ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Natasha Hurley-Walker - Astronomer
Natasha Hurley-Walker uses novel radio telescopes to explore the universe at some of the longest wavelengths of light.

Why you should listen

Dr. Natasha Hurley-Walker recently completed an astronomical survey of the entire southern sky, revealing the radio glow of our own Milky Way galaxy as well as hundreds of thousands of distant galaxies: the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. Unlike previous work, GLEAM is the first "radio color" survey, observed across such a wide range of frequencies that the unique spectrum of every object can be used to understand its underlying physics.

An Early-Career Research Fellow based at the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, in Perth, Western Australia, Hurley-Walker is part of the international Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) collaboration, spanning thirteen institutes across six countries. At her fingertips are tens of petabytes of data collected by the MWA since 2013, which she processes using powerful supercomputers at the nearby Pawsey Centre. Hurley-Walker earned a PhD in Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge by commissioning and using a new radio telescope to perform its first science observations. The experience directly transferred to the MWA, which she also helped to commission.

The MWA is a precursor to the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), what will be the largest radio telescope in the world, set to come online in the 2020s. By developing software and techniques to deal with data from the MWA, creating pathfinding maps of the sky and training a new generation of astronomers in cutting-edge techniques, Hurley-Walker is working to lay the scientific groundwork for the commissioning of the SKA. In 2016 Hurley-Walker was awarded an Australian SKA Fellowship in order to visit the SKA headquarters and transfer lessons from her commissioning experiences as well as develop her survey into a useful calibration model for the SKA.

Hurley-Walker is passionate about scientific outreach and keynoted talks in 2013 and 2017 at Astrofest, Australia's largest public astronomy festival. So that anyone in the world can see the sky with the same radio eyes as her, she created the GLEAMoscope , an interactive online viewer that shows the universe at radio wavelengths compared to other frequencies, including the more familiar "optical" spectrum. It being the 21st century, there's also an app: check out GLEAM on the Google Play store. In 2017 Natasha won the "Best Timelapse" category in the Astofest astrophotography competition with her colleague John Goldsmith for their creation of a composite video showing both the optical and radio sky. For more detail on Hurley-Walker's work, check out her article on TheConversation.

Working with cutting-edge data is tough, but sometimes hides serendipitous gems which Hurley-Walker has unearthed, like the faintest dying radio galaxy ever discoveredwhistling plasma ducts in the Earth's ionosphere and some of the youngest and weirdest radio galaxies ever found. View a complete list of Hurley-Walker's publications.

More profile about the speaker
Natasha Hurley-Walker | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxPerth

