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REID SHERMAN '04 AT AUSTRALIAN OBSERVATORY
Christmas is coming earlier this year for one Haverford
student. The senior astronomy major will be in Australia over the
holiday, where he’s being given an opportunity few, if any,
undergraduates have experienced. From December 6 until January 4,
Reid Sherman will be collecting data for an international team of
scientists at the Parkes Radio Telescope, one of the world’s
most important facilities for astronomical research.
Famous for its role in relaying Apollo 11 pictures
from the moon in 1969, the Parkes facility is the only such telescope
in the southern hemisphere. “It’s the only facility
in the world that can be used to collect the kind of data that is
required for our project,” explained Fronefield Crawford,
part of the science team and a visiting assistant professor in physics
at Haverford with whom Reid has been collaborating. “ Reid
is going to the facility to conduct observations on our behalf,”says
Crawford. “I think it’s the first time that an undergraduate
has been sent to a telescope like the one at Parkes on his own,
unaccompanied by a faculty advisor.”
Following some initial supervision by the observatory staff, Reid
will be completely responsible for one shift of the telescope’s
24-hour schedule. During that time he will collect data for Crawford
and other scientists from Canada, England, Italy, and Australia,
as well as for other researchers who’ve reserved time at the
observatory for their astronomical projects. Crawford and his colleagues
are interested in looking at pulsars — collapsed, rapidly
rotating stars that are formed in stellar explosions at the end
of a star’s life – and their potential relationship
to gamma rays. “The specific parts of the sky that we are
targeting contain gamma rays,” explains Crawford. “We
don’t know the sources of these gamma rays, but we think they
could be associated with pulsars.”
The ability of scientists to collect data on phenomena
such as pulsars furthers their understanding of the fundamental
structures of the universe and all physical laws, says Crawford,
who, like Reid, had the opportunity as an undergraduate to take
part in observations at a major observatory. “Even though
you can’t actually see these objects when you are using a
radio telescope, knowing you’re the only person in the world
collecting that information at that moment is quite magical.”
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