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World’s Largest Optical/Near-infrared Telescope (E-ELT) Will Be Built With New, Advanced, Powerful Cameras

This video presents “E-ELT Trailer.”

ESO (the European Southern Observatory) has been planning a 39-metre-class European Extremely Large optical/near-infrared Telescope, the E-ELT, which will become “the world’s biggest eye on the sky”.

The costs involved are astronomical!

The European Extremely Large Telescope (annotated): The very detailed annotated design for the E-ELT shown here is preliminary. Credit: ESO

The E-ELT will be the largest optical/near-infrared telescope in the world and will gather 15 times more light than the largest optical telescopes existing today.

The new, advanced, powerful cameras that will be built as part of the European Extremely Large Telescope include:

ELT -CAM Instrument

Fig.1: The MICADO First-Light Camera as a concept study at the Nasmyth focus of the E-ELT. The hexpod-like structure supports the optical bench of the Adapative Optics system (above), it carries and rotates the large vacuum vessel with the cold camera optics (below). As the central instrument structure it links the camera with the telescope incl. necessary adjustments.
Image by the Institute for Astrophysics

Fig.3: Comparative view of observations (top row) and simulations (lower row) of a crowded field, the center of the globular cluster Omega-Cen; upper row: today’s observations with VLT (Very Large Telescope), lower row: simulated view of James-Webb-Space-Telescope (JWST) and MICADO at the E-ELT. Images by the Institute of Asrophysics.

ELT – MIR Instrument

ELT – PCS Instrument

ELT-IFU Instrument

Please click here for more details and the roadmap of the E-ELT instruments.

Here are some highlights of the the world’s largest optical/near-infrared telescope.

Hexagonal segments of the E-ELT mirror. Credit: ESO

The mirror design itself is revolutionary and is based on a novel five-mirror scheme that results in an exceptional image quality.

Shooting a Laser at the Galactic Centre: The sky above Paranal on 21 July 2007. Two 8.2-m telescopes of ESO’s VLT (Very Large Telescope) are seen against the wonderful backdrop of the myriad of stars and dust that makes the Milky Way. Just above Yepun, Unit Telescope number 4, the Small Magellanic Cloud – a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way – is shining. A laser beam is coming out of Yepun, aiming at the Galactic Centre. It is used to obtain images that are free from the blurring effect of the atmosphere. On this image, the laser beam looks slightly artificial. This is a side effect due to saturation caused by the long exposure time. Planet Jupiter is seen as the brightest object on the upper right, next to the star Antares. Image taken by ESO astronomer Yuri Beletsky.
Credit: ESO/Yuri Beletsky

Adaptive mirrors (optics) are incorporated into the optics of the telescope to compensate for the fuzziness in the stellar images introduced by atmospheric turbulence.

It will be possible to switch from one science instrument to another within minutes.

The European Extremely Large Telescope will also be used to:

As the E-ELT will have a much larger sensitivity and resolution than the current generation of large telescopes, it will certainly be most useful in the study of faint objects in the Solar System.

“One of the highest scientific priorities for the telescope is to characterise exo-planets and, specifically, to take images of Earth-like planets. Such a giant leap from the capabilities we have today requires significant research into new technologies over several years. Therefore, an ambitious and powerful planetary camera and spectrograph (ELT-PCS) is included in the instrumentation plan, and the research and development for specific components required to build it will start as soon as possible.”

European Southern Observatory
http://www.eso.org/sci/facilities/eelt/docs/E-ELT-Construction-Proposal-INS-Chapter.pdf

The main goal of the E-ELT programme is to scientifically answer the question “are we alone?”

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