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At Palomar, he invented instruments for the 200-inch Hale telescope.
The Hale telescope is the most prominent example of a Horseshoe mount in use.
This was changed to vacuum deposited aluminum on glass, used on the 200-inch Hale telescope.
Even world class telescopes such as the Hale telescope, equipped with adaptive optics, did not detect the plume.
Vacuum metallizing was used to deposit aluminum on the large glass mirrors of reflecting telescopes, such as with the Hale telescope.
The research was performed on the 200 inch (5.08 meter) diameter aperture Palomar Hale telescope.
It would be the second-largest telescope in the world, taking its place behind the then enormous 200-inch Palomar Hale Telescope.
The largest telescope is a one-tenth scale model of the Hale telescope at Mount Palomar.
Cornell University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington share in the use of the Hale telescope.
He also led development of Cornell's instrumentation for the Palomar Observatory Hale Telescope.
Though surpassed in size by the Hooker telescope nine years later, the Hale telescope remained one of the largest in use for decades.
In 1973, Westphal built a silicon-intensified target camera for the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar.
Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory.
The most powerful American instrument is the Hale Telescope on Mount Palomar in California.
For example, the 200-inch Hale Telescope saw first light January 26, 1949, targeting a nebula located in the constellation Monoceros.
The Observatory houses the world's once-largest telescope, the 5.1m Hale Telescope, operated chiefly by computers now rather than humans.
Another telescope, the telescope at the Palomar Observatory, is also called the "Hale Telescope".
In 2000, high-resolution lucky imaging observations were conducted by the Mount Wilson Observatory 1.5 meter Hale telescope.
The Mount Palomar Hale telescope turned out to be the last world-leading telescope to have a parabolic primary mirror.
They did this by imaging the previously imaged HR 8799 planets using just a 1.5 m portion of the Hale Telescope.
The second largest, and the most scientifically productive since its completion in 1948, is the 200-inch Hale Telescope on Mount Palomar, Calif.
Instead he has written an exciting book about botany (sic) that recalls his 1987 astronomy book "First Light," about the Hale telescope.
While preparing for his observations Frail contacted astronomer Stanislav Djorgovski, who was working with the Hale telescope.
The central character of First Light is the Hale telescope on Palomar Mountain, which was the world's biggest telescope for more than three decades.
Palomar Mountain is most famous as being home since 1936 to the Palomar Observatory, and the giant Hale Telescope.