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Thirty Meter Telescope

The Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) is a planned extremely large telescope (ELT)[5][6] that has become controversial due to its location on Mauna Kea,[7][8][9][10] on the island of Hawaiʻi. The TMT would become the largest visible-light telescope on Mauna Kea.[11][12]

Thirty Meter Telescope
An artist's rendering of proposed telescope
Location(s)Mauna Kea Observatory in Hawaii, United States[1][2]
Coordinates19°49′58″N 155°28′54″W / 19.8327°N 155.4816°W / 19.8327; -155.4816[3]
OrganizationTMT International Observatory
Altitude4,050 m or 13,290 ft[2]
WavelengthNear UV, visible, and Mid-IR (0.31–28 μm)
BuiltConstruction began 2014, halted 2015[4]
First lighttba [4]
Telescope styleSegmented Ritchey–Chrétien telescope
Diameter30 m or 98 ft
Secondary diameter3.1 m or 10 ft
Tertiary diameter2.5 m × 3.5 m or 8.2 ft × 11.5 ft
Collecting area655 m2 or 7,050 sq ft[2]
Focal lengthf/15 (450 m)[2]: 52 
MountingAltazimuth mount
EnclosureSpherical calotte
WebsiteTMT.org
Location of Thirty Meter Telescope
  Related media on Commons

Scientists have been considering ELTs since the mid 1980s. In 2000, astronomers considered the possibility of a telescope with a light-gathering mirror larger than 20 meters (65') in diameter, using either small segments that create one large mirror, or a grouping of larger 8-meter (26') mirrors working as one unit. The US National Academy of Sciences recommended a 30-meter (100') telescope be the focus of U.S. interests, seeking to see it built within the decade.

Scientists at the University of California, Santa Cruz and Caltech began development of a design that would eventually become the TMT, consisting of a 492-segment primary mirror with nine times the power of the Keck Observatory. Due to its light-gathering power and the optimal observing conditions which exist atop Mauna Kea, the TMT would enable astronomers to conduct research which is infeasible with current instruments. The TMT is designed for near-ultraviolet to mid-infrared (0.31 to 28 μm wavelengths) observations, featuring adaptive optics to assist in correcting image blur. The TMT will be at the highest altitude of all the proposed ELTs. The telescope has government-level support from several nations.

Demonstrations attracted press coverage after October 2014,[13] when construction was temporarily halted due to a blockade of the roadway. When construction of the telescope was set to resume, construction was blocked by further protests each time.[14] In 2015, Governor David Ige announced several changes to the management of Mauna Kea, including a requirement that the TMT's site will be the last new site on Mauna Kea to be developed for a telescope.[15][16] The Board of Land and Natural Resources approved the TMT project,[17][18] but the Supreme Court of Hawaii invalidated the building permits in December 2015, ruling that the board had not followed due process. In October 2018, the Court approved the resumption of construction;[19] however, no further construction has occurred due to continued opposition. Several alternative sites for the Thirty Meter Telescope have been proposed. As of July 2023, there were no specific timelines or schedules regarding new start or completion dates.

Background edit

In 2000, astronomers began considering the potential of telescopes larger than 20 meters (65') in diameter. The technology to build a mirror larger than 8.4 meters (28') does not exist; instead scientists considered two methods: either segmented smaller mirrors as used in the Keck Observatory, or a group of 8-meter (26') mirrors mounted to form a single unit.[20] The US National Academy of Sciences made a suggestion that a 30-meter (100') telescope should be the focus of US astronomy interests and recommended that it be built within the decade.[21]

The University of California, along with Caltech, began development of a 30-meter telescope that same year. The California Extremely Large Telescope (CELT) began development, along with the Giant Segmented Mirror Telescope (GSMT), and the Very Large Optical Telescope (VLOT). These studies would eventually become the Thirty Meter Telescope.[22] The TMT would have nine times the collecting area of the older Keck telescope using slightly smaller mirror segments in a vastly larger group.[20] Another telescope of a large diameter in the works is the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) being built in northern Chile.[6]

The telescope is designed for observations from near-ultraviolet to mid-infrared (0.31 to 28 μm wavelengths). In addition, its adaptive optics system will help correct for image blur caused by the atmosphere of the Earth, helping it to reach the potential of such a large mirror. Among existing and planned extremely large telescopes, the TMT will have the highest elevation and will be the second-largest telescope once the ELT is built. Both use segments of small 1.44 metre (4'9") hexagonal mirrors—a design vastly different from the large mirrors of the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) or the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT).[23] Each night, the TMT would collect 90 terabytes of data.[24] The TMT has government-level support from the following countries: Canada, China, Japan and India.[25][26] The United States is also contributing some funding, but less than the formal partnership.[27][28]

Proposed locations edit

 
A world map of proposed Thirty Meter Telescope sites – orange denotes lights, blue denotes elevation (land and water separately)

In cooperation with AURA, the TMT project completed a multi-year evaluation of six sites:

The TMT Observatory Corporation board of directors narrowed the list to two sites, one in each hemisphere, for further consideration: Cerro Armazones in Chile's Atacama Desert and Mauna Kea on Hawaii Island. On July 21, 2009, the TMT board announced Mauna Kea as the preferred site.[30][31] The final TMT site selection decision was based on a combination of scientific, financial, and political criteria. Chile is also where the European Southern Observatory is building the ELT. If both next-generation telescopes were in the same hemisphere, there would be many astronomical objects that neither could observe. The telescope was given approval by the state Board of Land and Natural Resources in April 2013.[18]

There has been opposition to the building of the telescope,[32] based on potential disruption to the fragile alpine environment of Mauna Kea due to construction, traffic, and noise, which is a concern for the habitat of several species,[33] and because Mauna Kea is a sacred site for the Native Hawaiian culture.[34][35] The Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources conditionally approved the Mauna Kea site for the TMT in February 2011. The approval has been challenged; however, the Board officially approved the site following a hearing on February 12, 2013.[36]

Opposition in the Canary Islands edit

Because of the ongoing protests that re-erupted in July 2019, the TMT project officials requested a building permit for a second site choice, the Spanish island of La Palma in the Canary Islands. Rafael Rebolo, the director of the Canary Islands Astrophysics Institute, confirmed that he had received a letter requesting a building permit for the site as a backup in case the Hawaii site cannot be constructed.[37] Some astronomers argue however that La Palma is not an adequate site to build the telescope due to the island’s comparatively low elevation, which would enable water vapor to frequently interfere with observations due to water vapor’s tendency to absorb light at midinfrared wavelengths.[38] Such atmospheric interference could impact observing times for research into exoplanets, galactic formation, and cosmology.[38] Other astronomers argue that construction of the telescope in La Palma would disrupt projected international collaboration between the United States and other involved countries such as Japan, Canada, and France.[38]

Environmentalists such as Ben Magec and the environmental advocacy organization Ecologistas en Acción in the Canary Islands are gearing up to fight against its construction there as well. According to EEA spokesperson Pablo Bautista, the projected TMT construction area in the Canary Islands exists inside a protected conservation refuge which hosts at least three archeological sites of the indigenous Guanche people, who lived on the islands for thousands of years before Spanish colonization.[38] On July 29, 2021, Judge Roi López Encinas of the High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands, revoked the 2017 concession of public lands by local authorities for the TMT construction.[39] Encinas ruled that the land concessions were invalid as they were not covered by an international treaty on scientific research and that the TMT International Observatory consortium did not express concrete intent to build on the La Palma site as opposed to the site in Mauna Kea.[39]

On July 19, 2022, The National Science Foundation announced it will carry out a new environmental survey of the possible impacts of the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope at proposed building sites at both Mauna Kea and at the Canary Islands.[40] Continued funding for the telescope will not be considered prior to the results of the environmental survey, updates on the project's technical readiness, and comments from the public.[40]

Partnerships and funding edit

The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation has committed US$200 million for construction. Caltech and the University of California have committed an additional US$50 million each.[41] Japan, which has its own large telescope at Mauna Kea, the 8.3-metre Subaru, is also a partner.[42]

In 2008, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) joined TMT as a collaborator institution.[43] The following year, the telescope cost was estimated to be $970 million[44] to $1.4 billion.[30] That same year, the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC) joined TMT as an observer.[45][46] The observer status is the first step in becoming a full partner in the construction of the TMT and participating in the engineering development and scientific use of the observatory.

