Thirty-Meter Telescope Focuses on Two Candidate Sites
PASADENA, Calif.--After completing a worldwide survey unprecedented
in rigor and detail of astronomical sites for the Thirty-Meter
Telescope (TMT), the TMT Observatory Corporation board of directors
has selected two outstanding sites, one in each hemisphere, for
further consideration. Cerro Armazones lies in Chile's Atacama
Desert, and Mauna Kea is on Hawai'i Island.
The TMT observatory, which will be capable of peering back in
space and time to the era when the first stars and galaxies were
forming and will be able to directly image planets orbiting other
stars, will herald a new generation of telescopes.
To ensure that proposed TMT sites would provide the greatest advantage
to the telescope's capabilities, a global satellite survey was
conducted, from which a small sample of outstanding sites was chosen
for further study using ground-based test equipment. This ground-based
study of two sites in the northern hemisphere and three in the
southern was the most comprehensive survey of its kind ever undertaken.
Atmospheric
turbulence above each candidate site, and wind characteristics,
temperature variations, amount of water vapor, and other meteorological
data at some of the candidate sites, were continuously monitored
for up to four years. Based upon this campaign, the TMT project
will now further evaluate the best site in the northern hemisphere
and the best site in the southern hemisphere.
"All five sites proved to be outstanding for carrying
out astronomical observations," said Edward Stone, Caltech's
Morrisroe Professor of Physics and vice chairman of the TMT board. "I
want to congratulate the TMT project team for conducting an excellent
testing program, not only for TMT but for the benefit of astronomical
research in the future." In addition to the "astronomical
weather" at the sites, other considerations in the final selection
will include the environment, accessibility, operations costs, and
complementarities with other nearby astronomy facilities.
The
next step in the site analysis process is the preparation of
an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) that will thoroughly
evaluate all aspects, including environmental, cultural, socio-economic,
and financial, of constructing and operating the Thirty-Meter
Telescope in Hawai`i. An
environmental impact statement for Cerro Armazones has already
been completed and submitted to the Chilean government for their
review.
The
community-based Mauna Kea Management Board, which oversees the
management of the Mauna Kea summit in coordination
with the University of Hawai'i at Hilo, concurs that the Thirty-Meter
Telescope should proceed with its EIS process. Regardless of whether
Mauna Kea is selected as the Thirty-Meter Telescope site, information
generated from the EIS will be useful in the management of Mauna
Kea.
Henry
Yang, TMT board chair and chancellor of UC Santa Barbara, expressed
the gratitude of the board. "The selection of these
top two candidate sites is an exciting milestone in the Thirty-Meter
Telescope's journey from vision to reality. We are grateful for
the tireless efforts of our project team and the tremendous vision
and support of the Moore Foundation and our international partners
that have brought us to this point. We look forward to moving ahead
rapidly and with all due diligence toward the selection of our
preferred site."
The TMT is currently in the final stages of an $80 million design
phase. The plan is to initiate construction in 2010 with first
light in early 2018. This project is a partnership between the
University of California, California Institute of Technology, and
ACURA, an organization of Canadian universities. The Gordon and
Betty Moore Foundation has provided $50 million for the design
phase of the project and has pledged an additional $200 million
for the construction of the telescope, and Caltech and the University
of California each will seek to raise matching funds of $50 million
to bring the construction total to $300 million.
"We look forward to the discussions with the people of Hawai'i
and Chile regarding the opportunities to open a new era in astronomy
in one of these two world capitals of astronomy," says Professor
Ray Carlberg, the Canadian Large Optical Telescope project director
and a TMT board member. "Canadian scientists have partnered
in the extensive site testing carried out by TMT and we are very
pleased to see that it has led to two great options for TMT."
TMT gratefully acknowledges support for design and development
from the following: Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, Canada Foundation
for Innovation, Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, National
Research Council of Canada, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada, British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund,
Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, and the
National Science Foundation (USA).
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