The European Extremely Large Telescope (
E-ELT), with a main mirror 39 metres in diameter, will be the largest optical/near-infrared telescope in the world: truly the world’s biggest eye on the sky. It will be constructed in northern
Chile, on a site that has already been prepared.
The contract to build the telescope’s dome and structure was signed by
ESO’s
Director General,
Tim de Zeeuw, the Chairman of Astaldi,
Paolo Astaldi, and the
President of
Cimolai,
Luigi Cimolai. ESO was delighted to welcome
Italy’s
Minister of Education, Universities and
Research,
H.E. Stefania Giannini, to the ceremony, which was also attended by the
Italian Consul General in
Munich,
Renato Cianfarani, the ESO
Council President,
Patrick Roche, and the Italian ESO
Council Delegates, Nicolò D’Amico (who is also President of
INAF) and Matteo Pardo, Scientific
Attaché at the Italian
Embassy in
Berlin.
The President of
EIE, Gianpietro Marchiori, and other guests and representatives of the consortium were also present.
The contract covers the design, manufacture, transport, construction, on-site assembly and verification of the dome and telescope structure. With an approximate value of 400 million euros, it is the largest contract ever awarded by ESO and the largest contract ever in ground-based astronomy.
The E-ELT dome and telescope structure will take telescope engineering into new territory. The contract includes not only the enormous 85-metre-diameter rotating dome, with a total mass of around 5000 tonnes, but also the telescope mounting and tube structure, with a total moving mass of more than
3000 tonnes. Both of these structures are by far the largest ever built for an optical/infrared telescope and dwarf all existing ones. The dome is almost
80 metres high and its footprint is comparable in area to a football pitch.
The E-ELT is being built on
Cerro Armazones, a 3000-metre peak about
20 kilometres from ESO’s
Paranal Observatory. The access road and leveling of the summit have already been completed and work on the dome is expected to start on site in 2017.
Many other aspects of the construction of the E-ELT are also moving forward rapidly. ESO has already signed agreements for the construction of the first-light instruments MICADO,
HARMONI and
METIS, as well as the MAORY adaptive optics system for the E-ELT. Contracts for the telescope’s huge secondary mirror will be signed in the near future.
The light-collecting area of the E-ELT will be bigger than all existing optical research telescopes combined and its adaptive optics system will provide images about 15 times sharper than those from the
NASA/
ESA Hubble Space Telescope at the same wavelength. It offers numerous possibilities for technology and engineering spin-offs, technology transfer and technology contracting.
The new contract demonstrates that the E-ELT has the potential to be a powerhouse for economic development, offering contractors in ESO’s
Member States an opportunity to lead major projects at an international level.
Credit:
European Southern Observatory (ESO).
Editing:
Herbert Zodet.
Web and technical support: Mathias
André and
Raquel Yumi
Shida.
Written by:
Peter Grimley and
Richard Hook.
Narration:
Sara Mendes da Costa.
Music: Toomas Erm and
Johan B.
Monell (
http://www.johanmonell.com/).
Footage and photos: ESO, L.
Calçada, M. Kornmesser, ACe
Consortium, M. Struik (
CERN), ICAFAL/BROTEC Construcción, Microgate/
ADS, G. Hüdepohl (http://www.atacamaphoto.com), AdOptica,
NOVA/METIS/MAORY/MICADO consortium, HARMONI consortium, ESA/
Hubble, Theofanis N. Matsopoulos and C.
Malin (http://christophmalin.com/).
Directed by: Herbert Zodet.
Executive producer:
Lars Lindberg Christensen.
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- published: 25 May 2016
- views: 667