Showing posts with label Hartebeesthoek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hartebeesthoek. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2011

Deep-Space Ambiguity

As the hart panteth for the water brooks, so panteth my soul for Thee, O God. 
(Psa 42:1)

Deep Space. Deep Space Tracking Station. Deep Space Network. Deep Space Communications Complex. I wondered, "Why not Far Space?" And Far Space Tracking Stations and Networks? Why Deep? "Deep" seemed subliminally, spiritually, and deliberately ambiguous to me.

Webster's Dictionary [1880] defines:
Ambiguous [Lat. ambiguus, from ambigere, to wander about with irresolute mind] Doubtful or uncertain, particularly in respect to signification; equivocal; as, an ambiguous  course; an ambiguous  expression.
What have been thy answers what but dark,Ambiguous, and with double sense-deluding.   Milton

"Nebulous".....now there's another spaced-out synonym.

"Deep Space" terms seem to suggest not only something "far out" but also "deep within". For me "deep space" has a psychological or spiritual connotation. At Hartebeesthoek, one of the original three Deep Space Instrumentation Facilities of the early 1960s, we were not only probing deep space, we were also, unconsciously perhaps, engaged on a journey inward.
Heart Nebula

Even the etymology of "Hartebeesthoek" implied something more. The word derives from Dutch, from hart  deer + beest  beast + hoek  corner. Hart is akin to "horn" and refers to the antlers. The "hartebeest"  is an antelope. Merriam-Webster traces the word "deer" to "Middle English, deer, animal, from Old English deor  beast; akin to Old High German tior  wild animal, Lithuanian dvasia  breath, spirit". In Afrikaans, though not etymologically related, hart  not only means "deer" but it is also the word for "heart". In Psalm 42:1 the hart becomes the symbol of the spirit. So Hartebeesthoek came to symbolise for me that "corner" within my own heart that encompassed the immensity of deep space!

The Hindu Scriptures must surely count among the most beautiful and inspiring in the World. The Bhagavad Gita and Upanishads are among my favourites. In the Chandogya Upanishad is this beautiful "deep space" gem:
OM.  In the center of the castle of Brahman, our own body, there is a small shrine in the form of a lotus-flower, and within can be found a small space.  We should find who dwells there, and we should want to know him.
And if anyone asks, "Who is he who dwells in a small shrine in the form of a lotus flower in the center of the castle of Brahman?  Whom should we want to find and to know?" we can answer:
"The little space within the heart is as great as this vast universe.  The heavens and the earth are there, and the sun, and the moon, and the stars; fire and lightning and winds are there; and all that now is and all that is not: for the whole universe is in Him and He dwells within our heart." (Chandogya Upanishad 3.13.7)
It is a thought not alien to Christianity either.

In the words of Augustine (De Lib. Arb., II.41), "Wherever you turn, by certain traces which wisdom has impressed on her works, she speaks to you, and recalls you within, gliding back into interior things by the very forms of exterior things."

William Law (A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life) put it this way, "The outward world is but a glass, or representation of the inward; and every thing and variety of things in temporal nature must have its root, or hidden cause, in something that is more inward."

"All our greatest philosophers and theologians unanimously assert that the visible universe is a faithful reflection of the invisible," says Nicholas of Cusa (Of Learned Ignorance,I.xi).

Scanning the skies with deep space antennas is, in a way,  a scansion of, and a panting for the Divine Imprint within.

In conclusion, a thought for Holy Week...

"Think, dear friend, reflect on the world that you carry within yourself. And name this thinking what you wish. it might be recollections of your childhood or yearning for your own future. Just be sure that you observe carefully what wells up within you and place that above everything that you notice around you. Your innermost happening is worth all your love. You must somehow work on that." -- Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters to a Young Poet


©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

"Deep-Time Eyes"

Lord, I was blind; I could not see
In Thy marred visage any grace,
But now the beauty of Thy face
In radiant vision dawns on me.
                          -William T Matson


What beauty. I saw clouds and their light shadows on the distant dear earth . . .. The water looked like darkish, slightly gleaming spots . . .. When I watched the horizon, I saw the abrupt, contrasting transition from the earth's light-coloured surface to the absolutely black sky. I enjoyed the rich colour spectrum of the earth. It is surrounded by a light blue aureole that gradually darkens, becoming turquoise, dark blue, violet, and finally coal black.
-Yuri Gagarin


It is the Season of Lent. Good Friday is coming. So is Easter.

