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Johns Hopkins University.
Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope Project files, circa 1980-1989.
This collection consists of the central file for the HUT and documents the technical history of the construction of this actual flight artifact. Includes drawings, as well as project outlines, progress and status reports, memorandums, summaries, schedules, and proposals.
The Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) project was conceived, designed, and built by astronomers and engineers at Johns Hopkins University to perform astronomical observations in the far-ultraviolet portion of the electromagnetic spectrum, wavelengths of light that are inaccessible to ground-based telescopes. HUT's primary purpose was to observe wavelengths of light that are too short to be seen with the Hubble Space Telescope, although overlap was provided to allow direct comparison. The telescope flew twice aboard the space shuttle, once in December 1990 and again in March 1995, as part of a package of instruments called the Astro Observatory. HUT has been used to observe hundreds of objects, including stars, planets, and quasars. The HUT was donated to the National Air and Space Museum in 2001, and was included in the "Explore the Universe" Exhibition.
Johns Hopkins University.
Astronomy. -- Observations
Physical instruments -- Drawings.
Telescopes -- Design and construction.
Ultraviolet astronomy.
AIP-ICOS
Smithsonian Institution. National Air and Space Museum. Archives Division. MRC 322, Washington, DC, 20560, USA
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