Higher Degree by Research Application Portal

TitleMeasuring motions in the Local Universe, with Next Generation methods and SKA-VLBI
SupervisorDr Maria Rioja Capellan
CourseDoctor of Philosophy
Research areaPhysical Sciences
Project description

 The SKA offers an unprecedented improvement in sensitivity that, when combined the existing global VLBI facilities, will potentially provide an order of magnitude improvement in astrometric precision. Thus the distance to which meaningful cosmological measurements can be made.

This PhD would be part of our effort to develop next-generation methods for ultra-high precision astrometry with the next-generation facilities; these include the SKA, at high and low frequencies, and investigations for ngVLA (the new American VLBI array) ngEHT (the new Event Horizon Telescope) and even Space VLBI (which links into the UWA International Space Centre).

The specific PhD research topic would be to demonstrate the new methods on current facilities. In particular to develop and demonstrate MultiView VLBI using the Australian Geodetic array (AuScope) with the University of Tasmania. This will provide the first high-precision astrometric measurements of Methanol Masers in the inner quadrants of our Galaxy. The other leg of the project will be preparing the methods and making early demonstrations of VLBI operations for SKA-Low, which is a largely unexplored field. The Australians are planning a Low Frequency VLBI demonstrator LAMBDA and this PhD will carve the pathway for this instrument.

This PhD position is co-funded by the ARC and UWA.

Opportunity statusClosed
Open date01 Aug 2024
Close date02 Sep 2024
Funding source

ARC

SchoolGraduate Research School
Contact

Dr Maria Rioja | maria.rioja@uwa.edu.au

Senior Research Fellow (ICRAR/CSIRO)

Dr Richard Dodson | richard.dodson@uwa.edu.au

Senior Research Fellow

Course typeDoctorates
Description

The Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) is a program of independent, supervised research that is assessed solely on the basis of a thesis, sometimes including a creative work component, that is examined externally. The work presented for a PhD must be a substantial and original contribution to scholarship, demonstrating mastery of the subject of interest as well as an advance in that field of knowledge. 

Visit the course webpage for full details of this course including admission requirements, course rules and the relevant CRICOS code/s.

Duration4 years

Guidance

astronomy

next-generation methods

black holes

SKA

EHT