Mount Laguna Observatory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mount Laguna Observatory or MLO is an astronomical observatory operated by the Astronomy Department of San Diego State University (SDSU). It is located approximately forty five miles east of downtown San Diego on the eastern edge of the Cleveland National Forest, and is named after the Laguna Mountains.


Mount Laguna Observatory

Organization San Diego State University
Location San Diego, California
Coordinates 32°50′22″N, 116°25′32″W UNCERTAIN
Altitude 1859 meters (6100 feet)
Webpage MLO at SDSU
Telescopes
Unnamed telescope 16-inch reflector
Buller telescope 21-inch reflector
Smith telescope 24-inch reflector
Unnamed telescope 40-inch reflector
Large Robotic telescope (proposed) 100-inch reflector

Contents

The MLO was dedicated in June 19th, 1968, seven years after SDSU's Department of Astronomy became an independent academic department of SDSU's College of Sciences. The dedication took place during the 1968 summer meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

The observatory has four telescopes which are used by the students and faculty of both SDSU and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Data is transferred back from the MLO via the High Performance Research and Education Network (HPWREN).

  • 16-inch/40.64-cm telescope (to be replaced with 40-inch ULTRA telescope)
  • 21-inch/53.34 cm Buller telescope
  • 24-inch/60.96-cm Smith telescope
  • 40-inch/101.6-cm telescope
  • 100-inch/254-cm Large robotic telescope (proposed)

A collaboration between the University of Kansas, Composite Mirror Applications out of Tucson, AZ, and Dartmouth College is currently looking to replace the 16-inch telescope with another 40 inch telescope using carbon composite technology in a project known as ULTRA.

Also a 100-inch Large Robotic Telescope is being planned.


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