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"First Light for the Gran Telescopio Canarias"

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Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Stephan,

I found this photo of the unfinished primary mirror,showing the mechanicals inolved with the active/adaptive optics.

http://news.ufl.edu/wp-content/uf-news-post-images/print/1117.jpg

MikeM

3:48 AM, July 15, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Mike,

thank you for the link!

Here are some more photos which show the mechanics of the telescope, albeit without further explanations. The general text about the the GTC is the same as in the link above.

Best, stefan

6:16 AM, July 15, 2007

Blogger UF said...

And here you can find more information on it too, including what Queen has to say about it. :-)

7:56 AM, July 15, 2007

Blogger stefan said...

Hi Urbano,

great :-). Does Amara know that Brian May worked on dust in the Solar System? Problably yes...

Best, stefan

8:09 AM, July 15, 2007

Blogger amaragraps said...

Dear Stefan,

Absolutely! :-) I have been following the Brian May story; i.e. his PhD work on zodiacal dust. It's a fantastic story and I'm really tickled about what he did.

He's not easy to reach, and honestly, I'm not sure yet I've been successful, but at least his publisher forwarded an important package from me and the interplanetary dust community, about one month ago, a gift to support him in his research, which is a book of the Proceedings of our 2005 Dust in Planetary Systems Meeting. There are at least 100 people in our community who are interested to read his thesis, when it is in its final form.

P.S. I know that Brian May is difficult to reach because the head of the Solar Systems division of the European Space Agency (ESA) tried in 2004 to invite Brian to the launch of the Rosetta mission. This high-level ESA fellow was unsuccessful. I think that is a sad story, from both the perspective of Brian May (given his obvious enthusiam about astronomy), and from the perspective of ESA and the Rosetta scientists. I hope my smaller scaled attempt via his publisher will be more successful.

8:26 AM, July 15, 2007

Anonymous a quantum diaries survivor said...

Hi Stefan,

great news! I am considering a week at the very same site... For visual observing! With a few amateurs we are searching for dark sites, and the roque de los muchachos seems a nice idea (I also have friends in Magic, which by the way has a mirror of 17m diameter... but works with Cherenkov light).

As for the 50 seconds exposure, I am unimpressed! The pair is a 14.3 magnitude object, so with a 10m instrument I was hoping for more detail and more brightness.

Cheers,
T.

7:01 PM, July 15, 2007

Blogger amaragraps said...

Have you seen this? It looks like it was a very nice event!

10:31 AM, July 16, 2007

Anonymous rafa said...

Hi Stefan

You can find information in english at Grantecan.es the public consortium that built the telescope and at www.iac.es the astrophysics institute at the canary islands whose facilities host the new telescope.

You might want to know that all the data collected by the different instruments to be used with the telescope (some of them already built some of them yet to be developed) will be considered 'public' and stored and archived in a external facility (I believe in Spain's mainland). The researchers will get a kind of some 'exclusivity' rights on the rough data during some period of time but after the period expires the rough data collected will be publicly available.

I don't know if this is a common practice everywhere.

best

12:40 PM, July 20, 2007

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