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Observing Equipment

Anja von der Linden edited this page Aug 15, 2017 · 10 revisions

Mt. Stony Brook 14-inch telescope

Our Department operates the Mt. Stony Brook observatory, housing a 14-inch Meade LX200-ACF telescope. This will be the workhorse telescope for the imaging and spectroscopic components of the course.
Telescope manual
Step-by-step instructions
Note that the current telescope manual refers to using the CCDOps software for CCD imaging observations, while you will be using the (slightly) more modern CCDSoft.

CCD camera for imaging

Imaging observations with the 14-inch telescope will be taken with the SBIG STL-1001E CCD camera. The CCD camera is mounted on the back end of the telescope and is controlled through a laptop computer. A set of standard broad-band BVRI and a narrow-band H-alpha filters are available.
Operations manual
CCDSoft step-by-step instructions
CCDSoft manual

Spectrographs

We have two DADOS spectrographs; one has the low-resolution grating (200 l/mm) installed, the other the high-resolution grating (900 l/mm).
Spectrograph manual
Step-by-step instructions

CCD camera and AutoGuider for spectroscopy

We use an SBIG ST402ME camera for the spectroscopic observations (it is much lighter than the STL1001E). It is also operated through CCDSoft (see above).
ST402ME manual
There is a separate AutoGuider camera, the Orion StarShoot, which can be used with the DADOS spectrograph:
Orion StarShoot manual

Radio telescope and interferometer

Our two-element radio interferometer employs 1-meter aluminum mirrors to combine light onto a single 1 meter commercial satellite dish. The interferometer has an adjustable 2-10 meter baseline and the reflective elements are well suited for observations at centimeter wavelengths. Single-dish radio observations can also be taken by flipping the satellite dish by 180 degrees and pointing it away from the aluminum mirrors.
Interferometer manual
Journal article

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