Natasha Hurley-Walker: How radio telescopes show us unseen galaxies

Filmed:
1,295,837 views

Our universe is strange, wonderful and vast, says astronomer Natasha Hurley-Walker. A spaceship can't carry you into its depths (yet) -- but a radio telescope can. In this mesmerizing talk, Hurley-Walker shows how she probes the mysteries of the universe using special technology that reveals light spectrums we can't see.
- Astronomer
Natasha Hurley-Walker uses novel radio telescopes to explore the universe at some of the longest wavelengths of light. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
Space, the final frontier.
0
1080
2760
00:17
I first heard these words
when I was just six years old,
1
5880
3456
00:21
and I was completely inspired.
2
9360
2256
00:23
I wanted to explore strange new worlds.
3
11640
2376
00:26
I wanted to seek out new life.
4
14040
1496
00:27
I wanted to see everything
that the universe had to offer.
5
15560
3200
00:31
And those dreams, those words,
they took me on a journey,
6
19840
3696
00:35
a journey of discovery,
7
23560
1456
00:37
through school, through university,
8
25040
2176
00:39
to do a PhD and finally
to become a professional astronomer.
9
27240
3440
00:43
Now, I learned two amazing things,
10
31920
3016
00:46
one slightly unfortunate,
11
34960
1536
00:48
when I was doing my PhD.
12
36520
2056
00:50
I learned that the reality was
13
38600
2416
00:53
I wouldn't be piloting
a starship anytime soon.
14
41040
3160
00:57
But I also learned that the universe
is strange, wonderful and vast,
15
45440
4616
01:02
actually too vast
to be explored by spaceship.
16
50080
2800
01:05
And so I turned my attention
to astronomy, to using telescopes.
17
53720
3360
01:09
Now, I show you before you
an image of the night sky.
18
57840
2776
01:12
You might see it anywhere in the world.
19
60640
1920
01:15
And all of these stars are part
of our local galaxy, the Milky Way.
20
63040
3960
01:19
Now, if you were to go
to a darker part of the sky,
21
67560
2696
01:22
a nice dark site, perhaps in the desert,
22
70280
2536
01:24
you might see the center
of our Milky Way galaxy
23
72840
2416
01:27
spread out before you,
hundreds of billions of stars.
24
75280
2960
01:30
And it's a very beautiful image.
25
78840
1576
01:32
It's colorful.
26
80440
1336
01:33
And again, this is just
a local corner of our universe.
27
81800
3616
01:37
You can see there's
a sort of strange dark dust across it.
28
85440
3296
01:40
Now, that is local dust
29
88760
1976
01:42
that's obscuring the light of the stars.
30
90760
2656
01:45
But we can do a pretty good job.
31
93440
1576
01:47
Just with our own eyes, we can explore
our little corner of the universe.
32
95040
3456
01:50
It's possible to do better.
33
98520
1336
01:51
You can use wonderful telescopes
like the Hubble Space Telescope.
34
99880
3760
01:56
Now, astronomers
have put together this image.
35
104200
2176
01:58
It's called the Hubble Deep Field,
36
106400
1896
02:00
and they've spent hundreds of hours
observing just a tiny patch of the sky
37
108320
4336
02:04
no larger than your thumbnail
held at arm's length.
38
112680
2400
02:07
And in this image
39
115520
1256
02:08
you can see thousands of galaxies,
40
116800
1656
02:10
and we know that there must be
hundreds of millions, billions of galaxies
41
118480
3456
02:13
in the entire universe,
42
121960
1376
02:15
some like our own and some very different.
43
123360
2656
02:18
So you think, OK, well,
I can continue this journey.
44
126040
2656
02:20
This is easy. I can just
use a very powerful telescope
45
128720
2696
02:23
and just look at the sky, no problem.
46
131440
1800
02:25
It's actually really missing out
if we just do that.
47
133960
4016
02:30
Now, that's because
everything I've talked about so far
48
138000
2736
02:32
is just using the visible spectrum,
just the thing that your eyes can see,
49
140760
3896
02:36
and that's a tiny slice,
50
144680
1416
02:38
a tiny, tiny slice
of what the universe has to offer us.
51
146120
3360
02:42
Now, there's also two very important
problems with using visible light.
52
150160
4736
02:46
Not only are we missing out
on all the other processes
53
154920
2736
02:49
that are emitting other kinds of light,
54
157680
3176
02:52
but there's two issues.
55
160880
1416
02:54
Now, the first is that dust
that I mentioned earlier.
56
162320
3376
02:57