In June 2010, Governor Linda Lingle and University of Hawaii-Hilo Chancellor Rose Tseng attended a banquet at the Great Hall of the People at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China, sponsored by the China Diplomatic Friendship Association and the Chinese Chamber of Commerce. The banquet included special guest Lu Yong Xiang, vice chairman of the Chinese People’s National Congress and head of the Chinese National Academy of Sciences who had visited Mauna Kea as part of China's intention to become a collaborative partner with the TMT. The governor gave a presentation on the two competing site locations, Mauna Kea and Cerro Armazones, Chile.[47] Speaking at a Chinese Academy of Science conference in 1995, Lu Yong Xiang stated that by 2010, the academy would become one of the leading international scientific institutions, with new research results in such fields as Moon exploration, evolution of the universe and of life, space micro-gravity, particle physics, and astrophysics.[48]

In 2010, a consortium of Indian Astronomy Research Institutes (IIA, IUCAA and ARIES) joined TMT as an observer, subject to approval of funding from the Indian government. Two years later, India and China became partners with representatives on the TMT board. Both countries agreed to share the telescope construction costs, expected to top $1 billion.[49][50] India became a full member of the TMT consortium in 2014. In 2019 the India-based company Larsen & Toubro (L&T) were awarded the contract to build the segment support assembly (SSA), which "are complex optomechanical sub-assemblies on which each hexagonal mirror of the 30-metre primary mirror, the heart of the telescope, is mounted".[51]

The IndiaTMT Optics Fabricating Facility (ITOFF) will be constructed at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics campus in the city of Hosakote, near Bengaluru. India will supply 80 of the 492 mirror segments for the TMT. A.N. Ramaprakash, the associate programme director of India-TMT, stated; "All sensors, actuators and SSAs for the whole telescope are being developed and manufactured in India, which will be put together in building the heart of TMT", also adding; "Since it is for the first time that India is involved in such a technically demanding astronomy project, it is also an opportunity to put to test the abilities of Indian scientists and industries, alike."[51]

The continued financial commitment from the Canadian government had been in doubt due to economic pressures.[25][52] In April 2015, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that Canada would commit $243.5 million over a period of 10 years.[53] The telescope's unique enclosure was designed by Dynamic Structures Ltd. in British Columbia.[54] In a 2019 online petition, a group of Canadian academics called on succeeding Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau together with Industry Minister Navdeep Bains and Science Minister Kirsty Duncan to divest Canadian funding from the project.[55] The Canadian astronomy community has as of September 2020 named TMT its top facility priority for the decade ahead.[56]

Design edit

 
The Thirty Meter Telescope design, late 2007

The TMT would be housed in a general-purpose observatory capable of investigating a broad range of astrophysical problems. The total diameter of the dome will be 217 feet (66 m) with the total dome height at 180 feet (55 m) (comparable in height to an eighteen-storey building[57]). The total area of the structure is projected to be 1.44 acres (0.58 ha) within a 5-acre (2.0 ha) complex.[58]

Telescope edit

The centerpiece of the TMT Observatory is to be a Ritchey-Chrétien telescope with a 30-metre (98 ft) diameter primary mirror. This mirror is to be segmented and consist of 492 smaller (1.4 metre; 4'6"), individual hexagonal mirrors. The shape of each segment, as well as its position relative to neighboring segments, will be controlled actively.[59]

A 3.1-metre (10 ft) secondary mirror is to produce an unobstructed field-of-view of 20 arcminutes in diameter with a focal ratio of 15. A 3.5 × 2.5 metre (12' x 8') flat tertiary mirror is to direct the light path to science instruments mounted on large Nasmyth platforms.[60][61] The telescope is to have an alt-azimuth mount.[62] Target acquisition and system configuration capabilities need to be achieved within 5 minutes, or ten minutes if relocating to a newer device. To achieve these time limitations the TMT will use a software architecture linked by a service based communications system.[63] The moving mass of the telescope, optics, and instruments will be 1430 tonnes.[citation needed] The design of the facility descends from the Keck Observatory.[citation needed]

Adaptive optics edit

 
Mirror sizes of existing and proposed telescopes. The two other new extremely large telescopes, the ELT and GMT are being built in the southern hemisphere

Integral to the observatory is a Multi-Conjugate Adaptive Optics (MCAO) system. This MCAO system will measure atmospheric turbulence by observing a combination of natural (real) stars and artificial laser guide stars. Based on these measurements, a pair of deformable mirrors will be adjusted many times per second to correct optical wave-front distortions caused by the intervening turbulence.[64][65]

This system will produce diffraction-limited images over a 30-arc-second diameter field-of-view, which means that the core of the point spread function will have a size of 0.015 arc-second at a wavelength of 2.2 micrometers, almost ten times better than the Hubble Space Telescope.[66]

Scientific instrumentation edit

Early-light capabilities edit

Three instruments are planned to be available for scientific observations:

  • Wide Field Optical Spectrometer (WFOS) provides a seeing limit that goes down to the ultraviolet[67] with optical (0.3–1.0 μm wavelength) imaging and spectroscopy capable of 40-square arc-minute field-of-view.[68] The TMT will use precision cut focal plane masks and enable long-slit observations of individual objects as well as short-slit observations of hundreds of different objects at the same time. The spectrometer will use natural (uncorrected) seeing images.[69]
  • Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (IRIS) mounted on the observatory MCAO system, capable of diffraction-limited imaging and integral-field spectroscopy at near-infrared wavelengths (0.8–2.5 μm). Principal investigators are James Larkin of UCLA and Anna Moore of Caltech. Project scientist is Shelley Wright of UC San Diego.[70][71]
  • Infrared Multi-object Spectrometer (IRMS) allowing close to diffraction-limited imaging and slit spectroscopy over a 2 arc-minute diameter field-of-view at near-infrared wavelengths (0.8–2.5 μm).

Approval process and protests edit

 
Cultural practitioner Joshua Lanakila Mangauil, along with Kahoʻokahi Kanuha and Hawaiian sovereignty supporters block the access road to Mauna Kea in October 2014, demonstrating against the building of the Thirty Meter Telescope.

In 2008, the TMT corporation selected two semi-finalists for further study, Mauna Kea and Cerro Amazones.[72] In July 2009, Mauna Kea was selected.[72] Once TMT selected Mauna Kea, the project began a regulatory and community process for approval.[73] Mauna Kea is ranked as one of the best sites on Earth for telescope viewing and is home to 13 other telescopes built at the summit of the mountain, within the Mauna Kea Observatories grounds.[74] Telescopes generate money for the big island, with millions of dollars in jobs and subsidies gained by the state.[74] The TMT would be one of the most expensive telescopes ever created.[74]

However, the proposed construction of the TMT on Mauna Kea sparked protests and demonstrations across the state of Hawaii.[75] Mauna Kea is the most sacred mountain in Hawaiian culture[75][76][77][78][79][80] as well as conservation land held in trust by the state of Hawaii.[76]

Initial approval, permit and contested case hearing edit

In 2010 Governor Linda Lingle of the State of Hawaii signed off on an environmental study after 14 community meetings.[73][81] The BLNR held hearings on December 2 and December 3, 2010, on the application for a permit.[82]

On February 25, 2011, the board granted the permits after multiple public hearings.[73][82] This approval had conditions, in particular, that a hearing about contesting the approval be heard.[82] A contested case hearing was held in August 2011, which led to a judgment by the hearing officer for approval in November 2012. The telescope was given approval by the state Board of Land and Natural Resources in April 2013.[18][82] This process was challenged in court with a lower court ruling in May 2014.[82] The Intermediate Court of Appeals of the State of Hawaii declined to hear an appeal regarding the permit until the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources first issued a decision from the contested case hearing that could then be appealed to the court.[83]

First blockade, construction halts, State Supreme Court invalidates permit edit

The dedication and ground-breaking ceremony was held, but interrupted by protesters on October 7, 2014.[84][85][86] The project became the focal point of escalating political conflict,[87] police arrests[88][89][90] and continued litigation over the proper use of conservation lands.[91][92] Native Hawaiian cultural practice and religious rights became central to the opposition,[93] with concerns over the lack of meaningful dialogue during the permitting process.[94] In late March 2015, demonstrators again halted the construction crews.[95] On April 2, 2015, about 300 protesters gathered on Mauna Kea, some of them trying to block the access road to the summit; 23 arrests were made.[96][97] Once the access road to the summit was cleared by the police, about 40 to 50 protesters began following the heavily laden and slow-moving construction trucks to the summit construction site.[96]

