“You deal with us like a pack of galahs. [That’s a kind of parrot.] Simply because I don’t put on a tie or spend all day buried in a handbook doesn’t imply I’m a drongo. [That’s a hopeless …]”
What’s your favorite line from the film ‘The Dish’?
Created and written by Rob Sitch, Jane Kennedy, Tom Gleisner and Santo Cilauro, the 2000 movie is an Aussie traditional. It options Sam Neill, Tom Lengthy and Kev Harrington as employees at Murriyang, our Parkes radio telescope, in rural New South Wales, and the way they supported receiving and relaying the stay TV broadcast photos of the Apollo 11 Moon touchdown.
The Dish is cherished by audiences and critics: “David and Margaret” each gave it 4.5 stars! We love the film a lot we thought it’d be enjoyable to take take a look at what’s truth and what’s fiction, all within the title of a great story, after all.
Australia’s position within the 1969 Apollo 11 moon touchdown was immortalised in The Dish
What’s truth?
1. “We’re in the midst of the best feat ever tried. That is science’s likelihood to be daring.”
Murriyang, our Parkes radio telescope, did assist the Apollo 11 mission. Affectionately often known as ‘The Dish’, our telescope tracked Apollo 11 all through its journey, gathering voice alerts from the astronauts, telemetry from the spaceship, and the tv alerts from the moonwalk itself. It’s true that our assist was wanted to assist NASA’s Honeysuckle Creek and Tidbinbilla services close to Canberra, and the Carnarvon station in Western Australia. The alerts from NASA’s Goldstone, USA, monitoring station did “disappear into the bottom” on the day. The movie additionally confirmed a practical illustration of the Parkes management room and the way our employees operated the telescope.
2. “What’s the bell for?” “Lets us understand it’s windy.” “I might’ve informed you that. It’s blowing a bloody gale.”
Radio telescopes like Murriyang will be buffeted by wind similar to your umbrella on a windy day. Lately the telescope is robotically ‘parked’ at winds of 35km/hr. On the day of the moonwalk it was gusting 100km/hr! And it saved blowing a (bloody) gale all through the moonwalk! The observatory’s then-Director, John G Bolton, made the choice to maintain pointing into the wind. Fortunately, all of it turned out for the very best! Watch former Parkes electrical engineer David Cooke talk about the storm.
3. “They’re strolling early. Armstrong overruled the sleep break … He stated, ‘We don’t need to sleep. We need to stroll.’”
It’s true, the astronauts did stroll forward of schedule.
And what’s fiction? (To make a great story!)
1. “Honeysuckle Creek, additionally they have voice and telemetry, sure?”
The film’s largest departure from actual occasions is that it offers all credit score to the group on the Parkes Observatory. In actuality, the group at NASA’s Honeysuckle Creek monitoring station close to Canberra in addition to different services round Australia – together with Parkes – all performed necessary roles in supporting the Apollo 11 mission.
The primary minutes of the televised broadcast of the Moon touchdown have been acquired by way of Honeysuckle Creek, together with Neil Armstrong’s iconic ‘One big leap’ second. The employees at Honeysuckle additionally helped to broadcast the historic stay tv protection all over the world. It was a group Australia effort! And the congratulatory telegram from NASA included many extra gamers than simply Parkes.
2. “Nonetheless not flat sufficient, Glenn. I’ll give it a tweak.”
Sadly, our employees by no means performed cricket on the Dish. The actors did movie this scene on the precise telescope, however they needed to be very cautious across the gear and solely use a tennis ball. Howzat for a enjoyable movie truth?
3. “I believed there’s an uninterruptible energy supply. ” “It was designed as a UPS, however, um, the generator didn’t relax in … ”
We do have a UPS and backup diesel generator, however there was no energy failure. All in all, high quality management and foresight at Parkes have been a lot larger than the shemozzle proven within the film. Such was his dedication and thoroughness; Parkes Observatory Director John Bolton really had his group follow hand cranking the radio telescope to maintain the lunar module in vary within the occasion of a complete energy failure.
4: Younger journalist: “Can I’ve their full names and particular roles?”
The employees names and personas are fictionalised. The actual Director, John Bolton, handed away in 1993.
5: “What do I care if some bigwig Yank sees I really like my spouse?”
There was no animosity with American guests: we labored collectively and discovered from one another. In truth, in actual life there have been many extra NASA employees current than the one man, ‘Al Burnett’, performed by Patrick Warburton within the movie: it was a big group effort. Virtually 50 years later, we’re nonetheless working with NASA, sharing experience and exploring house collectively.
6. “Why’s it in the midst of a sheep paddock?!”
The movie begins off with the Prime Minister not realizing about Parkes. In truth, the PM knew all about our telescope — half the telescope’s building funds got here from the Australian Authorities. On the day of the Apollo 11 Moon touchdown, Prime Minister John Gorton made a shock go to to Honeysuckle Creek, not Parkes.
7. “It’s as massive as a soccer subject.”
Hmm … the dish is massive, however not that massive. With a diameter of 64 metres, Murriyang is without doubt one of the largest single-dish telescopes within the southern hemisphere devoted to astronomy. Don’t consider us? Come and see for your self!
See The Dish for your self!
Whether or not you’re travelling with your loved ones, faculty or a vacationer group, our Parkes Observatory Visitors Centre is a superb place to go to.
These details have been taken from the e-book “Parkes: 30 Years of Radio Astronomy” obtainable by the Parkes Observatory Visitors Centre.
This text was printed by CSIRO. You may learn the unique here
