|
|
“ZERODUR®” Glass Ceramic
Discovering the Past
|
 |
A “hot” spectacle: In mid-February 2000, SCHOTT began with the casting of the first blank for the Grantecan Project.
|
The Gran Telescopio Canarias is set to become the world’s biggest telescope. SCHOTT is supplying 42 “ZERODUR®” glass ceramic mirror carriers for the project.
Tourists love the Canaries because of their unique landscape and pleasant climate. Astronomers are drawn to it because of the clear nights there. For the island group in the Atlantic is regarded as one of the world’s ideal locations for observing the universe. The research facilities there and the scientists who work in them are among the most renowned in their field. The archipelago’s large international observatories are located on Tenerife and La Palma. The first ones were opened in 1985. Since then 20 telescopes have been installed there.
|
New eye on the sky
|
It is more than eight years since planning first began for arguably the most ambitious and most prestigious project to date by the Canaries Astrophysical Institute (IAC). The location of the 75 million Euro project, the Gran Telescopio Canarias (Grantecan, GTC) is the Roque de los Muchachos on La Palma. The observatory is financed by the Spanish state and the regional government of the Canaries. In addition considerable resources have been made available from the European Structural Fund.
SCHOTT was awarded the contract for the primary mirror, the “heart” of the telescope – in the face of competition from the USA and Russia – because of the superior quality of its “ZERODUR®” material.
|
High demands on material
|
The segmented primary mirror has a diameter of 10.4 meters (appr. 11.4 yards) and a surface area of 82 square meters (appr. 98 sq. yards). It comprises 36 hexagonal “ZERODUR®” glass ceramic segments. Each 1.9 meter (2 yards) diameter segment is 85 millimeters thick (3.4 inches) and weighs nearly 500 kilograms (1100 pounds). The high demands made on optical quality are just one of the features that make the primary mirror the most sophisticated part of the telescope. The support system for the individual segments and its electromechanical devices calls for the highest degree of precision. The “active optics” allow the most minor geometrical irregularities in the total system to be corrected, providing optimum alignment and superb image quality.
|
Comparable with top telescopes
|
 |
The mirror segments are made from “ZERODUR®” glass ceramics with a thermal expansion coefficient of practically zero.
|
The GTC – currently one of Spain’s largest science projects and the biggest European telescope in the Northern Hemisphere – will be comparable in performance with the Keck telescope on Hawaii (USA) and the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope on the Cerro Paranal in Chile. The Spanish observatory not only increases the number of the world’s telescopes in the 8-to-10 meter class, but it will combine a large collector surface with an excellent image quality and will be suitable for an observation spectrum in the visible and infrared range. This will permit scientific work over a large bandwidth.
The Grantecan represents the best instrument to date for the exploration of the Northern Hemisphere sky. The construction of the GTC will increase observation capacity for the Northern Hemisphere in Europe, while strengthening the location on the Canary Islands, which is to be known as the European Northern Observatory (ENO).
|
|
Contact
Advanced Optics SCHOTT AG
Hattenbergstrasse 10 55122 Mainz Germany
| +49 (0)6131/66-1812 |
| +49(0)3641/2888-9047 |
E-mail
More contacts
|