Part I - The Optical-Infrared Telescopes
The summit of Mauna Kea is considered by many to be the best
site for astronomical observations in the world. With approximately
220 clear nights every year, a stable, dry atmosphere which results
in sharp images, and no major cities nearby to affect the night
sky, it has been chosen as the site for many different telescopes.
In this article, we focus our attention on the other facilities
which share the mountain with Subaru.
Closest to Subaru on the mountain are the twin domes of the Keck
telescopes, operated by the University of California, the California
Institute of Technology, and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA). Each has a diameter of 10 meters,
making them the largest fully steerable optical-infrared telescopes
in the world. Unlike Subaru and the other telescopes on the mountain,
the Keck primary mirrors are constructed not from a single piece
of glass, but from 36 separate hexagonal elements, each approximately
2 meters across. The Keck I and Keck II telescopes began their
science observations in 1993 and 1996, respectively.
Next comes the 3-meter
Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF), operated on behalf of
NASA by the University of Hawai`i. IRTF is intended to provide
support for NASA's program to explore the Solar System through
coordinated observations with existing or planned missions, or
simply by undertaking studies which will provide the intellectual
groundwork for future missions. Although Solar System observations
are the main priority of IRTF, the telescope performs observations
in all areas of astronomy. Infrared observations are important
in many areas of astronomical research, ranging from local star
forming regions (where they can penetrate the thick veils of dust)
to studies of the most distant galaxies (where the Dopper shift
caused by the expansion of the Unvierse moves the light to ever
longer wavelengths).
Moving along, we come to the 3.6-meter
Canada-France-Hawai`i Telescope (CFHT). CFHT celebrated its
21st birthday in August 2000. One of the projects upon which CFHT
is embarking in this era of 8-10 meter telescopes is MegaCam,
a prime-focus camera which will contain 40 CCDs and provide a
field of view of one square degree, four times as large as Suprime-Cam's.
It will therefore be able to survey the sky almost as quickly
as Suprime-Cam, despite having a primary mirror that gathers only
one fifth the light compared to Subaru's.
Up the ridge from CFHT is Gemini
North whose primary mirror is 8.1 meters across, only
slightly smaller than Subaru's. Gemini North is one of a pair
of telescopes funded by an international consortium of the USA,
UK, Canada, Australia, Chile, Brazil, and Argentina; the other,
Gemini South at Cerro Pachon in Chile, saw First Light in November
2000. Together, these two telescope can observe the entire celestial
sphere.
Apart from operating the IRTF and having access to all the telescopes
on the summit, the University
of Hawai`i (UH) has its own 2.2-meter
telescope. Although much smaller than the other telescopes on
the island, there are many projects for which a very large telescope
is not required; in addition, since there are not as many UH staff
to apply for time on the 2.2-meter as there are, for example,
Japanese astronomers to apply for time on Subaru, observers can
have larger allocations of time which can make up for the smaller
light-gathering power of the telescope.
The
United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT), like the IRTF,
is designed solely for performing observations in the infrared
part of the spectrum. At 3.8 meters in diameter, it is the
largest such telescope in the world and, as a dedicated infrared
telescope, it can host instruments which a more versatile telescope
such as Subaru cannot. One such instrument is the wide-field camera
(WFCAM), currently being build in Edinburgh, UK, which will be
able to observe a field of view one degree in diameter. UKIRT
is operated by the Joint Astronomy Centre in Hilo, which is supported
by the research councils of the United Kingdom, Canada, and the
Netherlands.
The smallest telescope on the summit is the University of Hawai`i
0.6-meter telescope. Installed in 1969, it also has the distinction
of being the first telescope used for research on Mauna Kea.
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