Philips Atlas of the Universe

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

EXPLORING THE UNIVERSE


are not very good, and the site was selected only because
there are no really favourable locations in the old USSR.
Against this, the mountain observatories are spec-
tacular by any standards. The loftiest of all is the summit
of Mauna Kea, the extinct volcano in Hawaii, at well over
4000 metres (13,800 feet). At this height one’s lungs take
in only 39 per cent of the normal amount of oxygen, and
care is essential; nobody actually sleeps at the summit,
and after a night’s observing the astronomers drive down
to the ‘halfway house’, Hale Pohaku, where the air is
much denser. There are now many telescopes on Mauna
Kea, and others are planned. Almost equally awe-inspir-
ing is the top of the Roque de los Muchachos (the Rock of
the Boys), at La Palma in the Canary Islands. The altitude
is 2332 metres (7648 feet), and it is here that we find
the largest British telescope, the 4.2-metre (165-inch)
William Herschel reflector. The ‘Rock’ is truly interna-
tional; La Palma is a Spanish island, but there are observ-
atories not only from Britain but also from Scandinavia,
Germany, Italy and other countries. Another superb site is
the Atacama Desert of Northern Chile, where there are
four major observatories: La Silla (run by the European

Southern Observatory), Cerro Tololo and Las Campanas
(run by the United States), and the new observatory for
the VLT or Very Large Telescope, at Cerro Paranal in
the northern Atacama. The VLT has four 8.2-metre
(323-inch) mirrors working together; the mirrors are
named Antu, Kueyen, Yepun and Melipal. They can also
be used separately.
A modern observatory has to be almost a city in itself,
with laboratories, engineering and electronic workshops,
living quarters, kitchens and much else. Yet today there
is a new development. Telescopes can be operated by
remote control, so that the astronomer need not be in the
observatory at all – or even in the same continent. For
example, it is quite practicable to sit in a control room
in Cambridge and operate a telescope thousands of kilo-
metres away in Chile or Hawaii.
Observatories are now world-wide. There is even an
observatory at the South Pole, where viewing conditions
are excellent even though the climate is somewhat daunt-
ing. The AST/RO (Antarctic Submillimetre Telescope
and Remote Observatory) is in constant use; AST/RO has
an aperture of 67 inches (1.7 metres).

Kitt Peak, Arizona. Kitt
Peak is the US national
research facility for ground-
based optical astronomy. Its
largest optical telescope,
seen at top right, is the
Mayall reflector, with a
3.81-m (150-inch) mirror;
the altitude is 2064 m
(6770 feet). The triangular
building in the foreground is
the McMath–Pierce Solar
Facility, the world’s largest
solar telescope.

Antarctic Submillimetre
Telescope and Remote
Observatory AST/RO, at the
South Pole, where conditions
for this kind of research are
exceptionally good.

▲Dome of the Palomar
5.08-m (200-inch) reflector.
The Hale reflector was
brought into action in 1948,
and was for many years in
a class of its own. Though
it is no longer the world’s

largest, it maintains its
position in the forefront of
research, and is now used
with electronic equipment,
so that it is actually far more
effective than it was when
first completed.

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