, for which the PLATO observatory at Dome A is the IPY project.
To find out more, join Michael Burton in the Above The Poles Live Event.
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INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF ASTRONOMY: IYA
The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is a global effort initiated by the International Astronomical Union and UNESCO to help the citizens of the world rediscover their place in the Universe through the day- and night-time sky, and thereby engage a personal sense of wonder and discovery.
To help coordinate this huge global programme and to provide an important resource for the participating countries, the International Astronomical Union has established a central Secretariat and an IYA2009 website, www.astronomy2009.org, as the principal IYA2009 resource for public, professionals and media alike.
OBSERVATORIES
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Information can be found from the project webpage that includes data from several of the experiments, including webcams (see image below). Of course, being dark in the middle of the polar winter, it is difficult to see anything in the pictures from about March to September, but the simple fact that this observatory continues to operate, nearly a year after it was left unattended for the year, at the most remote location on the planet, is an amazing feat of itself.
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etc.
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ICECUBE
The IceCube Neutrino Detector is a neutrino telescope currently under construction at the South Pole in deep Antarctic ice. Thousands of spherical optical sensors are being deployed at depths between 1,450 and 2,450 meters in the ice. The main goal of the experiment is to detect high-energy neutrinos. The neutrinos are not detected themselves. Instead, the rare instance of a collision between a neutrino and an atom within the ice is used to deduce the kinematical parameters of the incoming neutrino. Current estimates predict the detection of about one thousand such events per day in the fully constructed IceCube detector. More information.
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The IceCube lab at the South Pole. The cables that carry the signals from the light sensors more than two kilometers below the surface enter through the cylinders at either end of the building.
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The inside of the hotwater drill building where a 2450 m deep, 60 cm wide hole is being melted to prepare to deploy light sensors.
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An overview of the drill camp. The large reel holds over 2.5 km of drill hose. To the right two cosmic ray detecting tanks for the surface IceTop array are in place.
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The light sensors inside an IceTop tank. After the water in the tanks has frozen, the tanks are made light tight and the snow is backed filled around the tanks.