The dust stops the visible light
from getting to us.
57
165720
2936
03:00
So as we look deeper
into the universe, we see less light.
58
168680
4696
03:05
The dust stops it getting to us.
59
173400
1560
03:07
But there's a really strange problem
with using visible light
60
175520
3416
03:10
in order to try and explore the universe.
61
178960
1960
03:13
Now take a break for a minute.
62
181640
2256
03:15
Say you're standing on a corner,
a busy street corner.
63
183920
2680
03:19
There's cars going by.
64
187080
1496
03:20
An ambulance approaches.
65
188600
1400
03:22
It has a high-pitched siren.
66
190840
1376
03:24
(Imitates a siren passing by)
67
192240
3736
03:28
The siren appeared to change in pitch
68
196000
2336
03:30
as it moved towards and away from you.
69
198360
2080
03:32
The ambulance driver did not change
the siren just to mess with you.
70
200960
3880
03:38
That was a product of your perception.
71
206040
2576
03:40
The sound waves,
as the ambulance approached,
72
208640
2736
03:43
were compressed,
73
211400
1216
03:44
and they changed higher in pitch.
74
212640
1936
03:46
As the ambulance receded,
the sound waves were stretched,
75
214600
2776
03:49
and they sounded lower in pitch.
76
217400
2056
03:51
The same thing happens with light.
77
219480
2000
03:54
Objects moving towards us,
78
222040
2376
03:56
their light waves are compressed
and they appear bluer.
79
224440
3176
03:59
Objects moving away from us,
80
227640
2216
04:01
their light waves are stretched,
and they appear redder.
81
229880
2656
04:04
So we call these effects
blueshift and redshift.
82
232560
2880
04:08
Now, our universe is expanding,
83
236440
2936
04:11
so everything is moving away
from everything else,
84
239400
4176
04:15
and that means
everything appears to be red.
85
243600
2680
04:19
And oddly enough, as you look
more deeply into the universe,
86
247040
3736
04:22
more distant objects
are moving away further and faster,
87
250800
4296
04:27
so they appear more red.
88
255120
1719
04:29
So if I come back to the Hubble Deep Field
89
257560
2935
04:32
and we were to continue
to peer deeply into the universe
90
260519
2697
04:35
just using the Hubble,
91
263240
1536
04:36
as we get to a certain distance away,
92
264800
2696
04:39
everything becomes red,
93
267520
1600
04:41
and that presents something of a problem.
94
269920
1976
04:43
Eventually, we get so far away
95
271920
2056
04:46
everything is shifted into the infrared
96
274000
2976
04:49
and we can't see anything at all.
97
277000
2000
04:51
So there must be a way around this.
98
279680
1696
04:53
Otherwise, I'm limited in my journey.
99
281400
1816
04:55
I wanted to explore the whole universe,
100
283240
1896
04:57
not just whatever I can see,
you know, before the redshift kicks in.
101
285160
3920
05:02
There is a technique.
102
290160
1256
05:03
It's called radio astronomy.
103
291440
1376
05:04
Astronomers have been
using this for decades.
104
292840
2336
05:07
It's a fantastic technique.
105
295200
1296
05:08
I show you the Parkes Radio Telescope,
affectionately known as "The Dish."
106
296520
3486
05:12
You may have seen the movie.
107
300040
1776
05:13
And radio is really brilliant.
108
301840
1576
05:15
It allows us to peer much more deeply.
109
303440
2536
05:18
It doesn't get stopped by dust,
110
306000
2696
05:20
so you can see everything in the universe,
111
308720
2256
05:23
and redshift is less of a problem
112
311000
1856
05:24
because we can build receivers
that receive across a large band.
113
312880
3200
05:28
So what does Parkes see when we turn it
to the center of the Milky Way?
114
316600
3936
05:32
We should see something fantastic, right?
115
320560
1960
05:35
Well, we do see something interesting.
116
323160
2896
05:38
All that dust has gone.
117
326080
1656
05:39
As I mentioned, radio goes
straight through dust, so not a problem.
118
327760
3440
05:43
But the view is very different.
119
331840
1896
05:45
We can see that the center
of the Milky Way is aglow,
120
333760
3816
05:49
and this isn't starlight.
121
337600
1680
05:51
This is a light called
synchrotron radiation,
122
339960
3136
05:55
and it's formed from electrons
spiraling around cosmic magnetic fields.
123
343120
4600
06:00
So the plane is aglow with this light.
124
348280
3096
06:03
And we can also see
strange tufts coming off of it,
125
351400
3296
