Telescopes

Kitt Peak, looking south from atop the 0.9-meter SPACEWATCH® telescope.
 Click image to view a 360° panorama! [340k] (Photograph by Mike Read)

SPACEWATCH® currently operates three telescopes on the summit of Kitt Peak. 

  1. 0.9-meter SPACEWATCH® telescope
  2. 1.8-meter SPACEWATCH® telescope
  3. 2.3-meter Bok telescope of Steward Observatory (part-time)

SPACEWATCH® 0.9-meter Telescope

0.9-m telescope
The SPACEWATCH® 0.9-m telescope (left) on beautiful Kitt Peak during the winter.   (Photograph by Jim Scotti)

Observatory Information

Geodetic Latitude (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 6 meters)31.96220°  N
Longitude (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 6 meters)-111.60038° E
Elevation of telescope axes (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 10 meters)2.08 km
IAU Observatory Code691

 

Optical configurationOld System (to 2002 April)Mosaic of CCDs (From 2002 Sept)
OpticsNewtonian, f/5.34, coma corrected and field flattenedCorrected prime focus, f/3
FilterSchott OG 515* (See below)Schott OG-515
Primary mirror diameter0.946 m (37.25 inches)0.946 m (37.25 inches)
Masked mirror diameter0.882 m (34.7 inches)

Clear aperture  0.934 m (36.75 inches); secondary shadow 0.3m diameter.

Effective collecting area = 0.61 m^2

Image scale (at corrected focus)43.8 arcsec/mm74.0 arcsec/mm
CCDTektronix TK2048EB1-1 (2048x2048 pixels), thinned, backside illuminatedFour  E2V Technologies Model: CCD42-90-I-941, 4608 x 2048 pixels each, thinned, and backside illuminated
Pixel size24 microns13.5 microns
Image scale1.05 arcsec/pixel1.00 arcsec/pixel
Effective field of view37' x 33' (RA x Dec)2.9 square degrees
Exposure time2m23s at 0° Dec;  2m38s at +/-25° Dec (drift scanning)120 seconds (stare mode)
Limiting magnitudeV = 21.5V = 21.7

* All SPACEWATCH® observations have been and will continue to be made through a Schott OG 515 filter. The filter greatly simplified lens design for the broad (0.5-1.0 micron) bandpass because it allowed us to avoid an atmospheric dispersion compensator, a difficult proposition at these fast f/numbers, and allows us to use flint elements in the lens prescription. It also reduces moonlit sky background.

Log Book of the Steward Observatory's 36-inch Telescope, 1967 June 03- 1986 May 30:  Steward Observatory 36-in Telescope Log Book 1967 June 03-1986 May 30 (PDF)

SPACEWATCH® 1.8-meter Telescope

1.8-m telescope
The 1.8-m SPACEWATCH® telescope in its upright position.
(Photograph by Alain Maury)

Observatory Information

Geodetic Latitude (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 6 meters)31.96169° N
Longitude (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 6 meters)-111.59995° E
Elevation (Reference Datum WGS 84; +/- 10 meters)2.08 km
IAU Observatory Code291

Primary mirror: 1.818 meter diameter, f/2.7 paraboloid.

Secondary shadow diameter = 0.78m

Net active optical collecting area = 2..12 m^2

Folded prime focus, coma corrected and field flattened.
Filter: Schott OG 515; see below.
Detector: Fairchild 3041 CCD, 2048 x 2048 pixels, thinned,
          backside illuminated, and broad-band antireflection (BBAR) coated.
Pixel size: 15 microns.
Camera: Finger Lakes Instruments ProLine Model PL3041-LC, S/N PL0144010.
Image scale: 0.6 arcsec/pixel.
Field of view:  20 arcmin x 20 arcmin.
Limiting magnitude: R = 22

All SPACEWATCH® observations have been and will continue to be made through a Schott OG 515 filter. The filter greatly simplified lens design for the broad (0.5-1.0 micron) bandpass because it allowed us to avoid an atmospheric dispersion compensator, a difficult proposition at these fast f/numbers, and allows us to use flint elements in the lens prescription.  It also reduces moonlit sky background, being a "minus-blue" (i. e., yellow-orange) color.

Instrument History

Download SPACEWATCH® Apparatus Epochs (PDF)

History of SPACEWATCH® 0.9-meter Telescope (PDF)
Carpenters' pics of 0.9m telescope 1920-2012 (PDF)

History of the SPACEWATCH® 1.8-meter Telescope (PDF)

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