Historically, Russian radio astronomy has had a permanent and stable connection with the P N Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The institute had both permanent stations and conducted expeditions to locations in the field in the Crimea region. These facilities, and expeditions were designed for research in radio astronomy beginning in the late 1940s. A decade later the center for radio astronomy research had gravitated to the southern Moscow region, in Pushchino. Here a new observatory, the Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory was developed within twenty years as part of the . It has become one of the largest radio astronomy observatories in Russia and in the world. It was founded in April, 11th, 1956 under the purview of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR.
History of equipment in use
The Pushchino Radio Astronomy Observatory has four notable radio telescopes, each with mirrors at 22 meters. Constructed in 1959 these are fully steerable, and are designed to operate in millimeter and centimeter ranges of wavelength. Added to the equipage is the DKR 1000, a wide-band radio telescope instrument, on-line in 1964, and operating in the meter wavelength range. The DKR 1000 has arms that are 40 by 1000 meters. In 1973, another telescope was added to this set. The nomenclature is "Large Phased Array" with the designation BSA/LPI, operating in the meter wavelength range. The DKR 1000 and BSA/LPI, are currently the largest radio telescopes in the world, which operate in the meter range.
Research divisions
The Observatory employs 45 researchers along with 60 engineers and technicians to accomplish staff the several major departments and several labs of the observatory. These are combined with 80 other people who perform administrative duties, workshops, garage, and a staff of guards. The departments and labs are designed to focus on scientific and technical aspects of observatory sciences. The departments are as follows: Plasma astrophysics, Extragalactic radio astronomy, Pulsar physics, Space radio spectroscopy, and Pulsar astrometry. The laboratories are as follows: Radio astronomy equipment, Automation radio astronomy research, Computer engineering and information technology, and Radio telescopes of the meter wavelength range.
Main areas of research
radio astronomy for Astrophysics
molecular clouds physics
space masers
giant atoms in Space
star formation processes
physical conditions in the diffuse interstellar medium
supernova remnants and the interstellar medium
radio emission of radio galaxies and quasars
interplanetary plasma and solar wind investigations
how perturbations propagate in the interplanetary plasma is studied