06:06
and objects which don't appear to line up
126
354720
2496
06:09
with anything that we can see
with our own eyes.
127
357240
2320
06:12
But it's hard to really
interpret this image,
128
360520
2136
06:14
because as you can see,
it's very low resolution.
129
362680
2776
06:17
Radio waves have a wavelength that's long,
130
365480
2176
06:19
and that makes their resolution poorer.
131
367680
2296
06:22
This image is also black and white,
132
370000
2056
06:24
so we don't really know
what is the color of everything in here.
133
372080
3760
06:28
Well, fast-forward to today.
134
376640
1376
06:30
We can build telescopes
135
378040
1456
06:31
which can get over these problems.
136
379520
2616
06:34
Now, I'm showing you here an image
of the Murchison Radio Observatory,
137
382160
3336
06:37
a fantastic place
to build radio telescopes.
138
385520
2776
06:40
It's flat, it's dry,
139
388320
2296
06:42
and most importantly, it's radio quiet:
140
390640
2976
06:45
no mobile phones, no Wi-Fi, nothing,
141
393640
3096
06:48
just very, very radio quiet,
142
396760
2496
06:51
so a perfect place
to build a radio telescope.
143
399280
2720
06:54
Now, the telescope that I've been
working on for a few years
144
402880
2856
06:57
is called the Murchison Widefield Array,
145
405760
1936
06:59
and I'm going to show you
a little time lapse of it being built.
146
407720
3016
07:02
This is a group of undergraduate
and postgraduate students
147
410760
3256
07:06
located in Perth.
148
414040
1256
07:07
We call them the Student Army,
149
415320
1736
07:09
and they volunteered their time
to build a radio telescope.
150
417080
2816
07:11
There's no course credit for this.
151
419920
1640
07:14
And they're putting together
these radio dipoles.
152
422320
2896
07:17
They just receive at low frequencies,
a bit like your FM radio or your TV.
153
425240
4960
07:23
And here we are deploying them
across the desert.
154
431000
3096
07:26
The final telescope
covers 10 square kilometers
155
434120
2416
07:28
of the Western Australian desert.
156
436560
2136
07:30
And the interesting thing is,
there's no moving parts.
157
438720
2976
07:33
We just deploy these little antennas
158
441720
2256
07:36
essentially on chicken mesh.
159
444000
1856
07:37
It's fairly cheap.
160
445880
1416
07:39
Cables take the signals
161
447320
1976
07:41
from the antennas
162
449320
2056
07:43
and bring them
to central processing units.
163
451400
2536
07:45
And it's the size of this telescope,
164
453960
1776
07:47
the fact that we've built it
over the entire desert
165
455760
2656
07:50
that gives us a better
resolution than Parkes.
166
458440
2800
07:53
Now, eventually all those cables
bring them to a unit
167
461880
3536
07:57
which sends it off
to a supercomputer here in Perth,
168
465440
3536
08:01
and that's where I come in.
169
469000
1286
08:03
(Sighs)
170
471320
1216
08:04
Radio data.
171
472560
1216
08:05
I have spent the last five years
172
473800
1816
08:07
working with very difficult,
very interesting data
173
475640
2856
08:10
that no one had really looked at before.
174
478520
1976
08:12
I've spent a long time calibrating it,
175
480520
2136
08:14
running millions of CPU hours
on supercomputers
176
482680
3896
08:18
and really trying to understand that data.
177
486600
2200
08:21
And with this telescope,
178
489360
1936
08:23
with this data,
179
491320
1256
08:24
we've performed a survey
of the entire southern sky,
180
492600
3936
08:28
the GaLactic and Extragalactic
All-sky MWA Survey,
181
496560
5096
08:33
or GLEAM, as I call it.
182
501680
1880
08:36
And I'm very excited.
183
504440
1456
08:37
This survey is just about to be published,
but it hasn't been shown yet,
184
505920
3381
08:41
so you are literally the first people
185
509325
1931
08:43
to see this southern survey
of the entire sky.
186
511280
2800
08:46
So I'm delighted to share with you
some images from this survey.
187
514799
3321
08:50
Now, imagine you went to the Murchison,
188
518880
1895
08:52
you camped out underneath the stars
189
520799
2096
08:54
and you looked towards the south.
190
522919
1617
08:56
You saw the south's celestial pole,
191
524560
1667
08:58
the galaxy rising.
192
526251
1205
08:59
If I fade in the radio light,
193
527480
2616
09:02
this is what we observe with our survey.
194
530120
2656
09:04
You can see that the galactic plane