Visiting my optician  the other day got me to thinking about these things, especially short- and far-sightedness. Fifty years ago today, 12th April 1961, Yuri Gagarin became the first person to go into Space. Though Gagarin never saw God out there he certainly saw "Beauty", beauty in a way no person had ever seen before.

Recently a Methodist minister had introduced me to a fascinating online discussion series on "Evolutionary Christianity" (http://evolutionarychristianity.com) hosted by Michael Dowd. I heartily commend these conversations to you too. The talks included a galaxy of theologians, scientists, and writers, some who I had previously read or heard speak. They were familiar, trusted voices. Although originally an Advent series of meditations, I made these hour long meditations my Lenten study for this year. What a marvelous time-shift this has proved to be!

Speakers included: Charles H Townes, Owen Gingerich, Richard Rohr, Jim Burklo, Denis Lamoureux, Bruce Sanguin, Mary Southard, Diarmuid O Murchu, Ursula King, Sally Morgenthaler, Philip Clayton, Ian Lawton, Joan Roughgarden, Matthew Fox, Spencer Burke, Brian Mclaren, Michael Morwood, Gretta Vosper, Ted Davis, Tom Thresher, Paul Smith, Doug Pagitt, Ian Barbour, Kevin Kelly, John Polkinghorne, Linda Gibler, Michael Dowd, Gloria Schaab, William D Phillips, Joan Chittister, Ross Hostetter, John Cobb, John F Haught, John Shelby Spong, Karl Giberson, Ilia Delio, Kenneth R Miller, and Gail Worcelo. All Christian scholars and researchers of renown, some Nobel Prize Winners, sharing what they had in common, namely, their love for Jesus as disciples of his and the amazing mystery of evolution they had come to appreciate. It was for me an incredible experience listening to these speakers.

One of the notions that immediately caught my attention was what Michael Dowd, the host of the discussions, called "deep-time eyes"....that is, the ability to look deep down into the mystery of cosmic time and space and there to see and experience the presence of God manifest throughout evolutionary time and realise our own connectedness to all creation.

Evolutionary Christianity points to those who value evidence as divine communication. Whatever our differences, we all have deep-time eyes and a global heart. -Michael Dowd

Though I still see as if "through a glass dimly", I can identify at least four influences in my life, a "Quarternity" if you like, that has affected my own seeing. There are two places and two people: Hartebeesthoek Deep Space Tracking Station - the Sterkfontein Caves; and, Teilhard de Chardin - Jan Smuts.



Hartebeesthoek Deep Space Tracking Station

It was at the Hartebeesthoek Deep Space Tracking Station that I was first introduced to notions of "deep space" and "deep time". The operations at a Tracking Station centred around concepts of space and time. For instance, this idea was especially embodied in what is called "Round Trip Light Time" (RTLT).

In space technology, the round-trip delay time or round trip light time is the time light or radio signals takes to go to a spacecraft and return. (See Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Round-trip_delay_time).  One was constantly being reminded of the relationship between space and time. Every space probe at every moment required of us a constant awareness of this ever changing variable....the RTLT. Nothing was static. Though minuscule in the great expanse of Space, RTLT made one ever conscious of the incredible immensity of the Universe. RTLTs were commonly measured in minutes or hours. However, set against the backdrop of countless Galaxies measured in billions of light years away one was overcome by the incomprehensible wonder of it all. Though occupying minute slivers of space and time, we needed to acquire deep-space-time perspectives or deep-space eyes to see it.

