- Source: Faulkes Telescope South
The Faulkes Telescope South is a clone of the Liverpool Telescope and is located at Siding Spring Observatory in New South Wales, Australia. It is a 2 m (79 in) Ritchey-Chrétien telescope. It was designed to be operated remotely with the aim of encouraging an interest in science by young people. It is supported by an altazimuth mount.
The telescope is owned and operated by LCOGT. This telescope and its sister telescope Faulkes Telescope North are used by research and education groups across the globe. The Faulkes Telescope Project is one such group which provides observing time (awarded by LCOGT) for educational projects for UK schools. Funds were initially sourced by charitable donations from philanthropist Dr. Martin C. Faulkes.
Faulkes Telescope South saw first light in 2004 with full operations occurring by 2006.
Discoveries
2008 HJ is a small near-Earth asteroid which at the time of its discovery was the most rapidly rotating object in the solar system.
Observations
On the 4 May 2007 the first ever observation of one of the satellites of Uranus passing in front of another was made by Marton Hidas and Tim Brown.
In 2013 it was used to image the Near-Earth asteroid 2013 XY8.
See also
List of largest optical reflecting telescopes
Liverpool Telescope
List of telescopes of Australia
References
External links
Faulkes Telescope website
The RoboNet global network which controls the Faulkes Telescopes over the internet
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Faulkes Telescope South
- Faulkes Telescope North
- Faulkes Telescope Project
- RoboNet
- Siding Spring Observatory
- Las Cumbres Observatory
- Robotic telescope
- List of telescopes of Australia
- Optical telescope
- Liverpool Telescope