A
pioneering radio astronomy project, introducing skills and expertise to
countries across Sub-Saharan Africa, has received a funding boost to continue
its transformational work.
The
Development in Africa with Radio Astronomy (DARA) project – which is led
by the University of Leeds –
has already trained more than 300 students and post-graduates in eight
countries since its launch eight years ago.
This
new £6.5m cash injection will help to train a further 225 people over the next
three years, equipping them with skills in radio astronomy and data science
that they can then apply to other sectors and help address local development
challenges such as water, agriculture and deforestation.
Melvin Hoare, Professor
of Astrophysics in Leeds’ School of Physics and
Astronomy, kickstarted the DARA project back in 2015. He said it was
“great news” that new funding would help to continue the initiative’s
life-changing work.

Students, tutors and Turkana Basin Institute (TBI) staff at the University of Edinburgh's 40 cm optical telescope.
“What always drives me to keep pushing
on in this project is the individual stories: meeting the African students,
many of whom have come from extremely poor rural backgrounds, who never thought
they would get the opportunity to study things out in space but always had that
inquisitive nature,” he added.
“Now with the high-tech skills they have
gained, they could come full circle and try to help their country alleviate
these challenges.”
This
third phase of DARA is being funded by the Science and Technology Facilities
Council (STFC) – part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
– via the International Science Partnerships
Fund, in partnership with South Africa.
Professor Hai-Sui Yu,
Leeds’ Interim Vice-Chancellor and President, said: “It’s tremendous this project has received further funding to provide
even more students in the Global South with transferrable skills that will not
only help improve their own economic prospects but could also help find
solutions to local development challenges.
“DARA is a fantastic example of how
innovation and international collaboration can lead to global benefits, and I’m
particularly pleased that our new International Strategy Fund played
a vital part in paving the way to secure this new phase.”
Part
of the world’s biggest radio telescope – the Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
– is being built in South Africa – the first big global science project to be
hosted on the African continent. Eight other countries – Botswana, Ghana,
Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia and Zambia, have partnered
with South Africa, with the ambition to host an extended network of SKA dishes
to deliver very high-resolution images of the radio sky. Prior to this,
the South African Radio Astronomy
Observatory (SARAO) will provide smaller dishes that will be
developed into training facilities over the next three years.

Former Leeds DARA PhD student, Dr Willice Obonyo (far right) – who is now a lecturer at the Technical University of Kenya (TUK) – with students using the small radio telescope.
The
core of the DARA programme is intensive hands-on training in high-level
computing; radio technologies; observational techniques in radio and optical
astronomy; and data reduction and analysis. This will be complemented by
training events and workshops in AI applications involving astronomical and
Earth observation data.
The
trainees also gain an understanding of potential development and
entrepreneurship opportunities from DARA’s industrial partners from the space
sector – all part of the project’s aspirations to do far more than simply
create a new generation of radio astronomers. The aim is to develop space
sector hubs with co-located services including radio telescopes, satellite
downlink, and data centre facilities to foster jobs and economic
opportunities.
The
new phase of DARA will also fund postdoctoral fellows in the African partner
institutions for the first time, in a bid to attract researchers back to their
home countries. The goal is to establish local experts who can utilise the SKA,
in collaboration with astronomers from the UK and South Africa.
Professor
Mark Thomson, Executive Chair of STFC, said: “DARA is a leading example of
strategic investment in science, with real impact across the world. Through our
support of the Research Infrastructure Partnership Programme, we are
reaffirming our commitment to developing high-tech capabilities across SKA
partner countries and fostering new collaborations to push the frontiers of
radio astronomy.”
Alongside
the University of Leeds, the UK partners on DARA are the Universities of Manchester, Edinburgh, Hertfordshire, Bristol, Oxford, Durham, Stirling, and the Highlands and Islands.
And in South Africa, the academic partners are the Universities of Cape Town, Pretoria, Rhodes, North West, UNISA and the Inter-university Institute for Data
Intensive Astronomy.
Anna Scaife, Professor
of Radio Astronomy at the University of Manchester, who led the DARA Big Data
precursor project, said: “Data science
skills have never been as economically valuable as they are right now. Data
intensive science and Big Data projects like the SKA provide a perfect training
ground for students to develop high-level skills that can be more widely
applied.”
The
University of Edinburgh joined DARA via a recent pilot project, also funded by
the University of Leeds’ International Strategy Fund, which trialled a new
optical astronomy training element in Kenya, where a 40cm optical telescope was
installed. This cohort also included students from South Africa, many from
historically disadvantaged institutions.
Professor Colin Snodgrass,
from the School of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Edinburgh, said:
“We are very excited to be joining the DARA project and expanding the training
that it offers to include optical astronomy as well as radio, so that the next
generation of African astronomers are able to study the sky across all wavelengths.”
By: Nana Appiah Acquaye