On April 7, 2015, the construction was halted for one week at the request of Hawaii state governor David Ige, after the protest on Mauna Kea continued. Project manager Gary Sanders stated that TMT agreed to the one-week stop for continued dialogue; Kealoha Pisciotta, president of Mauna Kea Anaina Hou, one of the organizations that have challenged the TMT in court,[98] viewed the development as positive but said opposition to the project would continue.[99] On April 8, 2015, Governor Ige announced that the project was being temporarily postponed until at least April 20, 2015.[100] Construction was set to begin again on June 24,[14] though hundreds of protesters gathered on that day, blocking access to the construction site for the TMT. Some protesters camped on the access road to the site, while others rolled large rocks onto the road. The actions resulted in 11 arrests.[101]

The TMT company chairman stated: "T.M.T. will follow the process set forth by the state."[102][103] A revised permit was approved on September 28, 2017, by the Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources.[104]

On December 2, 2015, the Hawaii State Supreme Court ruled the 2011 permit from the State of Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources (BLNR) was invalid[105] ruling that due process was not followed when the Board approved the permit before the contested case hearing. The high court stated: "BLNR put the cart before the horse when it approved the permit before the contested case hearing," and "Once the permit was granted, Appellants were denied the most basic element of procedural due process – an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner. Our Constitution demands more".[106][107]

BLNR hearings, Court validates revised permit edit

In March 2017, the BLNR hearing officer, retired judge Riki May Amano, finished six months of hearings in Hilo, Hawaii, taking 44 days of testimony from 71 witnesses.[108] On July 26, 2017, Amano filed her recommendation that the Land Board grant the construction permit.[109] On September 28, 2017, the BLNR, acting on Amano's report, approved, by a vote of 5-2, a Conservation District Use Permit (CDUP) for the TMT. Numerous conditions, including the removal of three existing telescopes and an assertion that the TMT is to be the last telescope on the mountain, were attached to the permit.[110][111]

On October 30, 2018, the Supreme Court of Hawaii ruled 4-1, that the revised permit was acceptable, allowing construction to proceed.[112][19] On July 10, 2019, Hawaii Gov. David Ige and the Thirty Meter Telescope International Observatory jointly announced that construction would begin the week of July 15, 2019.[113]

Renewed blockade shuts down all observatories edit

On July 15, 2019, renewed protests blocked the access road, again preventing construction from commencing. On July 17, 38 protestors were arrested, all of whom were kupuna (elders) as the blockage of the access road continued.[114][115] The blockade lasted 4 weeks and shut down all 12 observatories on Mauna Kea, the longest shut down in the 50-year history of the observatories. The full shut down ended when state officials brokered a deal that included building a new road around the campsite of the demonstrations and providing a complete list of vehicles accessing the road to show they are not associated with the TMT.[116] The protests have become the latest fight for indigenous rights[117] and become a field-defining moment for astronomy. While there is both Native Hawaiian and non native Hawaiian support for the TMT, a substantial percentage of native Hawaiians oppose the construction and see the proposal itself as a continued disregard to their basic rights.[118]

The 50 years of protests against the use of Mauna Kea has drawn into question the ethics of conducting research with telescopes on the mountain.[119] The controversy is about more than the construction and is about generations of conflict between Native Hawaiians, the U.S. Government and private interests. The American Astronomical Society stated through their Press Officer, Rick Fienberg; "The Hawaiian people have numerous legitimate grievances concerning the way they’ve been treated over the centuries. These grievances have simmered for many years, and when astronomers announced their intention to build a new giant telescope on Maunakea, things boiled over".[120] On July 18, 2019, an online petition titled "Impeach Governor David Ige" was posted to Change.org. The petition has gathered over 25,000 signatures.[121] The governor and others in his administration received death threats over the construction of the telescope.[122]

Current status edit

 
Inverted flag being flown next to Mauna Kea access road as a sign of protest, September 2023

On December 19, 2019, Hawaii Governor David Ige announced that the state would reduce its law enforcement personnel on Mauna Kea.[123] At the same time, the TMT project stated it was not prepared to start construction anytime soon.[124]

Early in 2020, TMT and the Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) jointly presented their science and technical readiness to the U.S. National Academies Astro2020 panel.[125] Chile is the site for GMT in the south and Mauna Kea is being considered as the primary site for TMT in the north. The panel will produce a series of recommendations for implementing a strategy and vision for the coming decade of U.S. Astronomy & Astrophysics frontier research and prioritize projects for future funding.

In July 2020, TMT confirmed it would not resume construction on TMT until 2021, at the earliest.[126] TMT continues to assess a number of factors impacting its timeline and schedule. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in TMT’s partnership working from home around the world and it continues to present a public health threat as well as travel and logistical challenges. The project is currently focused on doing the work it can safely do in its partner countries.

On August 13, 2020, the Speaker of the Hawaii House of Representatives, Scott Saiki announced that the National Science Foundation (NSF) has initiated an informal outreach process to engage stakeholders interested in the Thirty Meter Telescope project.[127] After listening to and considering the stakeholders’ viewpoints, NSF will decide whether to initiate a formal federal environmental review process for TMT.

As of June 20, 2022, no further construction has been announced or initiated. Continued progress on instrument design, mirror casting & polishing, and other critical operational technicalities have been worked through or are currently being worked on.[128][129] In July of 2023 a new state appointed oversight board assumed management over the Mauna Kea site. While there are no specific timelines or schedules regarding new start or completion dates, activist Noe Noe Wong-Wilson is quoted by Astronomy Magazine as saying, "It’s still early in the life of the new authority, but there’s actually a pathway forward." This is the start of a five year transition to a permanent Maunakea Stewardship Oversight Authority which will have control of the site from July 2028 and will include representatives from Native Hawaiian communities as well as astronomers.[130]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