RTLT was also a reminder of the vibrancy of the cosmos we found ourselves in. Everything was in motion. We are part of an amazing, dynamic, living organism.  Spacecraft. Earth. Moon. The Planets. The Sun in it course round the Galaxy. The Galaxies themselves. Potential was everywhere. Everything was alive and pulsating, a cosmic symphony rather than a meaningless cacophony of noise! One became conscious as Gagarin did, of beauty and wonder. If the Earth and Spacecraft were stationary bodies the RTLT would simply be a static straightforward measure of the distance between the two. But not so, all was in flux. Earth, planets, and spaceprobes were all engaged in a complex dance of orbits and trajectories. One needed to disentangle the vast deep-space-time relationships that bound farflung worlds to each other in an timeless embrace in order to make sense of it all. Soft-landings on the Moon were much more enchanting than two lovers throwing kisses to each other between passing trains.  One appreciated the elegance of Space-Time Physics and the precision of the interconnecting laws of nature. I slowly began to understand a little about concepts such as the "dilation of time" and "time slips" and its significance to faith and spirituality, prayer and meditation These were ideas which some have developed further such as Gregg Braden in his book The Isaiah Effect. At Hartebeesthoek I found my deep-space eyes. As Yuri Gagarin once said, "I could have gone on flying through space forever."

But there was more. As observed in a previous blog, not far from Hartebeesthoek were...

The Sterkfontein Caves



In close proximity to the Tracking Station are the Caves. Everyday on my way to work and home again we would drive by Sterkfontein. One cannot drive past these caves without being affected. Whereas at Hartebeesthoek we looked up into the sky here one looked down deep into the earth. Here was a constant reminder that our biological histories goes far back to the dawn of evolutionary time, more years than one can easily imagine. Perhaps not the deep-time of deep-space but here, right on my door-step in Southern Africa on my way to work, was a place where biological and geological time had coalesced the very star-stuff of cosmic space and time and brought forth hominid life and eventually of us all! For me this was a daily engagement  with the huge questions of life, existence, being, and the ongoing passage of time. One just had to cultivate the "deep-time eyes" that Michael Dowd speaks about.

Sterkfontein (Afrikaans for Strong Spring) is a set of limestone caves of special interest to paleo-anthropologists located in Gauteng province, Northwest of Johannesburg, South Africa near the town of Krugersdorp. The archaeological sites of Swartkrans (Afrikaans for Black Cliff) and Kromdraai (Afrikaans and Dutch for Crooked Turn) (and the Wonder Cave) are in the same area. Sterkfontein was declared a World Heritage Site in 2000 and the area in which it is situated, was named the Cradle of Humankind." -Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sterkfontein_caves

It was here at the Sterkfontein Caves that I found my deep-time eys. There I first saw into the beckoning eyes of the Taung Child, Mrs Ples, and Little Foot. It took the Caves of Raymond Dart and Robert Broom to open my own evolutionary-eyes as I gazed with them into the fossil record that was being uncovered.

Two Places... but there were also Two People whose thought affected me: Teilhard de Chardin and Jan Smuts. I was only one year old when, in 1947 at the invitation of Smuts, Teilhard planned to visit South Africa. Unfortunately a serious heart attack prevented him but he was able to visit South Africa in 1951 and again in 1953. Just two quotes will suffice:

Teilhard de Chardin

In his, The Phenomenon of Man, Teilhard has a marvelous section on "the perception of space-time" (p.238ff) in which he speaks of our difficulty with depth perception. He says...

"We have all forgotten the moment when, opening our eyes for the first time, we saw light and things around us all jumbled up and all on one single plane. It requires a great effort to imagine the time when we were unable to read or again to take our mind back to the time when for us the world extended no farther than the walls of our home and our family circle.


"Similarly it seems to us incredible that men could have lived without suspecting that the stars are hung above us hundreds of light years away, or that the contours of life stretched out millions of years behind us to the limits of our horizon."

He then makes this profound statement...

"The least molecule is, in nature and position, a function of the whole sidereal process, and the least of the protozoa is structurally so knit into the web of life that its existence cannot be hypothetically annihilated without ipso facto  undoing the whole network of the biosphere.... Time and space are organically joined again so as to weave, together, the stuff of the universe." (p.240)

The other influence was...

Jan Smuts

Smuts, writing in Holism and Evolution (p.336f)  shares similar deep-time thoughts...

