Teide Observatory (), IAU code 954, is an astronomical observatory on Mount Teide at , located on Tenerife, Spain. It has been operated by the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias since its inauguration in 1964. It became one of the first major international observatories, attracting telescopes from different countries around the world because of the good astronomical seeing conditions. Later, the emphasis for optical telescopes shifted more towards Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma.
Telescopes
Solar telescopes
thumb|alt=The image shows a large tower housing a telescope dome on it's top floor. The dome has a small hole in it where the telescope looks out.|French/Italian Solar Telescope THEMIS.
thumb|Testing laser systems on the [[ESO Wendelstein Laser Guide Star system.]]
thumb|[[ESO and Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias sign agreement on adaptive optics collaboration.]]
- Solar Vacuum Tower Telescope (VTT): 70 cm diameter. Operated by the Kiepenheuer Institute of Solar Physics, Freiburg (Germany). Installed in 1989.
- Télescope Heliographique pour l'Etude du Magnétisme et des Instabilités Solaries (THEMIS) Solar Telescope: 90 cm diameter, built 1996, operated by France and Italy. <!-- Title: The Solar Telescope THEMIS
Authors: Arnaud, J., Mein, P., & Rayrole, J.
Journal: Crossroads for European Solar and Heliospheric Physics. Recent Achievements and Future Mission Possibilities, Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain. March 23-27,1998. Organised by ESA Solar Physics Planning Group (SPPG) and Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC). European Space Agency, 1998., p.213 Bibliographic Code: 1998ESASP.417..213A-->
- GREGOR Solar Telescope: 1.5 m, operated by a German consortium. In operation since May 2012.<!--Title: GREGOR: high resolution solar observations from 1 AU
Authors: von der Lühe, O., Schmidt, W., Soltau, D., Kneer, F., Staude, J., & Pailer, N., ,
Journal: In: Solar encounter. Proceedings of the First Solar Orbiter Workshop, 14 - 18 May 2001, Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife, Spain. Eds.: B. Battrick & H. Sawaya-Lacoste, Scientific coordinators: E. Marsch, V. Marinez Pillet, B. Fleck & R. Marsden. ESA SP-493, Noordwijk: ESA Publications Division, ISBN 92-9092-803-4, 2001, p. 417 - 420
Bibliographic Code: 2001ESASP.493..417V 10.1002/1521-3994(200112)322:5/6<353::AID-ASNA353>3.0.CO;2-Z-->
- A node of the Birmingham Solar Oscillations Network (BiSON), operated by the University of Birmingham, UK.<!--Title: BiSON Performance
Authors: Chaplin, W. J., Elsworth, Y., Howe, R., Isaak, G. R., McLeod, C. P., Miller, B. A., ,
Journal: Solar Physics, Volume 168, Issue 1, pp.1-18
Bibliographic Code: 1996SoPh..168....1C-->
- One of six sites of the GONG network operated by the NSO Integrated Synoptic Program (NISP), United States.
Nocturnal telescopes
- Carlos Sánchez Infrared Telescope (TCS): 152 cm diameter installed by the UK in 1971
- Mons reflecting telescope: 50 cm diameter, operated by the University of Mons (Belgium), built in 1972.
- IAC-80 Telescope: 80 cm IAC telescope, installed in 1991.
- OGS Telescope: 1 m European Space Agency (ESA) optical ground station for satellite communications, built in 1998.
- STARE Telescope: 10 cm Stellar Astrophysics & Research on Exoplanets. Used by the Trans-Atlantic Exoplanet Survey.
- Bradford Robotic Telescope: 35 cm Telescope for educational use.
- STELLA Telescopes (STELLA I and STELLA II) robotic telescopes: 120 cm STELLA is an abbreviation of STELLar Activity, operated by Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics (AIP) with the collaboration of the IAC, put in operation 2006.
- SLOOH: US robotic telescopes, built in 2004.
- SPECULOOS Northern Observatory (SNO): 1-meter telescopes, one telescope (Artemis) completed in June 2019
- PIRATE: (Physics Innovations Robotic Astronomical Telescope Explorer Mark IV): 61 cm robotic telescope operated remotely by the Open University
- COAST: (COmpletely Autonomous Survey Telescope) 43 cm robotic telescope operated remotely by the Open University
- Two-meter Twin Telescope (TTT): robotic telescopes of 80 cm TTT1 and TTT2 and 2 meters TTT3 and TTT4. TTT is a project of Light Bridges in collaboration with IAC (Spain). Built in 2022.
Radio telescopes for cosmic microwave background astronomy
- The 33 GHz interferometer
- The COSMOSOMAS Experiment (10 and 15 GHz)
- The Very Small Array (VSA: 14-element interferometer at 30 GHz)
- QUIJOTE CMB Experiment
- GroundBIRD
Other buildings on the site
The observatory has a visitors' centre and a residencia (hostel) for astronomers. Brian May helped construct a building there to study interplanetary dust.
Discoveries
First brown dwarf
In 1995, Rafael Rebolo López, María Rosa Zapatero-Osorio and Eduardo L. Martín published their discovery of Teide-1, which they found through optical observations using the 0.8 meter telescope at Teide Observatory.
Minor planets
The Minor Planet Center credits the discovery of several minor planets directly to the observatory.
See also
- Astronomical seeing
- Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
- European Extremely Large Telescope
- Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
- La Silla Observatory
- Llano de Chajnantor Observatory
- Mount Teide
- Paranal Observatory
- Pico Viejo
- Roque de los Muchachos Observatory
- Teide National Park
- Very Large Telescope
- Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System
References
External links
- Observatorio del Teide website
- Discover the Teide Observatory at worldflicks.org
