Stanford Dish (Stanford Radio Telescope)

Radio telescope in California From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Stanford Dish, known locally as the Dish, is a steerable radio antenna in the Stanford, California foothills.[1] "The Dish" is also used locally to refer to the surrounding hiking area.[1]

AlternativenamesThe Dish Edit this at Wikidata
Location(s)California, Pacific States Region
Coordinates37°24′30″N 122°10′44″W Edit this at Wikidata
Diameter150 ft (46 m) Edit this at Wikidata
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Stanford Dish (Stanford Radio Telescope)
Alternative namesThe Dish Edit this at Wikidata
Location(s)California, Pacific States Region
Coordinates37°24′30″N 122°10′44″W Edit this at Wikidata
Diameter150 ft (46 m) Edit this at Wikidata
Websitedish.stanford.edu Edit this at Wikidata
Stanford Dish (Stanford Radio Telescope) is located in the United States
Stanford Dish (Stanford Radio Telescope)
Location of Stanford Dish
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The Stanford Dish in the early morning hours.
The Stanford Dish in the early morning hours
The Dish in the Stanford foothills

The 150-foot-diameter (46 m) Dish was built in 1961 by the Stanford Research Institute (now SRI International). The cost to construct the antenna was $4.5 million, and was funded by the United States Air Force.[2] In the 1960s the Dish was used to provide information on Soviet radar installations by detecting radio signals bounced off the moon.[3]

Later on, the Dish was used to communicate with satellites and spacecraft. With its unique bistatic range radio communications, where the transmitter and receiver are separate units, the powerful radar antenna was well-suited for communicating with spacecraft in regions where conventional radio signals may be disrupted.[4]

At one point, the Dish transmitted signals to each of the Voyager craft that NASA dispatched into the outer reaches of the Solar System.[5] In 1982 it was used to rescue the amateur radio satellite UoSAT-1.[6]

Later uses

As of 2018, the Dish is still actively used for academic and research purposes.[1][7] It is owned by the U.S. Government and operated by SRI International. It is used for commanding and calibrating spacecraft and for radio astronomy measurements.[8]

Recreational route

The area around the Dish offers a popular 3.5 mile recreational trail, visited by an average of 1,500–1,800 people daily.[9] The trail around the dish is known for its rolling hills and beautiful views, which on a clear day extend to San Jose, San Francisco, and the East Bay. The Stanford Running Club hosts an annual Dish Race and fun run that forms a 3.25 mile loop around the Dish trail.[10]

While hikers, walkers, and runners are welcome, bicycles and dogs are not allowed on the trail. It is open during daylight hours:

More information Jan, Feb ...
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opens (AM)6:306:306:006:006:006:006:006:006:306:306:306:30
closes (PM)5:005:306:307:307:307:307:307:307:006:005:005:00
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As of June 2018, 360 cows were grazing on the grounds of the Stanford Dish.[11] Stanford leases the land to farmers who own the cows.

See also

  • Millstone Hill  a similar SRI-built antenna in Massachusetts
  • Sugar Grove Station  site of a never-completed 1960s SRI project for a 600-foot steerable antenna in West Virginia

References

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