SA contribution to achieving SKA milestone

31st August 2018 By: Rebecca Campbell - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

The South African Radio Astronomy Observatory (Sarao) recently announced that the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) Telescope Manager (TM) Critical Design Review (CDR) had been completed. (The TM is a system, not a person.) The SKA is an international project to build the world’s biggest radio telescope, to be cohosted by South Africa and Australia – with the addition of outstations in other countries during Phase 2 of the project.

The TM CDR was carried out by a consortium of nine institutions in seven countries, with Sarao making a significant contribution. Within the consortium, Sarao led the Telescope Manager System Engineering team and also participated in the management work package. The South Africans who worked in the TM consortium were Sarao software functional manager Ray Brederode, and Sarao software team members Paul Swart, Lize van der Heever and Gerhard le Roux.

The TM consortium (established in 2013) was one of 12 engineering consortiums, involving 500 engineers in 20 countries, working on different aspects of the SKA. Nine of these consortiums were concerned with the critical components for the telescope and three were concerned with developing advanced instrumentation for it. The TM consortium was the first of all the consortiums to pass the very thorough CDR.

“We are proud that the MeerKAT CAM, or Control and Monitoring, system was selected as the reference design for [the] TM,” highlighted Sarao MD Dr Rob Adam. “South Africa can be very proud of its contribution to the SKA Telescope Manager design, proving that we have world-class engineers able to work on complex problems like designing the world’s largest radio telescope,” stressed Brederode.