"For we are indeed one with Nature, her genetic fibres run through all our being, our physical organs connect us with millions of years of her history; our minds are full of immemorial paths of pre-human experience. 


"Our ear for music, our eye for art carry us back to the early beginnings of animal life on this globe. Press but a button in our brain and the gaunt spectres of the dim forgotten past rise once more before us; the ghostly dreaded forms of the primeval Fear loom before us and we tremble all over with inexplicable fright. And then again some distant sound, some call of bird or smell of wild plants, or some sunrise or sunset glow in the distant clouds, some mixture of light and shade on the mountains may suddenly throw an unearthly spell over the spirit, lead it forth from the deep chambers and set it panting and wondering with inexpressible emotion. For the overwrought mind there is no peace like nature's, for the wounded spirit there is no healing like hers. There are indeed times when human companionship becomes unbearable, and we fly to nature for that silent sympathy and communion which she alone can give. 


"Some of the deepest emotional experiences of my life have come to me on the many nights I have spent under the open African sky, and I am sure my case has not been singular in this respect. 


"The intimate rapport with nature is one of the most precious things in life. Nature is indeed very close to us; sometimes closer than hands and feet, of which in truth she is but the extension. The emotional appeal of nature is tremendous, sometimes almost more than one can bear."

Teilhard and Smuts shared the same view. Over time such has also been my experience. The conversations at "Evolutionary Christianity" develops this further and has provided us with a much needed theological and scientific framework with which to look with renewed confidence into the future.

Conclusion

I opened with the verse from William Matson's hymn, "Lord, I was blind! I could not see / In Thy marred visage any grace". Deep-time eyes are not blind to our apparently fractured universe. There are fault lines that appear to be intrinsic to the very fabric of Nature. One need not look too deep into space before one encounters violent solar reactions, barren sterile worlds, and battered and inhospitable planets like Venus and Jupiter. One is ever mindful of tragedies that have cost the lives of Astronauts and Cosmonauts. Similarly Sterkfontein is not without its stories of woe. The Taung Child may have been the victim of some prehistoric bird of prey (See http://www.profleeberger.com/files/Taungbirdofpreybc.pdf). More recently, a diver tragically lost his life in the Caves. Without deep-time Gethsemane eyes we may not see the signs of grace in these marred images of cosmic tragedy and loss, death and decay.

Will we ever plummet the mysteries of our deep-space, deep-time experiences? Probably not as long as we are myopic in our theologies of Nature and Creation.  We may well lament the loss of our deep-time, deep-space eyes, as Adam and Eve did, as described in the apocryphal book, once they had been banished from the Garden...

And Adam said to Eve, "Look at thine eyes, and at mine, which afore beheld
angels in heaven, praising; and they, too, without ceasing.

"But now we do not see as we did; our eyes have become flesh; they cannot
see in like manner as they saw before."  (I Adam and Eve 4:8ff)

Deep-time eyes, redeemed eyes, invites us to look deeper and further into the evidence that is before us than we may have hitherto. As Michael Dowds would remind us, deep-time seeing leads to a long-time hope.


©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za

Friday, March 4, 2011

Hartebeesthoek - 50th Anniversary

Reflections of a Sixties "Tracker"

The Iconic 85' Dish (1965)

I want to be with you under a Southern Sky
Feel the earth move as I see you walking by
I want to take you to the moon and back tonight
Sleep with angels in the shelter of a perfect Southern Sky
In the stillness and forgiveness of a perfect Southern Sky
                                                        -Mango Groove

March 2011 marks the Golden Jubilee of the Hartebeesthoek's 85' Deep Space Dish Antenna located in the foothills of the Magaliesberg. Today this precision instrument is no longer used by NASA for its Space Programme but is dedicated instead to Radio Astronomy. Nevertheless, the story of the beginnings of the Hartebeesthoek Tracking Station is worth recalling not only for its historical significance but also for the impact it had on my own life.