thirty, meter, telescope, confused, with, iram, telescope, planned, extremely, large, telescope, that, become, controversial, location, mauna, island, hawaiʻi, would, become, largest, visible, light, telescope, mauna, artist, rendering, proposed, telescopeloca. Not to be confused with IRAM 30m telescope The Thirty Meter Telescope TMT is a planned extremely large telescope ELT 5 6 that has become controversial due to its location on Mauna Kea 7 8 9 10 on the island of Hawaiʻi The TMT would become the largest visible light telescope on Mauna Kea 11 12 Thirty Meter TelescopeAn artist s rendering of proposed telescopeLocation s Mauna Kea Observatory in Hawaii United States 1 2 Coordinates19 49 58 N 155 28 54 W 19 8327 N 155 4816 W 19 8327 155 4816 3 OrganizationTMT International ObservatoryAltitude4 050 m or 13 290 ft 2 WavelengthNear UV visible and Mid IR 0 31 28 mm BuiltConstruction began 2014 halted 2015 4 First lighttba 4 Telescope styleSegmented Ritchey Chretien telescopeDiameter30 m or 98 ftSecondary diameter3 1 m or 10 ftTertiary diameter2 5 m 3 5 m or 8 2 ft 11 5 ftCollecting area655 m2 or 7 050 sq ft 2 Focal lengthf 15 450 m 2 52 MountingAltazimuth mountEnclosureSpherical calotteWebsiteTMT orgLocation of Thirty Meter Telescope Related media on Commons edit on Wikidata Scientists have been considering ELTs since the mid 1980s In 2000 astronomers considered the possibility of a telescope with a light gathering mirror larger than 20 meters 65 in diameter using either small segments that create one large mirror or a grouping of larger 8 meter 26 mirrors working as one unit The US National Academy of Sciences recommended a 30 meter 100 telescope be the focus of U S interests seeking to see it built within the decade Scientists at the University of California Santa Cruz and Caltech began development of a design that would eventually become the TMT consisting of a 492 segment primary mirror with nine times the power of the Keck Observatory Due to its light gathering power and the optimal observing conditions which exist atop Mauna Kea the TMT would enable astronomers to conduct research which is infeasible with current instruments The TMT is designed for near ultraviolet to mid infrared 0 31 to 28 mm wavelengths observations featuring adaptive optics to assist in correcting image blur The TMT will be at the highest altitude of all the proposed ELTs The telescope has government level support from several nations Demonstrations attracted press coverage after October 2014 13 when construction was temporarily halted due to a blockade of the roadway When construction of the telescope was set to resume construction was blocked by further protests each time 14 In 2015 Governor David Ige announced several changes to the management of Mauna Kea including a requirement that the TMT s site will be the last new site on Mauna Kea to be developed for a telescope 15 16 The Board of Land and Natural Resources approved the TMT project 17 18 but the Supreme Court of Hawaii invalidated the building permits in December 2015 ruling that the board had not followed due process In October 2018 the Court approved the resumption of construction 19 however no further construction has occurred due to continued opposition Several alternative sites for the Thirty Meter Telescope have been proposed As of July 2023 there were no specific timelines or schedules regarding new start or completion dates Contents 1 Background 1 1 Proposed locations 1 1 1 Opposition in the Canary Islands 1 2 Partnerships and funding 2 Design 2 1 Telescope 2 2 Adaptive optics 2 3 Scientific instrumentation 2 3 1 Early light capabilities 3 Approval process and protests 3 1 Initial approval permit and contested case hearing 3 2 First blockade construction halts State Supreme Court invalidates permit 3 3 BLNR hearings Court validates revised permit 3 4 Renewed blockade shuts down all observatories 3 5 Current status 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground editIn 2000 astronomers began considering the potential of telescopes larger than 20 meters 65 in diameter The technology to build a mirror larger than 8 4 meters 28 does not exist instead scientists considered two methods either segmented smaller mirrors as used in the Keck Observatory or a group of 8 meter 26 mirrors mounted to form a single unit 20 The US National Academy of Sciences made a suggestion that a 30 meter 100 telescope should be the focus of US astronomy interests and recommended that it be built within the decade 21 The University of California along with Caltech began development of a 30 meter telescope that same year The California Extremely Large Telescope CELT began development along with the Giant Segmented Mirror Telescope GSMT and the Very Large Optical Telescope VLOT These studies would eventually become the Thirty Meter Telescope 22 The TMT would have nine times the collecting area of the older Keck telescope using slightly smaller mirror segments in a vastly larger group 20 Another telescope of a large diameter in the works is the Extremely Large Telescope ELT being built in northern Chile 6 The telescope is designed for observations from near ultraviolet to mid infrared 0 31 to 28 mm wavelengths In addition its adaptive optics system will help correct for image blur caused by the atmosphere of the Earth helping it to reach the potential of such a large mirror Among existing and planned extremely large telescopes the TMT will have the highest elevation and will be the second largest telescope once the ELT is built Both use segments of small 1 44 metre 4 9 hexagonal mirrors a design vastly different from the large mirrors of the Large Binocular Telescope LBT or the Giant Magellan Telescope GMT 23 Each night the TMT would collect 90 terabytes of data 24 The TMT has government level support from the following countries Canada China Japan and India 25 26 The United States is also contributing some funding but less than the formal partnership 27 28 Proposed locations edit nbsp A world map of proposed Thirty Meter Telescope sites orange denotes lights blue denotes elevation land and water separately In cooperation with AURA the TMT project completed a multi year evaluation of six sites Roque de los Muchachos Observatory La Palma Canary Islands Spain Cerro Armazones Antofagasta Region Republic of Chile Cerro Tolanchar Antofagasta Region Republic of Chile Cerro Tolar Antofagasta Region Republic of Chile Mauna Kea Hawaii United States This site was chosen and approval was granted in April 2013 San Pedro Martir Baja California Mexico Hanle Ladakh India 29 The TMT Observatory Corporation board of directors narrowed the list to two sites one in each hemisphere for further consideration Cerro Armazones in Chile s Atacama Desert and Mauna Kea on Hawaii Island On July 21 2009 the TMT board announced Mauna Kea as the preferred site 30 31 The final TMT site selection decision was based on a combination of scientific financial and political criteria Chile is also where the European Southern Observatory is building the ELT If both next generation telescopes were in the same hemisphere there would be many astronomical objects that neither could observe The telescope was given approval by the state Board of Land and Natural Resources in April 2013 18 There has been opposition to the building of the telescope 32 based on potential disruption to the fragile alpine environment of Mauna Kea due to construction traffic and noise which is a concern for the habitat of several species 33 and because Mauna Kea is a sacred site for the Native Hawaiian culture 34 35 The Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources conditionally approved the Mauna Kea site for the TMT in February 2011 The approval has been challenged however the Board officially approved the site following a hearing on February 12 2013 36 Opposition in the Canary Islands edit Because of the ongoing protests that re erupted in July 2019 the TMT project officials requested a building permit for a second site choice the Spanish island of La Palma in the Canary Islands Rafael Rebolo the director of the Canary Islands Astrophysics Institute confirmed that he had received a letter requesting a building permit for the site as a backup in case the Hawaii site cannot be constructed 37 Some astronomers argue however that La Palma is not an adequate site to build the telescope due to the island s comparatively low elevation which would enable water vapor to frequently interfere with observations due to water vapor s tendency to absorb light at midinfrared wavelengths 38 Such atmospheric interference could impact observing times for research into exoplanets galactic formation and cosmology 38 Other astronomers argue that construction of the telescope in La Palma would disrupt projected international collaboration between the United States and other involved countries such as Japan Canada and France 38 Environmentalists such as Ben Magec and the environmental advocacy organization Ecologistas en Accion in the Canary Islands are gearing up to fight against its construction there as well According to EEA spokesperson Pablo Bautista the projected TMT construction area in the Canary Islands exists inside a protected conservation refuge which hosts at least three archeological sites of the indigenous Guanche people who lived on the islands for thousands of years before Spanish colonization 38 On July 29 2021 Judge Roi Lopez Encinas of the High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands revoked the 2017 concession of public lands by local authorities for the TMT construction 39 Encinas ruled that the