Puneet Varma (Editor)

WIYN Observatory

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Organisation
  
WIYN Consortium

Mounting
  
Altazimuth mount

Address
  
Sells, AZ 85634, USA

Phone
  
+1 520-318-8292

Focal length
  
6.125 m (20.10 ft)

Collecting area
  
9.6 m (103 sq ft)

Enclosure
  
rhombicuboctahedron

Telescope style
  
optical telescope

Built
  
–1994

WIYN Observatory

Location(s)
  
Kitt Peak , United States of America

Diameter
  
3,498.85 mm (11 ft 5.750 in)

Profiles

Timelapse moonset at the wiyn observatory


The WIYN Observatory is owned and operated by the WIYN Consortium. Its telescope, a 3.5-meter instrument, is the second largest optical telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory in Arizona. Most of the capital costs for the observatory were provided by the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Indiana University, and Yale University, while the National Optical Astronomy Observatory provides most of the operating services.

Contents

Wiyn observatory observing with moon light


Telescope

The telescope is located in a half-Rhombicuboctahedron dome, and has a blank diameter of 3.51155 m (138.25"), and a diameter to bevels of 3.49885 m (137.75").

HYDRA

HYDRA is a multiobject spectrograph using fiber optics positioned in the focal plane to allow up to 100 separate objects to be observed at a time. The light is guided to a spectrograph room under the main telescope where a CCD camera records the spectrum of each object. The field of view is approximately 1 degree. [1]

WIYN High Resolution InfraRed Camera (WHIRC)

WHIRC is a near infrared high resolution imaging camera commissioned in 2008. WHIRC was a joint project between the WIYN partners and STScI. It consists of a 2k × 2k detector providing an excellent pixel scale of 0.1"/pixel and a field of view of 200 × 200 arcsec. WHIRC can be used with the WIYN Tip/Tilt Module (WTTM) to provide exquisite high-resolution images. A large set of filters is available.

One Degree Imager (ODI)

The One Degree Imager (ODI) is the flagship of WIYN's new instrument initiatives. ODI utilizes both WIYN's one degree field of view and excellent image quality. The original design for ODI was to cover the one square degree field using a total of 64 Orthogonal Transfer Arrays (OTAs) with a total of 1 GigaPixel and a pixelscale of 0.11 arcseconds per pixel. Orthogonal transfer arrays allow to actively improve image sharpness by correcting images for tip/tilt motion during the integration. Corrections will be done over the entire field of view, making ODI a unique and competitive instrument in the era of wide-field surveys. ODI is funded by the WIYN partners and the National Science Foundation.

ODI was first commissioned in a partial or prototype configuration (pODI) using 13 OTAs in the summer of 2012, and was available for science observations since early 2013. pODI was decommissioned in late 2014 to undergo a significant upgrade. The upgraded ODI, now using 30 OTAs in a 5x6 layout was re-commissioned in summer 2015 and has been available for science observations since October 2015.

Extreme Precision Doppler Spectropgraph (EPDS)

Funded by NASA, the EPDS spectrograph will be able to search for extra-solar planets by looking for minute variations in the radial velocity of the host star caused by the orbiting planet(s). For more details see the related WIYN/NASA press release.

Mini-Mosaic

MiniMo is a CCD consisting of two 2048 × 4096 pixel chips, with a field of view of 9.6 arcminutes. The two separate chips allows for faster readout of the image than would have been otherwise possible, as they can be read out simultaneously. [2]

Governance

The WIYN Consortium is governed by the Board of Directors, which includes three members of each partner institution. The Board meets twice a year. The Science Steering Committee provides scientific guidance to the Board and the WIYN Director.

Between 2000–2008, the WIYN Director was Dr. George Jacoby, followed by Dr. Pierre Martin (2008–2010). Since December 2010, Dr. Pat Knezek serves as interim director. Since 2013, Dr. Eric Hooper (UW Madison) serves as interim director.

Yale University withdrew from the WIYN consortium on 1 April 2014 and was replaced by Missouri University in fall of that year. In 2015, a NASA-NSF partnership called NN-EXPLORE effectively took over NOAO's share, although NOAO still manages the operations.

References

WIYN Observatory Wikipedia