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Telescopes

ASTRON is responsible for the operations of the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) and the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR).

Astronomy

The astronomical research at ASTRON is closely aligned with the strengths of our facilities LOFAR and WSRT-APERTIF.

Diversity & Sustainability

ASTRON is committed to achieving a fair, welcoming, and sustainable work environment for all.

Beschermingszones


Met onze radiotelescopen nemen wij de meest zwakke signalen uit het heelal waar. Daardoor zijn zij kwetsbaar voor elektromagnetische storing. Met het tijdig treffen van de juiste maatregelen kan storing worden voorkomen.

Wireless Data Lab


Draadloze techniek lijkt vanzelfsprekend, maar de ontwikkeling ervan gaat niet vanzelf. Daarom hebben we bij ASTRON een proeftuin ingericht; het Wireless Data Lab.

Making discoveries
in radio astronomy
happen.

ASTRON is the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy, and is part of the Institutes organisation of NWO.
STORIES

Invisible jets from tiny black holes sculpt the Galaxy

Black holes, even relatively small ones, leave dramatic “footprints” in space that extend far beyond their immediate vicinity—like ripples from a pebble dropped in a pond. New research using the MeerKAT radio telescope reveals that stellar-mass black holes (those formed from collapsed stars) shoot powerful jets of energy creating massive shockwaves, effectively carving out space and influencing their galactic neighbourhoods over thousands of years. The discoveries show smaller black holes play a much more significant role in shaping galaxies than previously thought. These findings are published today in two studies featured in the scientific journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Astronomy
News
Published by the editorial team, 25 April 2025

‘Beyond what we’d hoped’: international telescope in Australia captures first glimpse of the Universe

The first image from the international SKA Observatory’s telescope in Australia, SKA-Low, has been released – a significant milestone in its quest to reveal an unparalleled view of our Universe.

Science
SKA
Published by the editorial team, 17 March 2025

New Technology for Ultra-Fast Data Transfer: SURF and ASTRON Establish 400G Connection

SURF and ASTRON have implemented the OpenZR+ technology to establish a 400G network connection, significantly enhancing scientific research in the Netherlands.

LOFAR
News
Published by the editorial team, 20 February 2025

Astronomers Astonished: Enigmatic Distant Radio Bursts Appear to be Neutron Stars

Using the radio telescope at Westerbork, The Netherlands, astronomers have discovered two dozen of the unexplained Fast Radio Bursts. After zooming in on the signal of the distant bursts, the astronomers found a striking similarity to the radio flashes emitted by nearby, known neutron stars. The discovery is remarkable because these nearby neutron stars already produce more energy than anything achievable on Earth. The distant stars that emit the Fast Radio Bursts must somehow generate an astounding one billion times more energy than the nearby ones.

Astronomy
News
Science
WSRT-APERTIF
Published by the editorial team, 23 January 2025

European Pulsar Timing Array Wins Two Prestigious Awards

Roelien Attema named as Netherlands Academy of Engineering Fellow

Using short radio flashes to probe the remnants of neutron star mergers

LOFAR1 operations stopped, telescope gearing up for 2.0 upgrade

Gargantuan Black Hole Jets Are Biggest Seen Yet

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DAILY IMAGE

Colloquium: Reconstructing Cosmic Magnetism: New Techniques for Faraday Dispersion Recovery

© Victor Gustafsson

Magnetic fields play a fundamental role in shaping astrophysical environments, yet their structure and evolution remain difficult to probe. One of the most powerful tools for studying cosmic magnetism is Faraday rotation, which encodes information about the strength and topology of magnetic fields along the line of sight. However, recovering this information from interferometric polarization data is challenging due to the incomplete frequency sampling and limited bandwidth of radio observations.

In this talk, I will present two algorithms aimed at reconstructing the true Faraday dispersion from radio interferometric observations. The first integrates aperture synthesis and rotation measure (RM) synthesis into a single, self-consistent framework. This joint deconvolution enables deeper cleaning and more accurate reconstruction of polarized emission, while simultaneously correcting for direction-dependent effects that are common in modern radio interferometry.

The second approach explores the use of deep learning for RM synthesis deconvolution. This method, which operates on stacks of deconvolved two-dimensional polarized images, uses a less restrictive prior than conventional algorithms, enabling the recovery of extended and complex structures in Faraday depth space.

I will begin by outlining the theoretical foundations of both RM synthesis and aperture synthesis, highlighting their formal similarities as Fourier inversion problems. This perspective provides the motivation for treating them within a unified framework. I will then introduce the two algorithms designed to reconstruct the Faraday dispersion, and discuss their underlying assumptions and computational strategies. Finally, I will present results from applying these methods to both synthetic datasets and real observational data from the LOFAR and MeerKAT radio telescopes.

ASTRON daily image.
EVENTS

CASPER Workshop 2025

Mon 08 Sep 2025 - Fri 12 Sep 2025

The CASPER workshop is a semi-annual workshop where FPGA, GPU, and general heterogeneous system programmers get together to discuss new instruments in radio astronomy, as well as the tools and libraries for developing and manipulating these instruments.

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