land concessions were invalid as they were not covered by an international treaty on scientific research and that the TMT International Observatory consortium did not express concrete intent to build on the La Palma site as opposed to the site in Mauna Kea 39 On July 19 2022 The National Science Foundation announced it will carry out a new environmental survey of the possible impacts of the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope at proposed building sites at both Mauna Kea and at the Canary Islands 40 Continued funding for the telescope will not be considered prior to the results of the environmental survey updates on the project s technical readiness and comments from the public 40 Partnerships and funding edit The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation has committed US 200 million for construction Caltech and the University of California have committed an additional US 50 million each 41 Japan which has its own large telescope at Mauna Kea the 8 3 metre Subaru is also a partner 42 In 2008 the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan NAOJ joined TMT as a collaborator institution 43 The following year the telescope cost was estimated to be 970 million 44 to 1 4 billion 30 That same year the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences NAOC joined TMT as an observer 45 46 The observer status is the first step in becoming a full partner in the construction of the TMT and participating in the engineering development and scientific use of the observatory In June 2010 Governor Linda Lingle and University of Hawaii Hilo Chancellor Rose Tseng attended a banquet at the Great Hall of the People at Tiananmen Square in Beijing China sponsored by the China Diplomatic Friendship Association and the Chinese Chamber of Commerce The banquet included special guest Lu Yong Xiang vice chairman of the Chinese People s National Congress and head of the Chinese National Academy of Sciences who had visited Mauna Kea as part of China s intention to become a collaborative partner with the TMT The governor gave a presentation on the two competing site locations Mauna Kea and Cerro Armazones Chile 47 Speaking at a Chinese Academy of Science conference in 1995 Lu Yong Xiang stated that by 2010 the academy would become one of the leading international scientific institutions with new research results in such fields as Moon exploration evolution of the universe and of life space micro gravity particle physics and astrophysics 48 In 2010 a consortium of Indian Astronomy Research Institutes IIA IUCAA and ARIES joined TMT as an observer subject to approval of funding from the Indian government Two years later India and China became partners with representatives on the TMT board Both countries agreed to share the telescope construction costs expected to top 1 billion 49 50 India became a full member of the TMT consortium in 2014 In 2019 the India based company Larsen amp Toubro L amp T were awarded the contract to build the segment support assembly SSA which are complex optomechanical sub assemblies on which each hexagonal mirror of the 30 metre primary mirror the heart of the telescope is mounted 51 The IndiaTMT Optics Fabricating Facility ITOFF will be constructed at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics campus in the city of Hosakote near Bengaluru India will supply 80 of the 492 mirror segments for the TMT A N Ramaprakash the associate programme director of India TMT stated All sensors actuators and SSAs for the whole telescope are being developed and manufactured in India which will be put together in building the heart of TMT also adding Since it is for the first time that India is involved in such a technically demanding astronomy project it is also an opportunity to put to test the abilities of Indian scientists and industries alike 51 The continued financial commitment from the Canadian government had been in doubt due to economic pressures 25 52 In April 2015 Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that Canada would commit 243 5 million over a period of 10 years 53 The telescope s unique enclosure was designed by Dynamic Structures Ltd in British Columbia 54 In a 2019 online petition a group of Canadian academics called on succeeding Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau together with Industry Minister Navdeep Bains and Science Minister Kirsty Duncan to divest Canadian funding from the project 55 The Canadian astronomy community has as of September 2020 update named TMT its top facility priority for the decade ahead 56 Design edit nbsp The Thirty Meter Telescope design late 2007The TMT would be housed in a general purpose observatory capable of investigating a broad range of astrophysical problems The total diameter of the dome will be 217 feet 66 m with the total dome height at 180 feet 55 m comparable in height to an eighteen storey building 57 The total area of the structure is projected to be 1 44 acres 0 58 ha within a 5 acre 2 0 ha complex 58 Telescope edit The centerpiece of the TMT Observatory is to be a Ritchey Chretien telescope with a 30 metre 98 ft diameter primary mirror This mirror is to be segmented and consist of 492 smaller 1 4 metre 4 6 individual hexagonal mirrors The shape of each segment as well as its position relative to neighboring segments will be controlled actively 59 A 3 1 metre 10 ft secondary mirror is to produce an unobstructed field of view of 20 arcminutes in diameter with a focal ratio of 15 A 3 5 2 5 metre 12 x 8 flat tertiary mirror is to direct the light path to science instruments mounted on large Nasmyth platforms 60 61 The telescope is to have an alt azimuth mount 62 Target acquisition and system configuration capabilities need to be achieved within 5 minutes or ten minutes if relocating to a newer device To achieve these time limitations the TMT will use a software architecture linked by a service based communications system 63 The moving mass of the telescope optics and instruments will be 1430 tonnes citation needed The design of the facility descends from the Keck Observatory citation needed Adaptive optics edit nbsp Mirror sizes of existing and proposed telescopes The two other new extremely large telescopes the ELT and GMT are being built in the southern hemisphereIntegral to the observatory is a Multi Conjugate Adaptive Optics MCAO system This MCAO system will measure atmospheric turbulence by observing a combination of natural real stars and artificial laser guide stars Based on these measurements a pair of deformable mirrors will be adjusted many times per second to correct optical wave front distortions caused by the intervening turbulence 64 65 This system will produce diffraction limited images over a 30 arc second diameter field of view which means that the core of the point spread function will have a size of 0 015 arc second at a wavelength of 2 2 micrometers almost ten times better than the Hubble Space Telescope 66 Scientific instrumentation edit Early light capabilities edit Three instruments are planned to be available for scientific observations Wide Field Optical Spectrometer WFOS provides a seeing limit that goes down to the ultraviolet 67 with optical 0 3 1 0 mm wavelength imaging and spectroscopy capable of 40 square arc minute field of view 68 The TMT will use precision cut focal plane masks and enable long slit observations of individual objects as well as short slit observations of hundreds of different objects at the same time The spectrometer will use natural uncorrected seeing images 69 Infrared Imaging Spectrometer IRIS mounted on the observatory MCAO system capable of diffraction limited imaging and integral field spectroscopy at near infrared wavelengths 0 8 2 5 mm Principal investigators are James Larkin of UCLA and Anna Moore of Caltech Project scientist is Shelley Wright of UC San Diego 70 71 Infrared Multi object Spectrometer IRMS allowing close to diffraction limited imaging and slit spectroscopy over a 2 arc minute diameter field of view at near infrared wavelengths 0 8 2 5 mm Approval process and protests editMain article Thirty Meter Telescope protests nbsp Cultural practitioner Joshua Lanakila Mangauil along with Kahoʻokahi Kanuha and Hawaiian sovereignty supporters block the access road to Mauna Kea in October 2014 demonstrating against the building of the Thirty Meter Telescope In 2008 the TMT corporation selected two semi finalists for further study Mauna Kea and Cerro Amazones 72 In July 2009 Mauna Kea was selected 72 Once TMT selected Mauna Kea the project began a regulatory and community process for approval 73 Mauna Kea is ranked as one of the best sites on Earth for telescope viewing and is home to 13 other telescopes built at the summit of the mountain within the Mauna Kea Observatories grounds 74 Telescopes generate money for the big island with millions of dollars in jobs and subsidies gained by the state 74 The TMT would be one of the most expensive telescopes ever created 74 However the proposed construction of the TMT on Mauna Kea sparked protests and demonstrations across the state of Hawaii 75 Mauna Kea is the most sacred mountain in Hawaiian culture 75 76 77 78 79 80 as well as conservation land held in trust by the state of Hawaii 76 Initial approval permit and contested case hearing edit In 2010 Governor Linda Lingle of the State of Hawaii signed off on an environmental study after 14 community meetings 73 81 The BLNR held hearings on December 2 and December 3 2010 on the application for a permit 82 On February 25 2011 the board granted the permits after multiple public hearings 73 82 This approval