• Source: Harlan J. Smith Telescope
    • The Harlan J. Smith Telescope is a 107-inch (2.7 m) telescope located at the McDonald Observatory, in Texas, in the United States. This telescope is one of several research telescopes that are part of the University of Texas at Austin observatory perched on Mount Locke in the Davis Mountains of west Texas. The telescope was completed in 1968 with substantial NASA assistance, and is named after Harlan James Smith, the first Texas director of McDonald Observatory. Smith was the Observatory Director for 26 years.


      Vandalism damage


      The telescope was the victim of an act of vandalism in February 1970. A newly hired worker suffered a mental breakdown and brought a hand gun into the observatory. After firing one shot at his supervisor, the worker then fired the remaining rounds into the Primary Mirror. The holes effectively reduced the 107-inch (2.7 m) telescope to the equivalent of a 106-inch telescope (or about 2.5 centimeters less), but did not affect the quality of the telescope's images, only the amount of light it can collect.


      Observations


      The telescope has been used to observe many things. Some achievements includes the stars BD+17°3248 and XO-1.
      Jorge Meléndez of the Australian National University and Iván Ramírez of the University of Texas at Austin discovered the star HIP 56948 in 2007 using the telescope.
      The Visible Integral-field Replicable Unit Spectrograph-W (VIRUS-W), an integral field spectrograph, was used in 2021 to find that the Leo 1 dwarf galaxy contains a supermassive black hole.


      Contemporaries on commissioning


      Four largest telescopes 1968:


      See also


      List of largest optical reflecting telescopes


      References



      Telescope Shot

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