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About the Institute for Astronomy
The Institute for Astronomy (IfA) was founded at the University
of Hawaii (UH) in 1967 to manage Haleakala and Mauna Kea Observatories,
and to carry out its own program of fundamental research into the
stars, planets and galaxies that make up our Universe. One of eleven
research institutes within the University of Hawaii it has a total
staff of over 200, including about 45 faculty. The Institute has
an annual budget of $20m, including $15m in grants from the federal
government.
Research at the IfA
The
Institute for Astronomy is one of the world's leading astronomical
research centers. Its broad-based program includes studies of the
Sun, planets, and stars, as well as interstellar matter, galaxies,
and cosmology. Most IfA astronomers use the giant telescopes atop
Mauna Kea and Haleakala to collect faint visible light, and infrared
and submillimeter radiation from distant objects. They also use and
support space observatories, such as the Hubble Space Telescope and
Chandra (an X-ray astronomy satellite), to make observations that
cannot be made from the ground.
Academic programs at the IfA
The Institute has close links with the UH-Manoa Department of Physics
and Astronomy through the astronomy graduate program, which has about
30 students working for their MS and PhD degrees. IfA faculty also
teach many introductory astronomy courses on the Manoa Campus, reaching
some 800 undergraduate students annually.
Observatories
During the last thirty years, the State of Hawaii has
become the most sought-after location in the world for the construction
of large ground-based telescopes. The focal points for this construction
are the 3000-meter peak of Haleakala on Maui and the 4200-meter peak
of Mauna Kea on the island of Hawaii (the "Big Island").
The remarkable clarity, dryness, and stillness of the air above these
isolated high-altitude sites led to the commissioning by the University
of Hawaii first of the Mees
Solar Observatory at Mount Haleakala on the island of Maui in
1963 and then of the 2.2-meter
Telescope on Mauna Kea on the Big Island of Hawaii in 1970.
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The value of Mauna Kea for optical, infrared, and
submillimeter observations soon became apparent to the international
community, and during the 1970s three more large telescopes were
built on its summit. These are the 3-meter Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF),
the 3.6-meter Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) and
the 3.8-meter United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT).
In 1993, the world's largest optical telescope, the 10-meter Keck
I telescope at the W.
M. Keck Observatory followed in 1996 by the similar Keck II
telescope. The 8-meter Japan National Large Telescope (JNLT, or Subaru Telescope)
and the Gemini Northern 8-meter
Telescope became operational soon afterwards. These telescopes
all benefit from the remarkable seeing atop Mauna Kea, and from
the transparency to infrared wavelengths that are largely inaccessible
at lower (wetter) sites. By the end of the century there will be
four 8-10 meter class telescopes plus four 2-4 meter class telescopes
located on Mauna Kea.
Mauna Kea is world's premier developed site for submillimeter
astronomy. The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) is
a 15-meter telescope run by a consortium consisting of the United
Kingdom, the Netherlands and Canada. The Caltech Submillimeter
Observatory (CSO) houses
a 10-meter submillimeter telescope run by the California Institute
of Technology. The eight-antenna Submillimeter Array (SMA)
is a collaborative project of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
and the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy & Astrophysics
of Taiwan. It will permit high-resolution imaging using submillimeter
interferometry. All three facilities exploit the dryness of Mauna
Kea for observations in the 350-micron to 2-millimeter wavelength
range.
Finally, the western most antenna of the Very Large
Baseline Array (VLBA) of
the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) is located on the
upper slopes of Mauna Kea.
University of Hawaii astronomers have full access
to the UH 2.2 meter telescope and a guaranteed 10 - 15% of the
time on all the other telescopes on the summit of Mauna Kea.
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The University of Hawaii's Mees
Solar Observatory on Haleakala on the island of Maui conducts
daily observations of the Sun using a variety of detectors mounted
on a Sun-tracking spar. Coronagraphic, magnetic field, and oscillation
studies are presently underway. The LURE lunar
laser ranging observatory is also located on the summit of Haleakala;
it is operated by the IfA under contract to NASA.
The IfA is currently building instrumentation for
the new 3.67 meter AEOS telescope which is under construction for
the Air Force Maui Optical Station (AMOS).
University of Hawaii astronomers will have guaranteed access to
the telescope and its multi-object spectrograph when it is completed.
Sea-level facilities
The IfA operates facilities on the islands of Oahu, Hawaii, and
Maui. Its main base is in Manoa Valley, Oahu, just north of the
main campus of the University of Hawaii, in Honolulu. The building
includes offices, workshops, extensive computer facilities, classrooms
and a large astronomical library. A new sea-level
facility in Hilo on the Big Island houses part of the faculty
and staff of the IfA, with an emphasis on the support of Mauna
Kea telescope operations. It also houses research groups involved
in the development of adaptive optics and infrared detectors.
On Maui the IfA operates a laboratory
in Waiakoa for support of its Haleakala activities.
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