had conditions in particular that a hearing about contesting the approval be heard 82 A contested case hearing was held in August 2011 which led to a judgment by the hearing officer for approval in November 2012 The telescope was given approval by the state Board of Land and Natural Resources in April 2013 18 82 This process was challenged in court with a lower court ruling in May 2014 82 The Intermediate Court of Appeals of the State of Hawaii declined to hear an appeal regarding the permit until the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources first issued a decision from the contested case hearing that could then be appealed to the court 83 First blockade construction halts State Supreme Court invalidates permit edit The dedication and ground breaking ceremony was held but interrupted by protesters on October 7 2014 84 85 86 The project became the focal point of escalating political conflict 87 police arrests 88 89 90 and continued litigation over the proper use of conservation lands 91 92 Native Hawaiian cultural practice and religious rights became central to the opposition 93 with concerns over the lack of meaningful dialogue during the permitting process 94 In late March 2015 demonstrators again halted the construction crews 95 On April 2 2015 about 300 protesters gathered on Mauna Kea some of them trying to block the access road to the summit 23 arrests were made 96 97 Once the access road to the summit was cleared by the police about 40 to 50 protesters began following the heavily laden and slow moving construction trucks to the summit construction site 96 On April 7 2015 the construction was halted for one week at the request of Hawaii state governor David Ige after the protest on Mauna Kea continued Project manager Gary Sanders stated that TMT agreed to the one week stop for continued dialogue Kealoha Pisciotta president of Mauna Kea Anaina Hou one of the organizations that have challenged the TMT in court 98 viewed the development as positive but said opposition to the project would continue 99 On April 8 2015 Governor Ige announced that the project was being temporarily postponed until at least April 20 2015 100 Construction was set to begin again on June 24 14 though hundreds of protesters gathered on that day blocking access to the construction site for the TMT Some protesters camped on the access road to the site while others rolled large rocks onto the road The actions resulted in 11 arrests 101 The TMT company chairman stated T M T will follow the process set forth by the state 102 103 A revised permit was approved on September 28 2017 by the Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources 104 On December 2 2015 the Hawaii State Supreme Court ruled the 2011 permit from the State of Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources BLNR was invalid 105 ruling that due process was not followed when the Board approved the permit before the contested case hearing The high court stated BLNR put the cart before the horse when it approved the permit before the contested case hearing and Once the permit was granted Appellants were denied the most basic element of procedural due process an opportunity to be heard at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner Our Constitution demands more 106 107 BLNR hearings Court validates revised permit edit In March 2017 the BLNR hearing officer retired judge Riki May Amano finished six months of hearings in Hilo Hawaii taking 44 days of testimony from 71 witnesses 108 On July 26 2017 Amano filed her recommendation that the Land Board grant the construction permit 109 On September 28 2017 the BLNR acting on Amano s report approved by a vote of 5 2 a Conservation District Use Permit CDUP for the TMT Numerous conditions including the removal of three existing telescopes and an assertion that the TMT is to be the last telescope on the mountain were attached to the permit 110 111 On October 30 2018 the Supreme Court of Hawaii ruled 4 1 that the revised permit was acceptable allowing construction to proceed 112 19 On July 10 2019 Hawaii Gov David Ige and the Thirty Meter Telescope International Observatory jointly announced that construction would begin the week of July 15 2019 113 Renewed blockade shuts down all observatories edit Main article Opposition to the Mauna Kea Observatories On July 15 2019 renewed protests blocked the access road again preventing construction from commencing On July 17 38 protestors were arrested all of whom were kupuna elders as the blockage of the access road continued 114 115 The blockade lasted 4 weeks and shut down all 12 observatories on Mauna Kea the longest shut down in the 50 year history of the observatories The full shut down ended when state officials brokered a deal that included building a new road around the campsite of the demonstrations and providing a complete list of vehicles accessing the road to show they are not associated with the TMT 116 The protests have become the latest fight for indigenous rights 117 and become a field defining moment for astronomy While there is both Native Hawaiian and non native Hawaiian support for the TMT a substantial percentage of native Hawaiians oppose the construction and see the proposal itself as a continued disregard to their basic rights 118 The 50 years of protests against the use of Mauna Kea has drawn into question the ethics of conducting research with telescopes on the mountain 119 The controversy is about more than the construction and is about generations of conflict between Native Hawaiians the U S Government and private interests The American Astronomical Society stated through their Press Officer Rick Fienberg The Hawaiian people have numerous legitimate grievances concerning the way they ve been treated over the centuries These grievances have simmered for many years and when astronomers announced their intention to build a new giant telescope on Maunakea things boiled over 120 On July 18 2019 an online petition titled Impeach Governor David Ige was posted to Change org The petition has gathered over 25 000 signatures 121 The governor and others in his administration received death threats over the construction of the telescope 122 Current status edit nbsp Inverted flag being flown next to Mauna Kea access road as a sign of protest September 2023On December 19 2019 Hawaii Governor David Ige announced that the state would reduce its law enforcement personnel on Mauna Kea 123 At the same time the TMT project stated it was not prepared to start construction anytime soon 124 Early in 2020 TMT and the Giant Magellan Telescope GMT jointly presented their science and technical readiness to the U S National Academies Astro2020 panel 125 Chile is the site for GMT in the south and Mauna Kea is being considered as the primary site for TMT in the north The panel will produce a series of recommendations for implementing a strategy and vision for the coming decade of U S Astronomy amp Astrophysics frontier research and prioritize projects for future funding In July 2020 TMT confirmed it would not resume construction on TMT until 2021 at the earliest 126 TMT continues to assess a number of factors impacting its timeline and schedule The COVID 19 pandemic has resulted in TMT s partnership working from home around the world and it continues to present a public health threat as well as travel and logistical challenges The project is currently focused on doing the work it can safely do in its partner countries On August 13 2020 the Speaker of the Hawaii House of Representatives Scott Saiki announced that the National Science Foundation NSF has initiated an informal outreach process to engage stakeholders interested in the Thirty Meter Telescope project 127 After listening to and considering the stakeholders viewpoints NSF will decide whether to initiate a formal federal environmental review process for TMT As of June 20 2022 no further construction has been announced or initiated Continued progress on instrument design mirror casting amp polishing and other critical operational technicalities have been worked through or are currently being worked on 128 129 In July of 2023 a new state appointed oversight board assumed management over the Mauna Kea site While there are no specific timelines or schedules regarding new start or completion dates activist Noe Noe Wong Wilson is quoted by Astronomy Magazine as saying It s still early in the life of the new authority but there s actually a pathway forward This is the start of a five year transition to a permanent Maunakea Stewardship Oversight Authority which will have control of the site from July 2028 and will include representatives from Native Hawaiian communities as well as astronomers 130 See also editEuropean Extremely Large Telescope Very Large Telescope Giant Magellan Telescope List of largest optical reflecting telescopesPortals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar SystemReferences edit Thirty Meter Telescope Selects Mauna Kea TMT Observatory Corporation 2009 07 21 archived from the original on 2014 09 01 retrieved 2009 07 24 a b c d Thirty Meter Telescope Construction Proposal PDF TMT Observatory Corporation 2007 09 12 p 29 archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 24 retrieved 2009 07 24 Sanders Gary H 2005 01 11 79 03 The Thirty Meter Telescope TMT Project PDF p 17 archived from the original PDF on 2008 08 28 a b Timeline TMT International Observatory Retrieved 27 September 2022 Michael Perryman 31 August 2018 The Exoplanet Handbook Cambridge University Press p 345 ISBN 978 1 108 32966 8 a b Govert Schilling Lars Lindberg