It was at Hartebeeshoek that I first started work. Back in the 1960s with the Space Race at its height, a career in Space Research, was many an aspiring young boy's dream. Hartebeesthoek left an indelible mark on my life that I continue to appreciate. I will always remain indebted to colleagues and mentors, lecturers and trainers, engineers and technicians, storemen and security personnel, secretaries and librarians, mess and bunker room staff,  far too many to record by name, who in one way or another, had a formative influence on my life.

DSIF-51 Staff Photo (1970)

In the late 1950s NASA required round the globe tracking coverage for its proposed deep space unmanned missions. Goldstone (DSIF 11, 1958) in California and Woomera (DSIF 41, 1960-1972) were obvious choices. The third element in the envisaged Deep Space Network (DSN) fell in the longitude that would make either Spain or South Africa suitable options. While NASA preferred Spain, South Africa had a geographical advantage that could not be ignored. The launch path of the space probes from Cape Canaveral passed directly over South Africa. This was a critical phase in  the launch of a spacecraft. Invariably DSIF-51 would be the first to confirm or otherwise a successful launch and trajectory. Another deciding factor was the so-called "Southern dwell" of the planets at that time which gave South Africa and Australia a geo-astronomical advantage. The geographical position of South Africa was therefore of considerable strategic advantage. Despite some serious political and diplomatic qualms, the choice eventually tilted in South Africa's favour. NASA's first global Deep Space Network, Goldstone-Woomera-Hartebeesthoek, was linked by means of existing and developing communication lines to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Control Centre in Pasadena, California.

Sputniks and Explorers fired our young imaginations. I had just commenced High School when, in September 1960, an agreement was concluded by NASA with the South African government and the CSIR for the construction of the Deep Space Instrumentation Facility (DSIF 51, 1961-1974) north-west of Johannesburg. It would operate under the auspices of the National Institute for Telecommunications Research (NITR) of the CSIR. NASA was anxious to have the facility operational in time to provide essential support for the first launch of the Ranger missions to the Moon. This was scheduled to commence in July 1961. "To prepare the site, erect the antenna, install and test the equipment, and train personnel in its operation, under the pressure of a high profile mission like Ranger, posed a formidable challenge for everyone involved," wrote NASA historian Douglas J Mudgway (1: p23). This was no mean undertaking. I followed the progress with a great deal of interest not realising that I'd one day be working there.

The iconic, almost eight storey high, parabolic dish antenna is to this day still a monument to the vision of the original planners, negotiators, construction and installation engineers, and of project and station managers. Construction work began in November 1960 and was completed by July in good time for the anticipated Ranger Missions. This huge undertaking involved construction of roads and the preparation of the site, the trucking and shipping of sophisticated equipment and components from the USA  to Hartebeesthoek. Staff had to be employed and trained. The erection of the 85' antenna started in January 1961 was completed in 69 days on the 25th March 1961. Extensive electronic and communication installations had to be tested and calibrated. Despite heavy summer rains impeding the laying of foundations, the erection of buildings, and provision of on-site power generators, Hartebeesthoek was ready for operations by the 1st July 1961. Unfortunately the worsening political situation in South Africa prevented NASA from participating officially in the locally arranged Opening Ceremonies (1: p 25). Eventually the  political situation would lead to the closure of the Tracking Facility in June 1974 whereafter the facilities were commissioned for purposes of Radio Astronomy. It is now know as the Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatory (HRAO).

Despite the turmoil of the 1960s, Hartebeesthoek made a vital contribution to space research during those crucial, early years of space exploration. It provided tracking support for upto 38 spacecraft over its 13 years of  its operation. Some of the projects included:

The Pioneer Missions into Deep Space  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pioneer_program
The Ranger Missions to the Moon http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranger_program
Lunar Orbiters http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Orbiter_program
Surveyor Lunar Landings http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surveyor_Program
Mariner IV to Mars http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariner_IV
Mariner V Mission to Venus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariner_V
Mariner VI to Mars http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariner_VI
Apollo 15 Mission to the Moon http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_15

At one point Hartebeesthoek, in 1963, held the record for long-distance communications.  "Our DSIF station had the distinction of being the first in the DSIF network to successfully transmit a Command to Mariner 2. It was also the last station to contact Mariner, and as such holds the world's long distance communication record of about 54 million miles," said Dr Naude, President of the CSIR. Of course this has since been surpassed by larger tracking antennas and more sophisticated electronics. But at the time it was a notable achievement.

