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Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Telescope

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March 04, 2026

Prelims: Current events of national and international importance | Science & Technology

Why in News?

Recently, astronomers have released the largest-ever ALMA image of the Milky Way’s central region under the ACES – ALMA Central Molecular Zone Exploration Survey.

  • Location – It is located in the Atacama Desert, Chile.
  • Located at an altitude of about 5,000 metres on the Chajnantor Plateau.
  • The location is ideal for radio astronomy due to high altitude and extremely dry conditions.
  • Purpose – Formation of stars and planets, Molecular clouds and protoplanetary disks, Early galaxies in the universe and Chemical composition of space.
  • Operational Since – 2013.
  • Collaboration – ALMA is a joint international venture–
    • Led by European Southern Observatory (Europe)
    • U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF)
    • National Institutes of Natural Sciences (Japan)
    • In cooperation with the Republic of Chile
  • Core Specifications - It is not a single telescope but an interferometer—a network of 66 high-precision antennas that work together as one giant instrument.

Feature

Detail

Antennas

66 total (54 are 12m diameter; 12 are 7m diameter)

Wavelengths

0.32 mm to 3.6 mm (Millimeter and submillimeter)

Max Baseline

Antennas can be spread up to 16 km (10 miles) apart

Resolution

Up to 10 times sharper than the Hubble Space Telescope

Supercomputer

The ALMA Correlator, one of the fastest in the world

  • Technique - It uses a technique called interferometry. By combining the signals from multiple antennas, it mimics a single telescope with a diameter equal to the distance between the furthest antennas.

Key Findings Using ALMA

  • Largest-Ever High-Resolution Map – First time the entire Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) has been mapped in such detail.
  • Area Covered – Over 650 light-years across the CMZ.
  • Size – Mosaic equivalent to 3 full Moons side-by-side in sky coverage.
  • Discovery of Filamentary Gas Network – Long, thin streams of cold molecular gas detected.
  • Gas flows along filaments feeding star-forming regions.
  • Reveals how matter moves toward dense star-forming clumps.
  • Hidden Astrochemistry Uncovered – Detection of dozens of molecules, including –
    • Simple molecules – Silicon monoxide (SiO)
    • Complex organic molecules – Methanol, Ethanol, Acetone.
  • Indicates rich chemical complexity in extreme environments.
  • Star Formation Paradox – Despite having very high gas density, the CMZ of the Milky Way forms stars at a much lower rate than predicted by standard star-formation models.

References

  1. The Guardian | ALMA Telescope
  2. ESO | Largest image of the heart of the Milky Way
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