Institut de radioastronomie millimétrique

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The Institut de radioastronomie millimétrique (IRAM) operates two observatories at millimetre wavelengths, which are open to the international astronomical community: The 30-m single-dish telescope on Pico Veleta (2850 m), located in Sierra Nevada (Spain), and the six-antenna interferometer on the Plateau de Bure (2550 m) in the French Alps. Both sites are at high altitude to reduce the absorption by water vapour. The observatories are supported by the IRAM offices and laboratories in Granada and Grenoble. IRAM, which is directed by Pierre Cox, has its headquarters in Grenoble.

IRAM was founded in 1979 and is operated as a French-German-Spanish collaboration. Its partner institutes are the CNRS (Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France), the MPG (Max Planck Gesellschaft, Germany), and the IGN (Instituto Geográfico Nacional, Spain). The principal activity of IRAM is the study of mostly cold matter (e.g. interstellar molecular gas and dust) in the solar system, in our Milky Way, and other galaxies out to cosmological distances in order to determine their composition, physical parameters and history.

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