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It was a 1.5-metre (4.9 ft) Cassegrain telescope with a tip-tilt correcting secondary and optimized for infrared observations, but was decommissioned in March 2005.
The observatory at the summit of Gornergrat was built on top of the Kulmhotel Gornergrat in the late 1960' and is most notably equipped with a 600 mm telescope built by Officina Stellare. [4] [5] It was the location of the Gornergrat Infrared Telescope (North tower; until 2005) and of KOSMA (South tower; until 2010).
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Gornergrat Infrared Telescope; GUSTO (telescope) ... Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope; NASA Infrared Telescope Facility;
As the tourist traffic increased, the current larger hotel was built between 1897 and 1907. Given the clean air and good light conditions of the area, a dome was built on each of the two towers of the hotel in 1996. The KOSMA telescope was installed in the southern tower while the Gornergrat Infrared Telescope was installed in the northern ...
The list Includes optical observatories, including UV, visible and some optical infrared telescopes, and near infrared. The list covers from about 1901 to 2001, with some flexibility to accommodate ambiguity in classification, for example some 2002 telescopes, if it was nearly operation in 2001. 19th century and earlier telescopes that ceased ...
This is a list of large optical telescopes.For telescopes larger than 3 meters in aperture see List of largest optical reflecting telescopes.This list combines large or expensive reflecting telescopes from any era, as what constitutes famous reflector has changed over time.
Gornergrat (HFSJG) (defunct) 1967–2005 Gornergrat, Switzerland Granat (defunct) 1989–1999 Highly eccentric Earth orbit: Gran Telescopio Canarias: 2006 Canary Islands, Spain Grant O. Gale Observatory: 1984 Grinnell, Iowa, US Green Bank Telescope: Green Bank, West Virginia, US Green Point Observatory: 1961 Sutherland, New South Wales, Australia
These include the Chacaltaya Astrophysical Observatory in Bolivia, which at 5,230 m (17,160 ft) was the world's highest permanent astronomical observatory [9] from the time of its construction during the 1940s until surpassed in 2009 by the new University of Tokyo Atacama Observatory, [10] an optical-infrared telescope on a remote 5,640 m ...