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Chapter I

General Information

(Last updated: 2004.02.12)    

Department of Radio Astronomy – Location, Addresses, Telephones

Department of Radio Astronomy, known also as the Torun Radio Astronomy Observatory (TRAO), constitutes one of two chairs in the Torun Centre for Astronomy at the Faculty of Physics, Astronomy and Informatics of the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun and is located near Piwnice village, some 12 km North of Toruń township.

Geographical and Geodetic Coordinates

During November 2000 the EVN (European VLBI Network) carried out a geodetic experiment at 5 GHz which led to accurate determination of positions of a few radio telescopes, among them the Torun antenna (P. Charlot et al., 2001, ITRF2000 Positions of Non-geodetic Telescopes in the European VLBI Network, Proc. 15th Working Meeting on European VLBI for Geodesy and Astrometry, 194–200). Here are the RT32 position data:

Equatorial component at λ = 0° x 3638558.51 m
Equatorial component at λ = 90°E y 1221969.72 m
Polar component z 5077036.76 m
Equatorial component: √{x2+y2} r3838270.19 m
Length of radius vector: √{x2+y2+z2} R 6364638.27 m
Height above the ellipsoid h 133.61 m
Geographical longitude: arctan2(y,x) λ 18.56406° = 18°33'50.6"
Geodetic latitude φ 53.09546° = 53°05'43.7"
Geocentric latitude: arctan(z/r) φ' 52.91050° = 52°54'37.8"
The rectangular coordinates above are referred to the IERS Terrestrial Reference Frame, ITRF2000 and are accurate to about ±5 cm. The position correspond to the crossing point of the telescope two axes: the azimuth and elevation axes. The geodetic coordinates (φ and h) were calculated assuming the GRS80 ellipsoid recommended by the IERS: semimajor axis of 6378137 m and flattening of 1/298.257222101 (McCarthy, 1996, IERS Conventions).

Addresses and Telephones

Department of Radio Astronomy
Nicolaus Copernicus University
Piwnice
87-148 Łysomice, Poland
    or     Department of Radio Astronomy
Nicolaus Copernicus University
ul. Gagarina 11
87-100 Toruń, Poland


Tel.: (0-56) 61130NR Fax: (0-56) 6113009 Telex: 0552412 umk pl

 E-mail Addresses: User_name@astro.uni.torun.pl
 WWW home page


The table of private telephone numbers
has been removed from this electronic version


  Department of Radio Astronomy
NR
  Optical Observatory building
NR
Head: A. Kus
04
Centre Director: A. Kus
01
Secretary
03
Admin. Director: S. Krawczyk
07
Reception
10
Secretary
05
Library
14
Reception
50
Electronics laboratory
45
Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope  
24
Computing corner (for students)
48
Parabolic telescope
27
Hostel: room 119, 120, 122–124, 129  
70–75
Social room (3)
18
Mechanical workshop
43
J. Krełowski
60
Antenna control room
20
B. Rudak
RT32 – upper cabin
23
A. Strobel
59
RT32 – lower cabin
22
R. Tylenda
RT15
19
A. Woszczyk (head)
52



Radio Astronomy at the Nicolaus Copernicus University

Scientific staff, which in 1945 organised astronomical observatory at the Nicolaus Copernicus University hailed from Astronomical Observatory of Stefan Batory University in Vilnius (in 1939 Lithuanian government has closed the University). A village Piwnice was chosen for the site of the optical observatory. It is located about 12 km North of Torun. Here, in a close neighbourhood of the optical observatory, a radio astronomical observatory has been built in 1973. Radio astronomical works, however, started as early as 1955. Further developments are summarised in the table below.


Milestones in the history of Torun radio astronomy

1958.02.06  First observations of an active Sun were registered at the frequency (ν) of 127 MHz with an antenna having a reflector in the form of a paraboloidal cylinder
1958.10.29 First observations of a quiet Sun with a paraboloidal dish (d = 12 m; ν = 127 MHz). This date marks the beginning of regular solar patrol observations
1960.08 Beginning of partol observations of the Sun with an interferometer
1961.05-06 Observations of the Tau A occulted by the solar corona (ν = 32,5 MHz; three antenna interferometer, 1400 m wide)
1965.05 Group of Radio Astronomy established within the Chair of Astrophysics and Stellar Astronomy
1973.04.19 Launch of a radio spectrograph on board the ,,Interkosmos-Kopernik 500" satellite
1973.09 A building for the Group of Radio Astronomy completed
1976.10 Construction (started in the Spring of 1976) of the 15 m diameter parabolic radio telescope completed
1978.09 First test observations with the 15 m radio telescope
1980.01.01 Chair of Radio Astronomy established
1981.06.29 First successful observations with the VLBI technique (MkIIc terminal)
1983 Initial proposal of the 32 m paraboloidal antenna for VLBI
1986-88 Completion of initial and final design of the 32 m antenna, and start of construction works
1991.10.16 Erection of the 32 m antenna begun
1994.10.22 Construction of the 32 m antenna completed
1995.04. First transit observations with the new antenna at 5 GHz
1995.09.14 First tracking with the new antenna
1996.04.17 First successful VLBI experiment with the new antenna and the Penny+Giles (MkIII) terminal
1996.06-07 First observations of pulsars and spectral observations

