News on ancient-astronomy
- New robotic observatory on Antarctica
- Mountain top explodes friday to make way for giant telescope
- The Titanic disaster: Blame the Moon
- Herschels records available online
- 4 new laser telescopes delivered to ESO
- New supercomputer needed to handle new super observatory
- One more step for the Magellan Giant Telescope
- A boost for European radio-astronomy
- New technique makes observatories better than spacetelescopes
- ESO's 50 year anniversary
- Comet lovejoy over ESO
- Revolutionary new submilimeter camera first ligth
- First ligth for virtual 360 000km telescope
- ESO's Extremely Large Telescope one step closer to reality
- David H. Levy Logbooks online
- 10 years of adaptive optics
- Belgian astronomer discovered Big Bang - Not Edwin Hubble
- New privately funded radio-telescope array
- Full-size mock-up of world’s future largest telescope mirror
- Cryogenic Catering Truck Comes to the ALMA Observatory
- ALMA array ready for operation
- Astronomers start testing IR-camera at worlds largest telescope
- Worlds larget radio antenna
- Subaru telescope optics damaged
- Funidng for new giant solar telescope in place
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Funidng for new giant solar telescope in place
Thursday, 23 June 2011 11:01
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| Astronomy - Historic-astronomy |
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The 4.2-meter mirror will be the largest telescope mirror ever pointed at the sun. Polished into a highly complex, asymmetric shape, it will be the centerpiece of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope in Hawaii, allowing researchers to study the sun in unprecedented detail. The University of Arizona's College of Optical Sciences has been awarded a multi-million dollar contract by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, or AURA, to polish the 4.2-meter primary mirror for the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope, or ATST.
Surface-details of the Sun with the Swedish 1,2m solar telescope on the Canary Islands The project, led by James H. Burge, professor of astronomy and of optical sciences, and Martin Valente, director of the Optical Fabrication and Engineering Facility, utilizes advanced technologies developed at the UA for polishing large ultra-precise mirrors and for measuring shape errors of complex mirrors with high precision. Source: University of Arizona |





