Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope

Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope

Wide view of several observatories from the air, including Cerro Pachón which includes SOAR
Coordinates 30°14′17″S 70°44′01″W / 30.238°S 70.73372°W / -30.238; -70.73372Coordinates: 30°14′17″S 70°44′01″W / 30.238°S 70.73372°W / -30.238; -70.73372
Altitude 2,738±1 metre
Telescope style telescope
Diameter 4.1±0.1 metre

The Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope is a modern 4.1-meter (13 ft) aperture optical and near-infrared telescope located on Cerro Pachón, Chile at 2,738 metres (8,983 ft) elevation. It was commissioned in 2003, and is operated by a consortium including the countries of Brazil and Chile, Michigan State University, the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) (part of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory, NOAO), and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Partners have guaranteed shares varying from 10 to 30 percent of the observing time.

The telescope uses active optics on its primary and secondary mirrors to attain median image quality 0.7 arcsec at a wavelength of 500 nm. Multiple instruments are available on standby, mounted at unusually high weight-capacity Nasmyth foci and two lower capacity bent-Cassegrain foci. Switching is accomplished within a few minutes by rotating the 45° tertiary mirror. The pointing of this mirror is adjusted at high speed to prevent image blur from vibrations induced by wind-shake of the telescope structure.

Overview

Its optical specifications are:

Instruments

Current (5/2014) instruments are:

Additional facility instruments are being commissioned:

User instruments are employed by individual astronomers or teams but not available to all users.

US astronomers access the telescope remotely over the Internet 2. Chilean and Brazilian astronomers use their high-speed networks. An on-site operator controls where the telescope points while the remote astronomer controls the instrument and data retrieval.

The SOAR telescope dome is a $2 million, 66-foot-diameter (20 m), weatherproof structure weighing over 70 tons.[2]

See also

References

External links

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