The choice of location sparked considerable local controversy, both from the
San Carlos Apache Tribe, who claimed the mountain is sacred, and from
environmentalists who contended that the observatory would cause the demise of
the endangered Mount Graham Red Squirrel. Environmentalists and members of the
tribe filed some 40 lawsuits eight of which ended up before a federal appeals
court but the project ultimately prevailed after an act of the United States
Congress.
The telescope and mountain observatory survived two major forest fires in
eight years, the more recent in the summer of 2004.
Binocular Light
The telescope was dedicated in October 2004 and saw first light with a single
primary mirror on October 12, 2005 which viewed NGC 891. The second primary
mirror was installed in January 2006 and became fully operational in January
2008.
The first binocular light images show three false-color renditions of the
spiral galaxy NGC 2770. The galaxy is 102 million light years from our Milky
Way, a relatively close neighbor. The galaxy has a flat disk of stars and
glowing gas tipped slightly toward our line of sight.
equivalent to a single 22.8-meter (75-foot)
telescope. It is located on
10,480-foot Mount Graham in
southeastern Arizona.
"To have a fully functioning binocular telescope is not only a time for
celebration here at LBT, but also for the entire astronomy community," UA
Steward Observatory Director, Regents' Professor and LBT Corp. President Peter
A. Strittmatter said. "The images that this telescope will produce will be
like none seen before. The power and clarity of this machine is in a class of
its own. It will provide unmatched ability to peer into history, seeing the
birth of the universe."
Space and Technology.
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