Christensen 7 December 2011 Eyes on the Skies 400 Years of Telescopic Discovery John Wiley amp Sons p 45 ISBN 978 3 527 65705 6 We put everything into it Modest telescope could have big impact on Turkish science Science March 4 2020 Controversy over giant telescope roils astronomy conference in Hawaii Space Space com 16 January 2020 Retrieved 2020 02 13 Why are Jason Momoa and other Native Hawaiians protesting a telescope on Mauna Kea What s at stake USA today August 21 2019 This is our last stand Protesters on Mauna Kea dig in their heels CNN July 22 2019 What is TMT TMT International Observatory Retrieved 27 July 2019 Jones Caleb 2019 06 20 Controversial telescope to be built on sacred Hawaiian peak AP News Associated Press Herman Doug April 23 2015 The Heart of the Hawaiian Peoples Arguments Against the Telescope on Mauna Kea Smithsonian com Smithsonian com Retrieved 3 May 2015 a b Astronomers to restart construction of controversial telescope in Hawaii news sciencemag org 21 June 2015 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Governor David Ige announces major changes in the stewardship of Mauna Kea Governor of Hawaii 2015 05 26 Retrieved 2020 01 16 Big Island Now June 20 2019 UPDATE Notice to Proceed Granted for Thirty Meter Telescope Big Island Now Big Island now Retrieved 2019 08 24 We also accept the increased responsibilities for the stewardship of Maunakea including the requirement that as this very last site is developed for astronomy on the mauna five current telescopes will be decommissioned and their sites restored Construction Permits Revoked on the Thirty Meter Telescope in Hawaii Archived from the original on 2015 12 12 Retrieved 2015 10 21 a b c Massive telescope to be built in Hawaii 3 News NZ April 15 2013 Archived from the original on February 16 2016 Retrieved April 15 2013 a b Hawaii top court approves controversial Thirty Meter Telescope BBC News 2018 10 31 a b Martin Ratcliffe 1 February 2008 State of the Universe 2008 New Images Discoveries and Events Springer Science amp Business Media p 165 ISBN 978 0 387 73998 4 A P Lobanov J A Zensus C Cesarsky Ph Diamond 15 February 2007 Exploring the Cosmic Frontier Astrophysical Instruments for the 21st Century Springer Science amp Business Media p 24 ISBN 978 3 540 39756 4 Patricia A Whitelock 2006 The Scientific Requirements for Extremely Large Telescopes Proceedings of the 232nd Symposium of the International Astronomical Union Held in Cape Town South Africa November 14 18 2005 Cambridge University Press p 440 ISBN 978 0 521 85608 9 Anderson Mark 13 March 2014 The Billion Dollar Telescope Race Nautilus New York NautilusThink Brady Henry E 2019 05 11 The Challenge of Big Data and Data Science Annual Review of Political Science 22 1 297 323 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 090216 023229 ISSN 1094 2939 a b Mariella Moon 2015 03 18 Canada s economic issues might affect Thirty Meter Telescope s future Retrieved 2015 04 04 Megascope member Seven Days Nature paper 516 7530 148 149 11 December 2014 Bibcode 2014Natur 516 148 doi 10 1038 516148a India announced on 2 December that it will become a full partner in the Thirty Meter Telescope Yudhijit Bhattacharjee 2013 03 19 Thirty Meter Telescope Gets Small Grant to Make Big Plans Science journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved 2015 04 06 Yudhijit Bhattacharjee 2012 01 03 Giant Telescopes Face NSF Funding Delay Science journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved 2015 04 06 Ladakh to get world s largest telescope timesofindia com 2016 03 26 Retrieved 2013 07 31 a b Xin Ling October 9 2014 TMT opening ceremony interrupted by protests Science Archived from the original on October 10 2014 Retrieved 10 October 2014 McAvoy Audrey July 21 2009 World s largest telescope to be built in Hawaii Washington Post dead link Hearing on Hawaii Thirty Meter Telescope to continue next week Pacific Business News Bizjournals com 2011 08 19 Retrieved 2013 07 31 Summit Ecosystems KAHEA Kahea org Retrieved 2013 07 31 Sacred Landscape KAHEA Kahea org Retrieved 2013 07 31 Hawaii Tribune Herald Hawaii Tribune Herald Archived from the original on 2011 09 06 Retrieved 2013 07 31 TMT Takes Step Towards Construction after Approval by the Board of Land and Natural Resources Thirty Meter Telescope Tmt org 2013 04 13 Archived from the original on 2013 08 22 Retrieved 2013 07 31 Joseph Wilson Caleb Jones August 5 2019 Still blocked from Hawaii peak telescope seeks Spain permit The Associated press Retrieved 2019 08 21 a b c d Stalled in Hawaii giant telescope faces roadblocks at its backup site in the Canary Islands www science org Retrieved 2023 03 14 a b Spain judge nixes backup site for disputed Hawaii telescope AP NEWS 2021 08 25 Retrieved 2023 03 14 a b US environmental study launched for Thirty Meter Telescope AP NEWS 2022 07 19 Retrieved 2023 03 14 Perry Jill 5 December 2007 Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Commits 200 Million Support for Thirty Meter Telescope Caltech Retrieved 30 April 2015 India Joins Thirty Meter Telescope Project Thirty Meter Telescope Tmt org 2010 06 24 Archived from the original on 2012 08 06 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Thirty Meter Telescope Tmt org 2009 04 01 Archived from the original on 2012 03 01 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Mann Adam November 16 2009 Titanic Thirty Meter Telescope Will See Deep Space More Clearly Wired Retrieved 18 October 2010 Thirty Meter Telescope Tmt org 2009 11 17 Archived from the original on 2012 03 01 Retrieved 2012 08 06 China India to jump forward with Hawaii telescope Associated Press Retrieved January 12 2012 Office of Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle Hawaii governor ends China mission with TMT talk Press release Today Governor Linda Lingle continued to market Hawai i in Beijing Big Island Video News Retrieved 2019 08 24 Daily Report China Foreign Broadcast Information Service 1995 p 20 Construction of 30 meter optical telescope to begin next year The Economic Times 23 January 2013 Retrieved 23 January 2013 China India to work for largest telescope The Hindu 13 January 2012 Retrieved January 13 2012 a b The Wire staff India to Start Manufacturing Key Components for Thirty Meter Telescope Project The Wire Retrieved 2019 08 24 Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 2013 10 10 World s largest telescope stalled by Canadian funding woes Retrieved 2015 04 04 Canada finally commits its share of funds for Thirty Meter Telescope CBC News Semeniuk Ivan 6 April 2015 With 243 million contribution Canada signs on to mega telescope in search of first stars and other Earths Globe and Mail Ivan Semeniuk 22 July 2019 Thirty Meter Telescope dispute puts focus on Canada s role www theglobeandmail com Retrieved 7 December 2019 Bellrichard Chantelle 27 September 2020 Canadian astronomers contend with issue of Indigenous consent over Hawaiian telescope project CBC Retrieved 30 September 2020 Worth Katie February 20 2015 World s Largest Telescope Faces Opposition from Native Hawaiian Protesters Scientific American Retrieved 6 August 2015 Thirty Meter Telescope Detailed Science Case 2007 PDF Tmt org Archived from the original PDF on 2014 10 13 Retrieved 2014 03 11 Stepp Larry M Thompson Peter M MacMynowski Douglas G Regehr Martin W Colavita M Mark Sirota Mark J Gilmozzi Roberto Hall Helen J 2010 Stepp Larry M Gilmozzi Roberto Hall Helen J eds Servo design and analysis for the Thirty Meter Telescope primary mirror actuators PDF Ground based and Airborne Telescopes III 7733 77332F 77332F 14 Bibcode 2010SPIE 7733E 2FT doi 10 1117 12 857371 ISSN 0277 786X S2CID 34865540 Optics TMT International Observatory Ellerbroek Brent L Boyer C Bradley C Britton M C Browne S et al 2006 A conceptual design for the Thirty Meter Telescope adaptive optics systems PDF Advances in Adaptive Optics II SPIE Conference Series Vol 6272 pp 62720D 62720D 14 Bibcode 2006SPIE 6272E 0DE doi 10 1117 12 669422 ISSN 0277 786X S2CID 120741170 Gawronski W 2005 Control and pointing challenges of antennas and telescopes Proceedings of the 2005 American Control Conference 2005 pp 3758 3769 doi 10 1109 ACC 2005 1470558 ISBN 0 7803 9098 9 S2CID 13452336 Bridger Alan Silva David R Angeli George Boyer Corinne Sirota Mark Trinh Thang Radziwill Nicole M 2008 Thirty Meter Telescope Observatory software requirements architecture and preliminary implementation strategies Advanced Software and Control for Astronomy II Vol 7019 pp 70190X 70190X 12 Bibcode 2008SPIE 7019E 0XS doi 10 1117 12 789974 ISSN 0277 786X S2CID 17768964 Rochester Simon M Otarola Angel Boyer Corinne Budker Dmitry Ellerbroek Brent Holzlohner Ronald Wang Lianqi 2012 Modeling of pulsed laser guide stars for the Thirty Meter Telescope project Journal of the Optical Society of America B 29 8 2176 arXiv 1203 5900 Bibcode 2012JOSAB 29 2176R doi 10 1364 JOSAB 29 002176 ISSN 0740 3224 S2CID 13072542 Hippler Stefan 2019 Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes Journal of Astronomical Instrumentation 8 2 1950001 322 arXiv 1808 02693 Bibcode 2019JAI 850001H doi 10 1142 S2251171719500016 S2CID 119505402 Ellerbroek Brent Adkins Sean Andersen David Atwood Jennifer Browne Steve et al 2010 First light adaptive optics systems and components for the Thirty Meter Telescope PDF In Ellerbroek Brent L Hart Michael Hubin Norbert Wizinowich Peter L eds Adaptive Optics Systems II Vol 7736 pp 773604 773604 14 Bibcode 2010SPIE 7736E 04E doi 10 1117 12 856503 ISSN 0277 786X S2CID 55477536 Alan F M Moorwood 21 November 2008 Science with the VLT in the ELT Era Springer Science amp Business