The "new" 1-m telescope was installed in the dome that previously housed a 30-inch telescope. The telescope was built by APM Telescopes[1] and was lifted into the dome on 02 August 2016. Commissioning is currently underway.
The 30-inch telescope was donated to the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal.
Watch this space!
Contact numbers
To receive calls, the phones in the warm room and on the observing floor can be reached by the following numbers:
Extension number: 9109 (to phone from within the observatory)
To make calls if you have a problem that isn't addressed in this wiki or the fault forum (remember to dial the ** where given):
1.9m/74-inch observer: 9107
1.0m/40-inch observer: 9108
Cape Town remote observing station: 7027
Standby electronics technician: **103
Standby mechanical technician: **104
Standby IT technician: **113
A guided tour of the dome
The purpose of this section is to introduce you to the facilities and equipment you will need during your run. The tour begins at the front door of Lesedi's dome. To aid orientation, the domes of MeerLICHT, Lesedi, and the 40 inch are aligned East-West, perpendicular to the main road that passes SALT at the Northern end of the plateau and leads to the "Robotic Row" of telescopes in the South. A code (which you can obtain from the standby technicians/your support astronomer/other observers) is required to open the door.
Main lighting circuit switch
Just inside the entrance on the left-hand wall is a master switch to control all the lighting circuits in the building. Switch it on if you are working in the building, and always ensure that it is switched off when you leave, especially if people are observing remotely.
Light switches
- Foyer and stairwell light switches can be found on the right-hand wall, just around the corner to the right, at the foot of the stairs (foyer light switch on the right, stair lights on the left). There is a second switch for the stairwell lights at the top of the stairs.
- Light switches on the left at the top of the stairs. The left-hand switch is for the stairwell lights; the other for the observing floor incandescents.
- The switch for observing floor fluorescent lights is located up the ladder on the observing floor, on the dome control console mounted on wall above the North end of the pier.
- The slew lights on the ring beam are software controlled.
Ground floor facilities
As you enter the dome on the ground floor, you will find the following facilities:
- Fire extinguisher: mounted on the wall as you enter.
- First aid kit: on a shelf to the right as you enter the dome.
- Toilet: through the first door on the left as you enter the dome. The light switch is outside the door on the right. The right-hand switch operates an extractor fan(!).
- Kitchen:, second door on the left. It has a microwave, coffee maker, kettle, toaster, snackwich and an array of cutlery and crockery in the cupboard under the sink. There are jars of teas, coffees, hot chocolate and sugar. If these jars become empty, return them to the hostel kitchen in your night lunch bag for refilling. The kitchenware is cleaned daily by the hostel staff, except at weekends.
The warm room
The warm room is the door on the right-hand side, opposite the kitchen. It contains an air-conditioned server room and has the following resources at your disposal:
- A PC ("lesedi-nuc") for running the telescope and instrument control systems.
- Several network cables and power sockets for use with laptops.
- Lights on a dimmer switch (push and hold to adjust the brightness) and a desk lamp.
- An air conditioner to heat or cool the room.
- A stereo compatible with iPods and iPhones, and plays CDs, MP3s from DVDs and USB devices, and has a radio.
The Observing Floor
At the top of the stairs, be careful not to trip over the raised hatch in the floor (this is for lowering the primary mirror for aluminising). You will find Lesedi on a raised pier, surrounded by a metal grid floor, accessed by a ladder. The North end of the pier is nearest the stairs. Familiarise yourself with the following:
- Dome control console at the North end of the pier.
- Dome lockout switch beside the dome control console at the North end of the pier. Note that this does not lock out the telescope, only the dome. Lockout should be switched on (a red light on the box will flash) if people are working on the dome, otherwise left off.
The Telescope
Lesedi is a 1-metre Alt-Az Ritchey-Chretien telescope. There are two Nasmyth foci, each with an instrument rotator and identical corrector optics. The Nasmyth ports are identified as left and right, defined from the point of view of someone standing behind the parked telescope, i.e. looking at the back of the primary mirror cell. SHOC is mounted on the right-hand port, and Sibonise will be commissioned on the left in the near future. Future instruments (a low-resolution spectrograph and a fibre-fed echelle) will be co-mounted on an instrument selector to share the right-hand port with SHOC. A motorised tertiary mirror allows an instrument on either port to be selected in seconds.
