
Press Release:
July 5, 2006
Contacts:
Dr.
Nick Kaiser
UH Institute for Astronomy
Honolulu
1-808-956-8560 kaiser@ifa.hawaii.edu
Mr. Mike Maberry
Institute for Astronomy
Maui
1-808-876-7600, ext. 107
maberry@ifa.hawaii.edu
High Resolution Images:

JPEG
4 Mb
Photo by Rob Ratkowski/HAA Maui.

TIFF
16.5 Mb
Photo by Karen Teramura, IfA.
JPEG 4 Mb
Photo by Rob Ratkowski/HAA Maui.
See also
PS1 image gallery
Institute for Astronomy
Director's office
2680 Woodlawn Drive Honolulu, Hawaii 96822
Telephone: 1-808-956-8566
Fax: 1-808-946-3467
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New Telescope Dedicated on Haleakala
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| Blessing the new PS1 telescope
on the summit of Haleakala. Photo
by Rob Ratkowski /HAA Maui. |
The University of Hawaii's newest telescope, called PS1,
was dedicated on Friday, June 30 in a ceremony on the summit
of Haleakala. The telescope is a prototype for the larger
Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System, or
Pan-STARRS, telescope scheduled to start scanning the skies
for "killer asteroids" in 2010.
Institute for Astronomy Director Rolf Kudritzki described
the dedication of PS1 as "a historic event, since Pan-STARRS
is the most important University of Hawaii telescope project
in 30 years." PS1
achieved "first light" in late June, when engineers
obtained test images of a number of stars.
The telescope’s mirror is only 71 inches in diameter,
much smaller than the twin Keck telescopes on Mauna
Kea, whose mirrors are nearly 400 inches each. What will
make PS1 unique is that it will be equipped with the world's
largest digital camera, which is currently under construction
at the UH Institute for Astronomy's Manoa headquarters. This
camera will contain 1.4 billion pixels--about 300 times more
than is found in a typical commercial digital camera. Each
night PS1 will produce about 2000 gigabytes of data, most
of which will be sent by optical fiber to be analyzed at
the Maui High Performance Computing Center in Kihei.
Once the telescope is operational, the PS1 survey will survey
the whole sky every few days to find celestial objects that
change or move. In addition to discovering millions of asteroids,
some of which might pose a danger to Earth, PS1 will collect
data to be analyzed by Hawaii astronomers and an international
consortium. The data collected will help answer questions
in areas of astronomy ranging from our solar system to the
entire observable universe.
In his speech at the dedication, Kudritzki noted that PS1
is the first astronomy project to be constructed on Haleakala
following the guidelines established in the Haleakala High
Altitude Observatory Site Long Range Development Plan. Kahu
Charles Kauluwehi Maxwell Sr. provided the "sense of
place" training for all PS1 construction personnel,
and he also served as the cultural monitor who oversaw all
construction.
According to Hawaiian oral history, the ancient Hawaiian
astronomers and their students studied the sky from Pu`u
Kolekole on the summit of Haleakala. The culmination of the
dedication ceremony was the blessing of the building by two
of Maxwell’s grandsons and the untying of the maile
lei, an act of respect, an expression of sense of place,
and an explicit acknowledgment of the ancient Hawaiian astronomers
who first observed the universe from Haleakala.
The telescope and its enclosure were built by EOS
Technologies, based in Tucson, Arizona and Canberra, Australia.
The primary and secondary mirrors were developed through
the efforts of Corning Inc., Rayleigh Optical Corporation
and Evaporated Metal Films Inc.
More information:
PICTURE CAPTIONS:
Adrian Kamalaniikekai Kamali'i and Dane Uluwehiokalani
Maxwell (center) blessed the PS1 building on the summit of
Haleakala as those attending the dedication looked on. Mauna
Kea is in the background.
From left to right: Christopher "Ryan" Henry, principal
deputy under secretary of defense for policy;
Nick Kaiser, Pan-STARRS principal investigator, IfA; Rolf-Peter
Kudritzki, director, IfA; Maui Mayor Alan M. Arakawa;
and Gary Ostrander, vice chancellor for research and graduate
education. All were speakers at the dedication ceremony.
Pan-STARRS Principal Investigator Nick Kaiser gave a
tour of the PS1 telescope after the dedication ceremony.
Maui Mayor Alan M. Arakawa is in the foreground.
The Institute for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii conducts research into galaxies, cosmology, stars, planets, and the sun. Its faculty and staff are also involved in astronomy education, deep space missions, and in the development and management of the observatories on Haleakala and Mauna Kea.
Established in 1907 and fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the University of Hawaii is the state's sole public system of higher education. The UH System provides an array of undergraduate, graduate, and professional degrees and community programs on 10 campuses and through educational, training, and research centers across the state. UH enrolls more than 50,000 students from Hawaii, the U.S. mainland, and around the world.
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