Green Bank Telescope

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Green Bank Telescope

Green Bank Telescope
Organization: NRAO
Location: Green Bank, West Virginia, USA
Wavelength: radio
Built: 1971
Telescope style: parabolic off-axis reflector,Gregorian optics
Diameter: 100m
Collecting area: 7,854m2
Focal length: 60m
Mounting: wheel and track mount
Website: http://www.gb.nrao.edu/GBT/GBT.shtml

The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope (GBT) is the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope. It is part of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) at Green Bank, West Virginia (USA). The telescope honors the name of Senator Robert C. Byrd.

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[edit] Location

The telescope (38°25′58.23″N, 79°50′21.88″W) sits at the heart of the United States national radio quiet zone, a large area where all radio transmissions are either limited or banned outright, to help the telescope function properly.

[edit] Description

The surface area of the GBT is 100 by 110 meters with a separate actuator (a small motor used to adjust the position) for each of the 2,004 surface panels. The panels are made from aluminum to a surface accuracy of less than 0.003 inches (76.2 micrometers) RMS.

The telescope is unusual in that the mirror is not a symmetrical dish, but is a section of a much larger parabolic figure with the receiver where the prime focus of the entire mirror would be. As a result, the support for the receiver does not in any way obscure the mirror's view of the sky.

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