11
Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Mauna Kea Observatory

Jordan MatayoshiShae Otsuka

Page 2: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

•It’s a 4,200 meter high summit of Mauna Kea• Hawaii houses the world's largest observatory

Page 3: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

•Research used for optical, infrared, and submillimeter astronomy.

Page 4: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

•There are 13 working telescopes at the summit

Page 5: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

•Nine of them are for optical and infrared •three of them are for submillimeter wavelength•one is for radio astronomy

Page 6: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Optical/InfraredUH 0.9m

UH 0.9-m educational telescope 0.9m University of Hawaii at Hilo

2010

UH 2.2m

UH 2.2-m telescope 2.2m UH Institute for Astronomy

1970

IRTF NASA Infrared Telescope Facility 3.0m NASA 1979

CFHT Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope 3.6m Canada/France/UH 1979

UKIRT United Kingdom Infrared Telescope

3.8m United Kingdom 1979

Keck I W. M. Keck Observatory 10m Caltech/University of California

1992

Keck II W. M. Keck Observatory 10m Caltech/University of California

1996

Subaru Subaru Telescope 8.3m Japan 1999

Gemini Gemini Northern Telescope 8.1m USA/UK/ Canada/Argentina/Australia/Brazil/Chile

1999

Page 7: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

CSO Caltech Submillimeter Observatory

10.4m

Caltech/NSF 1987

JCMT James Clerk Maxwell Telescope

15m

UK/Canada/Netherlands

1987

SMA Submillimeter Array 8x6m

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory/Taiwan

2002

VLBA Very Long Baseline Array 25m

NRAO/AUI/NSF 1992

Radio

Submillimeter

Page 9: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Geography

• Stationed on a dormant volcano

• Altitude is 4205m (13,800ft)

• Summit about 40% above of the Earths atmosphere

Page 10: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka

Why it is a unique site

• Atmosphere about mountain is extremely dry• important for measuring infrared and submillimeter

radiation from celestial source

• Cloud free

• Away from city lights

Page 11: Mauna Kea Observatory Jordan Matayoshi Shae Otsuka