Astronomy:Coudé Spectrograph
From HandWiki
Location(s) | Decommissioned |
---|---|
Organization | European Southern Observatory |
Wavelength | Total range 320 — 1010 nm on three cameras |
First light | May 1969 |
The Coudé Spectrograph was an instrument attached to the ESO 1.52-metre telescope, 3 camera telescope equipped with photographic plates as detectors. It has two cameras working at f/6 and f/14. Dispersions from 1A/mm to 18a/mm are available with a selection of three gratings, each with ruled areas of 20 x 30 cm.
The Coudé Spectrograph was installed at the coudé focus of the ESO 1.52-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory in May 1969. It was decommissioned from the ESO 1.52-metre telescope in mid 1980s.[1] The telescope was named after its inventor, Robert G. Tull Coudé.[2][3]
References
- ↑ "The Coudé Spectrograph". https://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/lasilla/152metre/coude/.
- ↑ "Robert G. Tull Coudé Spectrograph | McDonald Observatory". https://mcdonaldobservatory.org/research/instruments/robert-g-tull-coud%C3%A9-spectrograph.
- ↑ Tull, R. G. (1972). "1972ailt.conf..259T Page 259". Auxiliary Instrumentation for Large Telescopes: 259. Bibcode: 1972ailt.conf..259T. https://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1972ailt.conf..259T. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
External links
- Diagram of a Coudé spectrograph.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coudé Spectrograph.
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