Many readers will be interested in knowing what day the site selection decision for
the Square Kilometer Array will be announced.
The short answer is that the general public will probably have to wait until
March/April 2012.
Some light is shed on this by the Briefing Notes for the Meeting of the SKA Board of
Directors which took place on 18 Jan 2012.
See
http://www.skatelescope.org/wp-conte...ng.Notes_1.pdf
In summary -
* 7 Feb 2012 - The SKA Siting Group (SSG) was to receive the report and recommendation
of the SKA Site Advisory (SSAC). As this information is confidential, one can
only assume that this event has taken place.
* 15 Feb 2012 - The SSG was to meet and transmit the SSAC's report and
recommendation, together with its own comments on the site evaluation
process, to the SKA Board of Directors.
* 22 Feb 2012 - The Board will meet to discuss the report and recommendation.
If the Board is satisfied that the agreed evaluation process has been followed, it will
convene a General Meeting of Members.
* No date appears to have been announced for such a General Meeting,
but a deadlock mechanism for the site selection process has already been
approved which would come into effect if it is not possible to reach a
unanimous decision on a site resolution. At the General Meeting, Members
will be invited to consider the SSAC report and recommendation and further
negotiation will take place.
* No date appears to have been announced but another General Meeting
will then take place for a vote.
* If no agreement is reached, two to six weeks later, the deadlock mechanism will
be invoked.
As Brian Boyle is a Board Director, in theory he should know by now
but he has made clear that this information will be confidential for some time.
In a Tweet yesterday, Brian said he still did not know.
Brian has indicated that the general public should learn of the decision some time
in March/April.
To date, the Australian Government has invested over $300 million in the project.
$152 million for the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder project (ASKAP).
See
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/projects/askap/
$10 million for the Murchison Wide Field Array
See
http://www.mwatelescope.org/
$80 million for the Pawsey Supercomputing Center
See
http://www.ivec.org/Supercomputing/P...mputing_Centre
$25 million for the Perth to Geraldton NBN optical fiber link
See
http://www.computerworld.com.au/arti...e_roll_begins/
$50 million on green power for the sites.
See
http://www.sciencewa.net.au/3388-fro...rk-matter.html
The West Australian Government has also invested $10.8 million into the Pawsey
Center.
A successful bid would attract $2.1 billion of investment from overseas.
If the Australian bid is successful, the computer infrastructure in the Pawsey Center
in WA alone would make it one of the most powerful computer systems on the planet
processing at any instant what is estimated to be the equivalent to ten times
the entire Internet data traffic. By comparison, it makes the computing
requirement of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) seem small so winning the
bid would be a huge shot in the arm for the Australian IT and communications
industries.
Follow Dr Brian Boyle on Twitter here -
http://twitter.com/#!/brianboyleska