Liverpool Telescope
We own and operate the Liverpool Telescope
We are the only astronomy group in the UK to operate its own major optical telescope.
Sited on La Palma in the Canary Islands, the Liverpool Telescope is the world's largest fully robotic telescope. The remoteness of the island, lack of urban development and restrictions on artificial light pollution makes this one of the best astronomical sites in the world.
Access the website for science users of the telescope.
Telescope details
- A two-metre Cassegrain reflector, with Ritchey-Chretien hyperbolic optics, on an alt-azimuth mount
- Up to nine different instruments can be mounted at the telescope, including imaging cameras and spectrometers
- Over the years a wide variety of optical and near-IR imagers, spectrometers, and polarimeters have been mounted on the telescope
- Autonomous but can be manually controlled
Scientific goals
- Rapid robotic reaction to unpredictable phenomena and their systematic follow-up
- Small scale surveys and source follow-up
- Monitoring of variable objects on all timescales from seconds to years
- Simultaneous coordinated observations with other ground and space based facilities
- Link to image of Owned and operated by the Astrophysics Research Institute, it was designed and built by Telescope Technologies Limited (a spin-off company of the University) as the prototype of their two-metre class telescopes.
- Link to image of Located on the island of La Palma on the Canary Islands.
- Link to image of An unbarred spiral galaxy approximately 130 million light-years away in the constellation Aries. The image was captured from the Liverpool Telescope.
- Link to image of The Liverpool Telescope support building office.