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Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

GREGOR: the new 1.5m solar telescope on Tenerife

R. Volkmer; Oskar von der Luehe; F. Kneer; Juergen Staude; Axel Hofmann; W. Schmidt; Michal Sobotka; Dirk Soltau; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittmann; Thomas Berkefeld

The new 1.5 m high resolution telescope will be build up on the reused solar tower of the German 45 cm Gregory Coude Telescope at the Teide Observatory, Izana, Tenerife. The new telescope is a Gregory type with open telescope structure, alt-azimuth mount, complete retractable dome, and a pool of well established and new developed post focus instruments. An adaptive optics system provides the capability for diffraction limited observations at visible wavelengths and the polarimetry device in the secondary focus reduces the perturbation due to instrumental polarization in an efficient way. We describe the main optical characteristics and the focal plane instrumentation with respect to the latest status of the project.


Optical Science and Technology, SPIE's 48th Annual Meeting | 2003

Optical and thermal design of the main optic of the solar telescope GREGOR

R. Volkmer; Oskar von der Luhe; Dirk Soltau; Peter Emde; Matthias R. Krödel; Norbert Manfred Pailer; E. Wiehr

The optical and thermal design of the 1.5 m solar telescope GREGOR is presented. The three first main mirrors of GREGOR will be made from Cesic, a silicon carbide material. One major constraint of large solar telescopes is the thermal load of the structure and the mirrors. The mirrors are heated by the solar radiation and introduce potentially harmful mirror seeing. GREGOR will use an active mirror cooling system and an open telescope structure to reduce these negative effects. A thermal analysis shows that the equilibrium temperature of the Cesic Mirror without active cooling is 6° above ambient temperature. Additional cooling will reduce the temperature difference of the optical surface and ambient air to below 0.1° K. With tempered airflow (about 2.5 m3/s per square meter mirror surface) the temperature gradient on the surface of the face sheet is less than 0.1°K. The telescope will have an open structure and a complete retractable dome to support mirror and structure cooling by wind.


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2012

A retrospective of the GREGOR solar telescope in scientific literature

C. Denker; O. von der Lühe; A. Feller; K. Arlt; H. Balthasar; S.-M. Bauer; N. Bello González; Th. Berkefeld; Peter Caligari; M. Collados; Andreas Fischer; T. Granzer; T. Hahn; C. Halbgewachs; Frank Heidecke; A. Hofmann; T. J. Kentischer; M. Klvaňa; F. Kneer; A. Lagg; H. Nicklas; Emil Popow; Klaus G. Puschmann; J. Rendtel; Dirk Schmidt; W. Schmidt; Michal Sobotka; S. K. Solanki; Dirk Soltau; J. Staude

In this review, we look back upon the literature, which had the GREGOR solar telescope project as its subject including science cases, telescope subsystems, and post-focus instruments. The articles date back to the year 2000, when the initial concepts for a new solar telescope on Tenerife were first presented at scientific meetings. This comprehensive bibliography contains literature until the year 2012, i.e., the final stages of commissioning and science verification. Taking stock of the various publications in peer-reviewed journals and conference proceedings also provides the “historical” context for the reference articles in this special issue of Astronomische Nachrichten/Astronomical Notes (© 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)


Proceedings of SPIE | 2004

Progress report of the 1.5 m solar telescope GREGOR

R. Volkmer; Oskar F. von der Lhe; F. Kneer; Jurgen Staude; Thomas Berkefeld; Peter Caligari; W. Schmidt; Dirk Soltau; H. Nicklas; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittmann; H. Balthasar; Axel Hofmann; Klaus G. Strassmeier; Michal Sobotka; M. Klvana; M. Collados

GREGOR is the new 1.5 m solar telescope assembled on Tenerife, Spain, by the German consortium of the Kiepenheuer Institut fur Sonnenphysik, the Astronomischen Institut Potsdam, the Universitats-Sternwarte Gottingen and other national and international Partners. The refurbishment of the building is almost finished. The manufacturing of the telescope structure and the optics is still in progress. After the integration of the new complete retractable dome in July 2004 the telescope structure, optic and post focus instruments will be assembled during the rest of the year. First light is planned during May 2005.


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2001

Post‐focus instrumentation for GREGOR

F. Kneer; A. Hofmann; O. von der Lühe; W. Schmidt; Dirk Soltau; J. Staude; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittmann

GREGOR is a high-resolution solar telescope with an aperture of 1.5 m. It will be equipped with an Adaptive Optics system and is designed for high-precision measurements of magnetic fields and plasma motions in the solar photosphere and chromosphere with a resolution of 70 km on the Sun. GREGOR will replace the Gregory Coude Telescope at the Observatorio del Teide on Tenerife. In concert with the other solar telescopes at Teide Observatory it will be useful for studying the dynamics of the solar atmosphere and the underlying physical processes. GREGOR will also serve as a test bed for next generation solar telescopes. We discuss briefly the postfocus instrumentation of GREGOR.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1984

Time-dependence of umbral oscillations

Dirk Soltau; E. Wiehr


Archive | 2003

Current Status of the 1.5m Solar Telescope GREGOR

R. Volkmer; Oskar von der Luhe; Franz Kneer; Jurgen Staude; Thomas Berkfeld; W. Schmidt; Dirk Soltau; H. Nicklas; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittman; Axel Hofmann; Michal Sobotka; M. Klvana


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2003

From the Gregory‐Coudé Telescope to GREGOR: a development from past to future

F. Kneer; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittmann


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2003

GREGOR - optical design considerations

Dirk Soltau; Th. Berkefeld; A. Hofmann; Oskar von der Luhe; W. Schmidt; R. Volkmer; E. Wiehr


Astronomische Nachrichten | 2003

From the Gregory-Coudé Telescope to GREGOR: a development from past to future. Summary of workshop held in Göttingen, July 24-26, 2002

F. Kneer; E. Wiehr; Axel D. Wittmann

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Dirk Soltau

Kiepenheuer Institut für Sonnenphysik

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F. Kneer

University of Göttingen

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W. Schmidt

Kiepenheuer Institut für Sonnenphysik

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R. Volkmer

Kiepenheuer Institut für Sonnenphysik

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A. Hofmann

Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam

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Oskar von der Luhe

Kiepenheuer Institut für Sonnenphysik

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Michal Sobotka

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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H. Nicklas

University of Göttingen

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