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NEWS

REMEMBERING PROF. GOVIND SWARUP Shortly before going to press, we learned of the passing of renowned Indian astrophysicist Prof. Govind Swarup. Professor Swarup was the pioneer of radio astronomy in India. Over the last seven decades, he built two of the world’s largest radio telescopes, the Ooty and GMRT radio telescopes, nurtured a community of Indian radio astronomers that is among the best in the world, and inspired many generations of astronomers, engineers and students. Born in 1929, he spent his early years in the state of Uttar Pradesh, before obtaining his MSc degree from Allahabad University in 1950 and joining the newly formed National Physical Laboratory (NPL). He then went on to spend two years at CSIRO in Australia, working on radio studies of the Sun, before moving to Harvard Observatory in the US and doing his PhD at Stanford where he became Assistant Professor. Upon returning to India in 1963, he set up a radio astronomy group (which became the National Centre for Radio Astrophysics, NCRA) funded by the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) and designed the 500m Ooty Radio Telescope (ORT), completed in 1970. The success of the ORT led, in 1978, to a proposal for the Giant Equatorial Radio Telescope (GERT) as a joint project of “non-aligned” countries led by India to build an instrument with at least ten times the collecting area of the ORT. When funding for GERT failed to materialise, Swarup then went on to design the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT), a 30-dish array made up of 45-m diameter dishes with an innovative design that was completed in 1995 and available to the international community. It is now an SKA pathfinder facility. Govind was one of the key players in the emergence of the SKA concept. The ORT and GMRT, together with other large telescopes elsewhere, like the VLA, provided the jumping-off point for even larger instruments like the SKA. The GERT and GMRT science cases also showed the way on the science by pointing out the potential of a large collecting area for detecting neutral hydrogen in emission in the distant universe. This was the first formulation of what became the initial prime scientific driver for the SKA. In 1993, with his eye clearly on the future, he and Ron Ekers (first chair of the International SKA Steering Committee) proposed the establishment of a Large Telescope Working Group under the auspices of the International Union of Radio Science (URSI). This is recognised as the start of the SKA as a project.

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Govind continued to be very involved in radio astronomy even after his retirement, regularly participating in seminars and contributing to research papers. He saw the potential of SKA for India, and was instrumental in ensuring NCRA’s involvement in the SKA Project from its early days. In the early 2000s, he advocated a low-cost design for the SKA dishes based on the GMRT design. In 2014 NCRA formally joined the SKA Organisation becoming its 11th member, and later the government of India took over India’s membership. We will all remember Govind as a superb scientist and engineer; but he was also an excellent mentor, both to colleagues around the world and to a large cohort of students, many of whom are now the leaders of Indian astronomy. We at SKA and the astronomy community will miss him and we send our most sincere condolences to his family and friends.

All images credit: Tata Institute of Fundamental Research

C O N TA C T | S E P T E M B E R 2 0 2 0


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Articles inside

Pathfinders

12min
pages 16-21

Manchester-led team discovers 157-day cycle in enigmatic fast radio burst

2min
page 16

Zooming in on the origins of fast radio bursts

1min
page 17

Chinese and American radio telescopes provide insights into the formation of massive stars

2min
page 18

Let's talk about... gravitational waves

8min
pages 12-15

Indian team discovers long-sought tiny solar explosions using MWA

2min
page 19

Apertif discovers rare twinkling radio sources

1min
page 20

LOFAR, 10 years of science and innovation

2min
page 21

2 min with...SKAO's Facilities Manager

2min
page 22

PhD Placement: Lara Alegre on her experience at SKA HQ

3min
page 23

Fighting coronavirus with radio astronomy skills

1min
pages 10-11

SKA completes final reviews ahead of construction

4min
pages 24-25

SARAO launches e-learning platform for radio astronomy

1min
page 9

TeamSKA: Prof. Kristine Spekkens

8min
pages 26-28

Celebrating Indigenous culture around the Australian SKA site

1min
page 8

Chinese SRC prototype awarded astronomy prize

1min
page 7

First Australian SKA Regional Centre Director appointed

1min
page 7

Pulsar timing with the Nançay Radio Telescope confirms the universality of free fall

1min
page 6

Teams asked to register interest for Science Data Challenge 2

1min
page 5

Events

1min
page 29

Canadian astronomy community prioritises SKA in 10-year plan

1min
page 5

New SKA software development team forges links with UK industry

1min
page 4

Events coming up

1min
page 31

SKAO signs HPC agreement with CERN, GÉANT and PRACE

1min
page 4

SKA jobs

1min
page 31

Foreword by Prof. Philip Diamond

1min
page 3

Remembering Prof. Govind Swarup

2min
page 30

The cover

1min
page 1
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