The telescope is parked facing East, the dome to the West. There shouldn't be any need for manual interaction with the telescope during the night, but you should ensure that the observing floor is clear of ladders and other obstacles before moving the telescope, and that the mirror covers are closed before opening the dome.
Webcam
There are currently two webcams to use to keep an eye (and an ear) on the telescope:
- The Mobotix camera sees the full observing floor, but has no sound.
- The UniFi camera sees the shutters, the top half of the telescope and half the observing floor, and the dome can be rotated to view the opposite half. The UniFi webcam must be viewed in Chrome/Chromium (not Firefox) for the sound to work.
Filters
At present, SHOC has one 8-position filter wheel, containing UBVRI, a clear filter to match the focus of the Bessell filters, and two empty slots. The SHOC software identifies the filter in each position. There is also a 6-position neutral density wheel that can be used with or without the Bessell filters in the beam. Filters must not be removed from the filter wheels.
Observing limits
Meteorological constraints
The dome must be closed when any of the following weather limits is reached:
- Humidity: Texternal - Tdew ≤ 1.5
- Wind speed: 60 km/h
- Heavy cloud
In case of strong wind and rain, please park the dome shutters facing into the wind. This can be done by putting the dome in lockout and rotating left or right using the dome control console.
Meteorological information
The following should be used for regular monitoring of external conditions while observing:
- DIMM seeing data and all the weather stations on the plateau are summarised on this page
- For assessing sky conditions, SALT and LCO operate all sky cameras, also available on the website above.
Telescope pointing limits
Lesedi can safely point between 30 and 89 degrees above the horizon, at any azimuth. There are no obstructions in the dome to be aware of (assuming the observing floor has been checked for ladders etc).
If the telescope reaches an altitude limit, it will simply stop tracking and can be pointed to a new position. If it reaches an azimuth limit while tracking, it should automatically "rewind" and continue tracking the same object. If it doesn't, you will need to repoint the telescope.
Start-up recipes
Start-up in Sutherland
Follow this procedure to prepare the telescope and dome for observing in Sutherland:
- Check the weather conditions here. If windspeed <60km/h and T-Tdew > 1.5 (see observing limits), continue with step 2.
- Check the observing floor and clear any obstacles (e.g. ladders) that may obstruct the telescope.
- Switch off the lights everywhere except in the warm room.
- Log into lesedi-nuc in the warm room, open a browser and navigate to the webcam and click "Live Feed".
- Open a second browser window and navigate to the TCS (URL coming soon).
- Click the STARTUP button on the bottom right of the screen. This will switch on the slew lights so you can watch it open the dome, baffle and mirror covers, and set the dome to follow the telescope, then switch off the slew lights.
- Select the Instrument you require by clicking either SHOC or SIBONISE to the mid-left of the display.
Start-up remotely from Cape Town
On-site technical staff should have checked the facility in the afternoon, clearing any obstacles, unlocking the dome and turning off the lights.
- Check the weather conditions here. If windspeed <60km/h and T-Tdew > 1.5 (see observing limits), continue with step 2.
- Open a browser, navigate to the webcam and click "Live Feed". Check that the observing floor is clear.
- Open a second browser window and navigate to the TCS (URL coming soon).
- Click the STARTUP button on the bottom right of the screen. This will switch on the slew lights so you can watch it open the dome, baffle and mirror covers, and set the dome to follow the telescope, then switch off the slew lights.
- Select the Instrument you require by clicking either SHOC or SIBONISE to the mid-left of the display.
Instrument start-up
Follow the instructions on the SHOC wiki.
Sky flat recipe
If sky conditions are photometric during morning/evening twilight, you will be able to take sky flats:
- Follow the start-up procedure.
- Follow the appropriate instrument setup procedure.
- On the TCS Advanced tab, left-hand side under Telescope, enter 80 in the Altitude box and enter an Azimuth to face the telescope in the opposite direction to the rising (270) or setting (90) Sun. Click Slew. Then immediately below the Slew button, click Tracking OFF.
- On the instrument PC, select the required filter. If you need flats in a variety of filters, be sure to cycle through them in the correct order (e.g. UBVRI during evening twilight; IRVBU in the morning). This also applies if you need a range of prebin settings (i.e. start with low binning in the evening; high to low binning in the morning).
- Take a minimum of 15 flats in each filter/prebin setting.
Observing recipes
Acquiring a target
- Follow the facility start-up procedure.
- Check that the selected target is within the observing limits.