The parabolic cylinder was the first radio astronomical instrument built in the observatory. It allowed to record radio emission of the active Sun on February 6, 1958, unfortunately only a month later it collapsed under the weight of icing. The enthusiastic radio astronomers of those years have built a new telescope yet in the same year. This time it was a stearable paraboloid of revolution, 12 m in diameter. It was employed for solar observations at 127 MHz since September 1958. So initiated observations at this wavelength (2,36 m) were later continued for many years in a routine manner, although other antennas were used at different periods of time (see e.g. Gawrońska et al., 1994). In October 1960 a low-resolution interferometer consisting of a pair of cylindrical antennas separated by 10 λ (23,6 m) took over the solar monitoring. In 1972 these antennas were replaced by antennas of standard gain with a simpler, flat reflector. The observations at 127 MHz on 15 February 1961 were supplemented with similar interferometric (baseline 10 λ) observations at 327 MHz.

Another fruitful program led by the Torun radio astronomers concerned occultations of a few radio sources during their apparent passage behind the solar corona. For the purpose a three antenna interferometer has been built with the longest baseline equal to 1400 m, that operated at 32.5 MHz since May 1961.

Later, the astronomers have built also a broad-band (100 – 150 MHz) interferometer for research of active centers on the face of the Sun, a solar spectrograph for the range 25 – 200 MHz with a log-periodic antenna, and a system for circumpolar aperture synthesis at 43 MHz.

In these early years the University astronomers closely cooperated with scientists of the Polish Academy of Sciences. This friendly collaboration in addition to the above mentioned endevours resulted also in scientific equipment (0.6 – 6 MHz spectrograph) for Kopernik 500 sputnik (launched on April 19, 1973), proposal and co-ordination of project for 15 m radio telescope (completed in 1977), and a small stearable parabolic telescope for solar observations at 2,8 GHz.

Of the above mentioned old radio astronomical instrumentation only the 127 MHz solar interferometer is used till this day. It is situated, as in the beginning, on the precincts of the optical observatory. There one can still see skeleton of the 12 m paraboloid and remnants of the 327 MHz interferometer.

The 15 m telescope, dedicated primarily to VLBI in cooperation with western observatories, has been occasionally used for other observations. Noteworthy is a project of monitoring of a few strong pulsars, which however was too time-consuming and consequently has been suspended.

Once the 15 m telescope became available for observations, it opened chances for Polish radio astronomers to join the team of a few world leading institutions using the most advanced technique of VLBI. The barriers to overcome at this stage were the terminal (Mark II then), which had to be built in the observatory, and a purchase of a rubidium frequency standard required by the technique. A documentation received from England, upon agreement with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (Green Bank, USA), allowed the terminal to be successfully assembled and tested solely by the staff of the TRAO. In 1981 the first interference fringes were obtained with the Bonn correlator from observations carried out on Torun-Effelsberg (FRG) baseline (the Westerbork station in the Netherlands also participated in this test experiment).

Soon, the Torun station used to take part in practically all European, and from time to time in intercontinental, VLBI observations on a regular basis. Typically it was four 7- to 14-day sessions a year.

On August 10, 1982, three stations, Westerbork, Jodrell Bank (Great Britain) and Torun, observed for the first time in Europe at the wavelength of 49 cm (until then there were not enough stations equipped with these receivers). After correlation in Bonn, the first map (of the 3C286 radio source) has been generated in Torun. Of the many observations, in which the Torun station participated, worth mentioning is the one called 'world radio array' — a global experiment performed in April 1984 at the wavelength of 18 cm, in which 18 stations participated (which means as many as 153 baselines) — the largest number of stations to date. Tha California-Torun baseline was one of the longest in the network.

The equipment of the 15 m radio telescope essential for the VLBI observations comprised of: rubidium frequency standard, frequency synthesizers (which produced local oscillator signals), digital clock (plus a system of time synchronization based on the TV method), Mark II terminal (video converter, formatter and cassette video recorder) and a set of receivers for standard VLBI bands: 408, 610, 1420, 1660 and 5000 MHz. Considerable part of these devices has been built wholly at the TRAO.


File prepared on 12 Feb 2004.