(For mission images see: http://www.hartrao.ac.za/other/dss51/missions.html)

"....a key element in all of those dramatic spacecraft events, the DSN shared their excitement, but saw a quiet , unreported drama of its own. There were occasions when the success or failure of a multimillion spacecraft, the reputation of NASA, or the recovery of critical science data from a far planet, lay in the hands of the DSN and, not infrequently, those of a crew member at a distant tracking station....  often though, the determined, sometimes heroic, efforts of engineers and technicians in laboratories at JPL, and in control rooms and antennas at remote tracking stations, provided drama enough for those of us who were aware of it." (1: xxi)

Celebrating the Fifth Anniversary of the International Tracking Networks in 1963, Dr S M Naude, president of the CSIR, remarked, "The tracking of satellites and space probes is an arduous task. There are moments of tense drama which even the veteran tracker cannot resist, but there are proportionately more humdrum moments when machinery and instruments have to be cleaned and overhauled. The responsibility, the excitement and the routine of tracking call for special qualities of personality and character, and I am profoundly grateful that these are evidenced in abundance in the work of Dr. Hewitt, Mr. Hogg, Mr. Botha and the 80-odd scientists and technicians who man the combined Radio Space Research Station. Credit is also due to their wives and families for accepting the irregular hours of work at the station...the D.S.I.F. station crew was divided into three shifts of 10 people, each shift working for about 18 hours a day." (3)

Tracking staff included engineers and technicians from South Africa, Britain, the Netherlands, Germany, and Greece. Though proudly a facility based in Africa, South Africa's discriminatory legislation expressly excluded many from participating in this adventure into Space. This was to be its nemesis. I myself had to go to Pasadena and Goldstone in California before I really even became aware of this glaring anomaly and injustice.

Some of us, were not only fortunate but privileged to have been trained and employed as technicians in Space Communications at Hartebeesthoek from 1965 till December 1972. I, for instance, had the chance of a life time, to go to JPL and Goldstone for further training on one of the Mariner Mars missions. Many equally deserving South Africans were excluded from such opportunities.

I became acutely aware of the injustice. The writing was on the wall.  14th August 1971 American Congressman Charles Diggs, visited South Africa which included an inspection of Hartebeeshoek. The Apartheid policies of the South African government had become an embarrassment. Sanctions were being imposed. The American presence at Hartebeeshoek came increasingly under scrutiny. Larger tracking dishes and more sophisticated equipment no longer gave South Africa the leverage of its strategic geographical advantage. The Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex (MDSCC) now came into prominence. The closure of the Hartebeesthoek Tracking Station was finally announced in July 1973. The closure of DSIF-51 ironically resulted in long term positive spinoffs for both myself and for Hartebeesthoek itself.

For myself, in 1969 the Anglican Dean of Pretoria, the Rev Mark Nye had called for a space programme of the human spirit "to  tackle the far more difficult problems of man in his relationship to himself, to society and to God. If men can provide the resources, the skills, the astronomical sums of money, to put two men on the Moon, why cannot they direct themselves equally successfully to the ordering of their own lifes?" (Sunday Times, 10/6/69) This challenge couldn't be ignored much longer. By the time of Congressman Diggs' visit, I had already sensed a call to ministry. Diggs was a Baptist and an ardent Civil Rights and Anti-Apartheid Activist.  His visit, unpopular as it was, precipitated my decision to move on. I had come to the end of my contractual commitments and obligations to Hartebeesthoek.  I resigned and candidated for the Methodist ministry at the end of 1971. There were now other important, more urgent frontiers and missions beckoning me.