is no longer dark with dust.
195
532800
3056
09:07
It's alight with synchrotron radiation,
196
535880
2416
09:10
and thousands of dots are in the sky.
197
538320
2496
09:12
Our large Magellanic Cloud,
our nearest galactic neighbor,
198
540840
3296
09:16
is orange instead
of its more familiar blue-white.
199
544160
3216
09:19
So there's a lot going on in this.
Let's take a closer look.
200
547400
3376
09:22
If we look back
towards the galactic center,
201
550800
2416
09:25
where we originally saw the Parkes image
that I showed you earlier,
202
553240
3216
09:28
low resolution, black and white,
203
556480
2376
09:30
and we fade to the GLEAM view,
204
558880
2080
09:34
you can see the resolution
has gone up by a factor of a hundred.
205
562200
3856
09:38
We now have a color view of the sky,
206
566080
2856
09:40
a technicolor view.
207
568960
1336
09:42
Now, it's not a false color view.
208
570320
2976
09:45
These are real radio colors.
209
573320
2400
09:48
What I've done is I've colored
the lowest frequencies red
210
576600
2816
09:51
and the highest frequencies blue,
211
579440
1616
09:53
and the middle ones green.
212
581080
1576
09:54
And that gives us this rainbow view.
213
582680
2216
09:56
And this isn't just false color.
214
584920
2256
09:59
The colors in this image
tell us about the physical processes
215
587200
2936
10:02
going on in the universe.
216
590160
1240
10:03
So for instance, if you look
along the plane of the galaxy,
217
591974
2762
10:06
it's alight with synchrotron,
218
594760
1456
10:08
which is mostly reddish orange,
219
596240
2376
10:10
but if we look very closely,
we see little blue dots.
220
598640
3120
10:14
Now, if we zoom in,
221
602320
1576
10:15
these blue dots are ionized plasma
222
603920
2536
10:18
around very bright stars,
223
606480
1640
10:20
and what happens
is that they block the red light,
224
608680
2776
10:23
so they appear blue.
225
611480
1640
10:25
And these can tell us
about these star-forming regions
226
613880
2936
10:28
in our galaxy.
227
616840
1256
10:30
And we just see them immediately.
228
618120
1616
10:31
We look at the galaxy,
and the color tells us that they're there.
229
619760
3056
10:34
You can see little soap bubbles,
230
622840
1576
10:36
little circular images
around the galactic plane,
231
624440
3416
10:39
and these are supernova remnants.
232
627880
2000
10:42
When a star explodes,
233
630600
1696
10:44
its outer shell is cast off
234
632320
2456
10:46
and it travels outward into space
gathering up material,
235
634800
3296
10:50
and it produces a little shell.
236
638120
1960
10:52
It's been a long-standing
mystery to astronomers
237
640800
3376
10:56
where all the supernova remnants are.
238
644200
2080
10:58
We know that there must be a lot
of high-energy electrons in the plane
239
646960
4336
11:03
to produce the synchrotron
radiation that we see,
240
651320
2656
11:06
and we think they're produced
by supernova remnants,
241
654000
2576
11:08
but there don't seem to be enough.
242
656600
1776
11:10
Fortunately, GLEAM is really, really
good at detecting supernova remnants,
243
658400
3896
11:14
so we're hoping to have
a new paper out on that soon.
244
662320
2480
11:17
Now, that's fine.
245
665800
1256
11:19
We've explored our little local universe,
246
667080
2336
11:21
but I wanted to go deeper,
I wanted to go further.
247
669440
2376
11:23
I wanted to go beyond the Milky Way.
248
671840
2080
11:26
Well, as it happens, we can see a very
interesting object in the top right,
249
674520
3776
11:30
and this is a local radio galaxy,
250
678320
2216
11:32
Centaurus A.
251
680560
1240
11:34
If we zoom in on this,
252
682240
1256
11:35
we can see that there are
two huge plumes going out into space.
253
683520
3400
11:39
And if you look right in the center
between those two plumes,
254
687600
2896
11:42
you'll see a galaxy just like our own.
255
690520
2376
11:44
It's a spiral. It has a dust lane.
256
692920
2456
11:47
It's a normal galaxy.
257
695400
1616
11:49
But these jets
are only visible in the radio.
258
697040
3616
11:52
If we looked in the visible,
we wouldn't even know they were there,
259
700680
3176
11:55
and they're thousands of times larger
than the host galaxy.
260
703880
3040
11:59
What's going on?
What's producing these jets?
261
707480
2400
12:03
At the center of every galaxy
that we know about
262
711160
3536
12:06