Media p 242 ISBN 978 1 4020 9190 2 Kevin H Baines F Michael Flasar Norbert Krupp Tom Stallard 6 December 2018 Saturn in the 21st Century Cambridge University Press p 431 ISBN 978 1 107 10677 2 Fred Kamphues 2016 www maunakeaandtmt org PDF Mikeroniek p 14 Retrieved 2019 08 21 IRIS Home Page Irlab astro ucla edu 2010 10 05 Retrieved 2013 07 31 Ellerbroek Brent Joyce Richard Boyer Corinne Daggert Larry Hileman Edward Hunten Mark Liang Ming Bonaccini Calia Domenico 2006 The laser guide star facility for the Thirty Meter Telescope PDF Advances in Adaptive Optics II SPIE Conference Series Vol 6272 pp 62721H 62721H 13 Bibcode 2006SPIE 6272E 1HJ doi 10 1117 12 670070 ISSN 0277 786X S2CID 123191350 a b Thirty Meter Telescope Archived from the original on 2010 08 10 Retrieved 2010 08 29 a b c About TMT Archived from the original on 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2015 12 03 a b c TI Here s why we should build it anyway Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Zara Christopher April 4 2015 TMT Mauna Kea Protests Heat Up Site Of Thirty Meter Telescope Called Sacred By Native Hawaiian Leaders IBT Media Inc International Business Times Retrieved 20 December 2015 a b Nelson Jonathan 29 June 2015 Who Owns the Rights to Mauna Kea E21 economics21 org Retrieved 20 December 2015 Martin Gray 2007 Sacred Earth Places of Peace and Power Sterling Publishing Company p 254 ISBN 978 1 4027 4737 3 Mauna Kea the most sacred mountain to native Hawaiians was the site of ongoing religious ritual practice Gutierrez Ben 10 April 2015 Protest against Thirty Meter Telescope spreading worldwide Honolulu Hawaii News Now Mauna Kea is sacred and our children are taught to respect our aina said teacher Leo Akana They understand that science is an important thing but I think the state needs to realize that Hawaiians were the very first astronomers here Mauna Kea Indigenous Religious Traditions 18 November 2011 Retrieved 2020 02 13 Mauna Kea is sacred to the Native Hawaiians and is the zenith of their ancestral ties to creation Mauna Kea The Office of Hawaiian Affairs OHA Retrieved 2020 02 13 Mauna Kea is a deeply sacred place that is revered in Hawaiian traditions It s regarded as a shrine for worship as a home to the gods and as the piko of Hawaiʻi Island University of Hawaii at Hilo proposing agency May 8 2010 Final Environmental Imapact Statement volume II section 8 0 PDF Hawaii gov Retrieved August 22 2019 a b c d e Stewart Burnett Colin M John December 3 2015 Hawaii Supreme Court voids Thirty Meter Telescope permit Oahu Publications West Hawaii Today Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 19 December 2015 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jamie Winpenny 2013 06 26 The Uncertain Future of Mauna Kea Big Island Weekly Archived from the original on 2013 06 29 Retrieved 2014 03 11 KITV4 News 2014 10 07 Protesters disrupt Mauna Kea telescope groundbreaking KITV4 News Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 2015 04 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The Two way National Public Radio 2014 10 08 Protesters disrupt telescope groundbreaking in Hawaii NPR National Public Radio Retrieved 2015 04 04 Beatty J Kelly Work begins on Thirty Metre Telescope Australian Sky amp Telescope Odysseus Publishing Pty Ltd 83 11 ISSN 1832 0457 Lynn Beittel 2015 04 01 VIDEO Why block TMT on Mauna Kea Big Island Video News Retrieved 2015 04 04 KITV4 News 2015 04 02 Protesters arrested blocking road to giant telescope site KITV4 News Archived from the original on 2015 04 10 Retrieved 2015 04 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Jamilia Epping 2015 04 03 DLNR makes additional protest arrests Big Island Now com Retrieved 2015 04 04 Ben Gutierrez 2015 04 04 A day after arrests Mauna Kea telescope protest grows Hawaii News Now Retrieved 2015 04 04 Tom Callis 2014 08 29 TMT project headed back to court 4 appeal denial of contested case hearing request for sublease West Hawaii Today Archived from the original on 2015 04 17 Retrieved 2015 04 04 Ikaika Hussey 2014 02 20 Board of regents vote in favor of mauna kea sublease plan despite lawsuit demonstrations The Hawaii Independent Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 2015 04 04 Dominique Saks 2011 11 19 Indigenous religious traditions Mauna Kea Colorado College Retrieved 2015 04 04 Chad Blair 2015 04 04 OHA trustee calls for moratorium on Mauna Kea telescope Honolulu Civil Beat and KITV4 News Retrieved 2015 04 04 Davis Chelsea March 26 2015 Thirty Meter Telescope protesters continue to block construction on Mauna Kea KHNL Retrieved 4 April 2015 a b Jones Caleb April 3 2015 Clash in Hawaii Between Science and Sacred Land U S News amp World Report Associated Press Retrieved April 4 2015 Staff April 2 2015 Police TMT Issue Statements on Mass Arrests on Mauna Kea Big Island Video News Retrieved April 4 2015 Hawaii Court Rescinds Permit to Build Thirty Meter Telescope Jones Caleb April 7 2015 Amid controversy construction of telescope in Hawaii halted U S News amp World Report Associated Press Retrieved April 7 2015 Yoro Sarah April 11 2015 Thirty Meter Telescope construction delayed KHON2 Retrieved 15 April 2015 Dickerson Kelly June 25 2015 Protesters just blocked the construction of a revolutionary scientific instrument again Business Insider Retrieved June 28 2015 Overbye Dennis December 3 2015 Contested case hearing The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved 18 December 2015 APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD CIRCUIT CAAP 14 0000873 CIV NO 13 1 0349 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 04 29 Retrieved 2015 12 03 09 28 17 Board of Land and Natural Resources Approves TMT Permit Witze Alexandra 2015 Hawaiian court revokes permit for planned mega telescope Nature Nature com 528 7581 176 Bibcode 2015Natur 528 176W doi 10 1038 nature 2015 18944 PMID 26659163 Knapp Alex December 3 2015 Hawaii Supreme Court Revokes Construction Permit for Thirty Meter Telescope on Mauna Kea Forbes com Forbes com Retrieved 19 December 2015 Hou v Board of the Land and Natural Resources 363 P 3d 224 136 Haw 376 2015 Overbye Dennis 28 July 2017 Giant Telescope Atop Hawaii s Mauna Kea Should Be Approved Judge Says The New York Times p A13 Retrieved 29 July 2017 Proposed Findings of Fact Conclusions of Law and Decision and Order In re Contested Case Hearing Re Conservation District Use Application CDUA HA 3568 For the Thirty Meter Telescope at the Mauna Kea Science Reserve Ka ohe Mauka Hamakua Hawai i TMK 3 4 4 015 009 Hawaii Board of Land and Natural Resources Approves Conservation District Use Permit to Build TMT on Maunakea Sep 29 2017 Retrieved Nov 1 2018 Hawai i BLNR Approves TMT Permit Big Island Now September 28 2017 Retrieved November 1 2018 State Supreme Court rules in favor of Thirty Meter Telescope s construction Hawaii News Now 31 October 2018 Retrieved 2018 10 31 Hofschneider Anita July 10 2019 Thirty Meter Telescope Construction Will Start Next Week Civil Beat Retrieved 10 July 2019 Kelleher Jennifer Sinco Jones Caleb 2019 07 18 Hawaiian Elders Arrested as Standoff Continues Over a Telescope Slated for a Sacred Mountain Time AP Press Archived from the original on July 18 2019 DLNR releases names of those arrested on Maunakea Hawaii Tribune Herald 2019 07 26 Daniel Clery August 13 2019 Telescopes in Hawaii reopen after deal with protesters Science AAAS American Association for the Advancement of Science Retrieved 2019 08 21 Yessenia Funes August 9 2019 Mauna Kea s Thirty Meter Telescope Is the Latest Front in the New Fight for Indigenous Sovereignty Gizmodo Media Group Retrieved 2019 08 21 Ethan Siegel August 9 2019 Astronomy Faces A Field Defining Choice In Choosing The Next Steps For The TMT Forbes Media Retrieved 2019 08 21 Marisa Peryer July 27 2019 For years Yale s Astro Dept has conducted research on Native Hawaiian cultural site Yale Daily News Retrieved 2019 08 21 Peter Hess August 13 2019 Hawaii s Space Telescope Controversy Is Reopening Old Wounds Inverse Inverse Retrieved 2019 08 21 Petition on change org calls for impeachment of Governor David Ige KITV July 19 2019 Retrieved 11 December 2019 Gov David Ige decries death threats over Thirty Meter Telescope STAR ADVERTISER 13 September 2019 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Statement by Governor David Ige on Mauna Kea TMT governor hawaii gov Retrieved 2020 10 03 Staff H N N 26 December 2019 In major deal TMT protesters agree to temporarily clear Mauna Kea Access Road Hawaii News Now Retrieved 2020 10 03 Overbye Dennis 2020 03 18 American Astronomy s Future Goes on Trial in Washington The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 10 03 Staff H N N 15 July 2020 Construction of Thirty Meter Telescope probably won t resume until 2021 Hawaii News Now Retrieved 2020 10 03 Democrats Hawai i House 2020 08 19 Speaker Saiki Announces National Science Foundation s Outreach for Thirty Meter Telescope hawaiihousedemocrats Retrieved 2020 10 03 TMT International Observatory TMT International Observatory Zastrow Mark 29 March 2023 Path forward for Thirty Meter Telescope Mauna Kea begins to emerge Astronomy Retrieved 4 October 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thirty Meter Telescope Official website Mauna Kea page at the Hawai i Department of Land and Natural Resources INSIGHTS ON PBS HAWAII Should the Thirty Meter Telescope Be Built air date video April 30 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thirty Meter Telescope amp oldid 1185792276, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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