For Hartebeeshoek and others there were positive outcomes too. Highly skilled and experienced staff in some of the most advanced electronic technologies of the time were dispersed further afield, some were employed by local industries, others went abroad, a few remained at Hartebeeshoek. The impact of this kind of migration of skills and experience is immeasurable. Hartebeesthoek continued to advance the exploration of the Universe through its Radio Astronomy programme operating first under the CSIR, then the Foundation for Research Development (FRD), which later became the National Research Foundation (NRF) in 1999. Cooperating with Radio Astronomers in many parts of the world including South Africa, Hartebeesthoek has continued to provide invaluable support in groundbreaking 21st Century Space Research.

Dr George Nicolson, who headed up the Radio Astronomy Observatory, wrote, "When in 1974, NASA decided to close the Hartebeesthoek station, prohibitive transportation costs and the spirit of cooperation which exists among scientists all over the world resulted in some of the radio-tracking equipment being left behind for the use of the CSIR radio astronomers. The Hartebeesthoek Deep Space Station then became South Africa's Radio Astronomy Observatory...." (4). This expertise and technology remained in the country and has evolved to become one of the most significant research facilities in the country. A new era in South African astronomy had been born.

Unfortunately, toward the end of 2008, the large bearing of the 85'  dish antenna failed. This was a serious setback but it didn't daunt Hartebeesthoek. According to the HRAO website, the 85' antenna that had given faithful service for almost fifty years "was immediately shut down to prevent further damage. After extensive engineering investigation and consultation, the decision was taken to repair the telescope."  Acquiring and replacing a main bearing of this huge 200 tonne structure was in itself a major engineering feat. This remarkable achievement is documented on the pages of the HRAO website at  http://www.hartrao.ac.za/news/100906_26m_repair/index.html.  The fifty year old antenna was given a new lease of life and is operational once again, a worthy monument to South Africa's historic role in space exploration.

Working at Hartebeeshoek was for me not only a vicarious journey into Outer Space but it was also a virtual journey into my own Inner Space. In no small measure the experience was enriching, extending the boundaries of my own limited horizons and prejudices, broadening and deepening my understanding of my origins and place in an unimaginably vast Universe. The further we looked out upon the vast expanse of our Universe, listening to the miniscule signals coming from a lonely distant spacecraft the more conscious I became of a Transcendental Reality holding it all together. Often I would go outside at night and see the Dish pointed skyward focused on some remote, invisible star or probe in Space and I would become blissfully mindful of something that Jan Smuts once wrote. He was no stranger to the Magalieberg, he said:

"...we are indeed one with Nature, her genetic fibres run through all our being, our physical organs connect us with millions of years of her history; our minds are full of  immemorial paths of pre-human experience." (7: p.333)

...and then I'd remember that not very far from Hartebeesthoek where I was standing, peering ecstatically deep into the dark night sky were the Sterkfontein Caves. And I instinctively felt a profound connection between the two. I had come a very long way.

A recent visit to Hartebeesthoek (2010)

Hartebeesthoek has also come a long way. We wish "Harties" another fifty years of  many more exciting discoveries as it continues to probe ever further into our "perfect Southern Skies"!

oOo

For more about the Hartebeesthoek Radio Astronomy Observatorysee http://www.hartrao.ac.za/
and for some stunning photos  see http://www.hartrao.ac.za/gallery/

References:
1. Douglas J Mudgway, Uplink-Downlink, A History of the Deep Space Network 1957 - 1997,  NASA 2001
2. G Gray-Cobb, "The radio space research station, Hartebeesthoek", The Transactions of the SA Institute of Electrical Engineers, April 1964, p 163
3. Dr S M Naude, Speech "U.S. International Tracking Networks' Fifth Anniversary", The South African Engineer, March 1963.
4. Dr G D Nicolson, "Tuning in on the Universe", Scientiae, March 1980. p 10
5. Doug Hogg, "South Africa and the Exploation of Space", Scientiae, February 1975.
6. DSIF: Johannesburg, JPL Technical Memorandum No 33-224, 1965.
7 Jan C Smuts, Holism and Evolution, Macmillan (Third Edition), 1936

Related Blogs:
http://ichthyscybernetics.blogspot.com/2010/03/first-love-principle-of-first.html
http://ichthyscybernetics.blogspot.com/2010/03/first-love-continued-programming-and.html


















©Colin G Garvie HomePage: http://www.garvies.co.za