According to
Leo Blitz, when in 1996 he took over directorship of Berkeley's
Radio Astronomy Laboratory, the giant millimeter-wave astronomy project now in Atacama (
ALMA) was already in prospect, although far from completion. By siting an SZA antenna near each of the CARMA antennas and observing a compact astronomical radio source near the source under study, the properties of the atmosphere could be measured on time scales as short as a couple of seconds. This information could be used in the data reduction process to remove a significant fraction of the degradation caused by the atmospheric scintillation. Observations using the SZA (operating at 30 GHz) to make the atmospheric measurements started in November 2008. The SZA has also participated directly in the science operations of CARMA during experiments where all three types of telescopes were attached to the same correlator. Observations were primarily in the 3 mm range (80–115 GHz) and the 1 mm range (210–270 GHz). These frequencies are useful for detecting many molecular gases, including the second most abundant molecule in the universe,
carbon monoxide (CO). Observing CO is an indirect indicator of the presence of molecular
hydrogen gas (the most abundant molecule in the universe) which is difficult to detect directly. Cold dust is also detectable in this wavelength range and can be used to study planet-forming disks around stars, for example. In 2009, the OVRO 10.4 m antennas were instrumented with 27–35 GHz receivers and made observations in the centimeter band in concert with the SZA antennas. The telescopes ceased operation in 2015 and were relocated to the Owens Valley Radio Observatory for storage.{{Cite web ==VLBI==