is a supermassive black hole.
263
714720
2256
12:09
Now, black holes are invisible.
That's why they're called that.
264
717000
3416
12:12
All you can see is the deflection
of the light around them,
265
720440
3016
12:15
and occasionally, when a star
or a cloud of gas comes into their orbit,
266
723480
4296
12:19
it is ripped apart by tidal forces,
267
727800
2736
12:22
forming what we call an accretion disk.
268
730560
2480
12:25
The accretion disk
glows brightly in the x-rays,
269
733640
3216
12:28
and huge magnetic fields
can launch the material into space
270
736880
4416
12:33
at nearly the speed of light.
271
741320
1720
12:35
So these jets are visible in the radio
272
743520
3160
12:39
and this is what we pick up in our survey.
273
747240
2160
12:42
Well, very well, so we've seen
one radio galaxy. That's nice.
274
750040
4016
12:46
But if you just look
at the top of that image,
275
754080
2176
12:48
you'll see another radio galaxy.
276
756280
1736
12:50
It's a little bit smaller,
and that's just because it's further away.
277
758040
3240
12:53
OK. Two radio galaxies.
278
761800
2656
12:56
We can see this. This is fine.
279
764480
1576
12:58
Well, what about all the other dots?
280
766080
1736
12:59
Presumably those are just stars.
281
767840
1560
13:01
They're not.
282
769880
1216
13:03
They're all radio galaxies.
283
771120
1600
13:05
Every single one of the dots in this image
284
773320
2896
13:08
is a distant galaxy,
285
776240
1736
13:10
millions to billions of light-years away
286
778000
2856
13:12
with a supermassive
black hole at its center
287
780880
2616
13:15
pushing material into space
at nearly the speed of light.
288
783520
3576
13:19
It is mind-blowing.
289
787120
1760
13:21
And this survey is even larger
than what I've shown here.
290
789680
3736
13:25
If we zoom out to
the full extent of the survey,
291
793440
2536
13:28
you can see I found 300,000
of these radio galaxies.
292
796000
4096
13:32
So it's truly an epic journey.
293
800120
2896
13:35
We've discovered all of these galaxies
294
803040
2656
13:37
right back to the very first
supermassive black holes.
295
805720
3560
13:41
I'm very proud of this,
and it will be published next week.
296
809960
2780
13:45
Now, that's not all.
297
813280
2816
13:48
I've explored the furthest reaches
of the galaxy with this survey,
298
816120
4336
13:52
but there's something
even more in this image.
299
820480
2960
13:56
Now, I'll take you right back
to the dawn of time.
300
824320
3296
13:59
When the universe formed,
it was a big bang,
301
827640
3656
14:03
which left the universe
as a sea of hydrogen,
302
831320
4056
14:07
neutral hydrogen.
303
835400
1496
14:08
And when the very first stars
and galaxies switched on,
304
836920
2776
14:11
they ionized that hydrogen.
305
839720
2096
14:13
So the universe went
from neutral to ionized.
306
841840
3440
14:18
That imprinted a signal all around us.
307
846160
3176
14:21
Everywhere, it pervades us,
308
849360
1736
14:23
like the Force.
309
851120
1416
14:24
Now, because that happened so long ago,
310
852560
3720
14:29
the signal was redshifted,
311
857000
1800
14:31
so now that signal
is at very low frequencies.
312
859560
3296
14:34
It's at the same frequency as my survey,
313
862880
2456
14:37
but it's so faint.
314
865360
1376
14:38
It's a billionth the size
of any of the objects in my survey.
315
866760
3880
14:43
So our telescope may not be quite
sensitive enough to pick up this signal.
316
871320
4896
14:48
However, there's a new radio telescope.
317
876240
2496
14:50
So I can't have a starship,
318
878760
1656
14:52
but I can hopefully have
319
880440
1256
14:53
one of the biggest
radio telescopes in the world.
320
881720
2856
14:56
We're building the Square Kilometre Array,
a new radio telescope,
321
884600
3616
15:00
and it's going to be a thousand
times bigger than the MWA,
322
888240
2736
15:03
a thousand times more sensitive,
and have an even better resolution.
323
891000
3216
15:06
So we should find
tens of millions of galaxies.
324
894240
2216
15:08
And perhaps, deep in that signal,
325
896480
2336
15:10
I will get to look upon the very first
stars and galaxies switching on,
326
898840
4176
15:15
the beginning of time itself.
327
903040
2360
15:17
Thank you.
328
905920
1216
15:19
(Applause)
329
907160
2760
Translated by Joseph Geni
Reviewed by Joanna Pietrulewicz

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Natasha Hurley-Walker - Astronomer
Natasha Hurley-Walker uses novel radio telescopes to explore the universe at some of the longest wavelengths of light.

Why you should listen

Dr. Natasha Hurley-Walker recently completed an astronomical survey of the entire southern sky, revealing the radio glow of our own Milky Way galaxy as well as hundreds of thousands of distant galaxies: the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. Unlike previous work, GLEAM is the first "radio color" survey, observed across such a wide range of frequencies that the unique spectrum of every object can be used to understand its underlying physics.

An Early-Career Research Fellow based at the Curtin University node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, in Perth, Western Australia, Hurley-Walker is part of the international Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) collaboration, spanning thirteen institutes across six countries. At her fingertips are tens of petabytes of data collected by the MWA since 2013, which she processes using powerful supercomputers at the nearby Pawsey Centre. Hurley-Walker earned a PhD in Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge by commissioning and using a new radio telescope to perform its first science observations. The experience directly transferred to the MWA, which she also helped to commission.

The MWA is a precursor to the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), what will be the largest radio telescope in the world, set to come online in the 2020s. By developing software and techniques to deal with data from the MWA, creating pathfinding maps of the sky and training a new generation of astronomers in cutting-edge techniques, Hurley-Walker is working to lay the scientific groundwork for the commissioning of the SKA. In 2016 Hurley-Walker was awarded an Australian SKA Fellowship in order to visit the SKA headquarters and transfer lessons from her commissioning experiences as well as develop her survey into a useful calibration model for the SKA.

Hurley-Walker is passionate about scientific outreach and keynoted talks in 2013 and 2017 at Astrofest, Australia's largest public astronomy festival. So that anyone in the world can see the sky with the same radio eyes as her, she created the GLEAMoscope , an interactive online viewer that shows the universe at radio wavelengths compared to other frequencies, including the more familiar "optical" spectrum. It being the 21st century, there's also an app: check out GLEAM on the Google Play store. In 2017 Natasha won the "Best Timelapse" category in the Astofest astrophotography competition with her colleague John Goldsmith for their creation of a composite video showing both the optical and radio sky. For more detail on Hurley-Walker's work, check out her article on TheConversation.

Working with cutting-edge data is tough, but sometimes hides serendipitous gems which Hurley-Walker has unearthed, like the faintest dying radio galaxy ever discoveredwhistling plasma ducts in the Earth's ionosphere and some of the youngest and weirdest radio galaxies ever found. View a complete list of Hurley-Walker's publications.

More profile about the speaker
Natasha Hurley-Walker | Speaker | TED.com