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    1st Photos from New Discovery Channel Telescope Unveiled

    A privately funded telescope has taken its first images, capping off a two decades-long quest to construct the facility for research and public engagement.

    The Discovery Channel Telescope is an observatory with a 14-foot (4.3-meter) mirror built near Happy Jack, Ariz., by the Lowell Observatory and Discovery Communications, the parent company of television's Discovery Channel. The telescope's opening was marked with a gala on Saturday (July 21) at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff and featured a keynote speech from Neil Armstrong, the first person ever on the moon.

    [Slideshow: Satellite captures stunning images of Earth]

    "The First Light Gala is a historic event in the annals of Lowell Observatory," Jeffrey Hall, director of Lowell Observatory, said in a statement. "It marks completion of our spectacular new research facility, initiation of superb projects that will bring our research to millions through our partnership with Discovery Communications. We are honored to be part of it and grateful to all who have helped make it a reality."

    The $53 million Discovery Channel Telescope is the fifth largest telescope in the continental United States, and was paid for without any federal or state funding. The observatory snapped its inaugural pictures — including views of the famous Whirlpool and Sombrero galaxies, as well as the M109 barred spiral galaxy — in May using its 16-million-pixel camera.

    "The Discovery Channel Telescope is emblematic of our mission to ignite curiosity and stir the imagination of audiences here and around the globe," said John Hendricks, founder and chairman of Discovery Communications, who, with his wife Maureen, was a major donor to the project. "The telescope represents 'discovery' in both word and deed and we are thrilled to see the amazing places it will take us with breathtaking images and vital new research."

    [Slideshow: Dazzling distant planets]

    Though the telescope's eyes are now open to the universe, it will undergo a testing phase for about 18 months, with its first scientific data gathering expected to begin in 2013 or 2014. Its location, in the Coconino National Forest about 45 miles (72 kilometers) south-southeast of Flagstaff, is in a dark-sky site, one of the darkest, best places from which to view the night sky in the United States.

    The process of planning and building the telescope is due to be featured in a one-hour Discovery Channel documentary set to air in September 2012.

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    Copyright 2012 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
     
    • Hugh Mungus  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      Amazing stuff.........I hope they're happy in that Galaxy.....
      • Hajolaj 16 hrs ago
        Still you can't change what happened thousands or millions of years ago.
        Those light beams hit without discrimination, and if you can't make a stereo photo out of your "great technical upset" The best if you look forward about the future
        Instead.
      • Cactuspete 22 hrs ago
        I hope they get along better in that galaxy than we do in this one.
      • salmonella 1 day 1 hr ago
        Hehe La La, You need to learn the difference between a Solar System and a Galaxy!
    • tecton47  •  Denver, Colorado  •  1 day 12 hrs ago
      Congratulations Discovery! Well done! It never occurred to me to think of a telescope as "privately funded" versus being built using other resources. It's a pleasant surprise and one more step in the growing involvement of private ventures in the field of space exploration, I'm still marveling at the successful SpaceX mission! The sentence "Neil Armstrong, the first person ever on the moon" stands out not only for its odd wording but also because...are there really people out there that NEED that clarifier? Has public education - and the attention span of today's students - declined to the point that there are people unaware of who Neil Armstrong is? As space enthusiasts ourselves we know that science knowledge has plummeted to frightening lows but has it gotten that bad!? Please tell me I'm wrong.

      R.I.P. Sally Ride, what an impact you made in your short time with us. You will be missed and my condolences to her family and friends.
      • shotenzenjin16 57 mins ago
        You gotta love IT... Sally Ride and Niel Armstrong sure did and continues too ! Now I'm off to re-boot my imagination/life... May all live in harmony with the 'mystic law'.
      • tecton47 3 hrs ago
        "Faked Moon Landing." Cool name for a gay porno flick.
      • AZZKIKR 11 hrs ago
        I'm not quite sure what you are asking. All of the individual stars you see in this photo are part of our own Milky Way Galaxy. M109 is about 1000 times further away than anything in our own galaxy. The individual stars in M109 are not resolved in the photo.
    • daveH  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      One more tool to explore and inspire. Onward!
      • Dean74 13 hrs ago
        @ Steve D, Well said...some trolls feel the need to spread their misery
      • Steve D 21 hrs ago
        This is an Adult conversation. Children should not be allowed. Seen but not heard. The thumbs down are the little kids just having fun I suppose.
      • Michael 23 hrs ago
        Google Earth should have some satelite telescopes pointing outward, instead of earthward. Then they could have people choose where they wanted it pointed and maybe charge a few bucks for their "look" . Viola', new profit stream.
    • Joshua  •  Capitol Heights, Maryland  •  1 day 3 hrs ago
      Discovery Channel has a telescope now. Maybe now they can make shows again about science instead of catching crabs.
      • lonespin 1 hr 48 mins ago
        I love watching those Swamp people?? gronks shooting gators yuk yuk,give it the metal John boy!!!
      • Sam 8 hrs ago
        Got 2 Discovery channels and NatGeo, what else do you need?
      • M 14 hrs ago
        The D channel figured out a way to get people to watch their channel more. More watching more commercials, more revenue, ta da funding for a telescope. In the grand scheme of things looks like crab fishing has paid off, however I wonder when we'll have extreme high school janitor shows. Most suck
    • Kirstin  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      That's really cool -- and coming at the same time as the tragic news of Sally Ride's death, rather poetic. She was always trying to encourage more people (not just governments) to get into science, and for such a large instrument to be built by what is essentially an entertainment company -- obviously her mission and the mission of so many other astronauts and educators is paying off. People *are* interested in space, interested enough for the Discovery Channel to fund something like this. 14 feet isn't the biggest in the world, not by a long stretch, but it's still damn big for private funds, especially since telescopes are pretty much for pure science only; they generally pay for themselves in science, not money. So this is pretty awesome, and a good addition to the Lowell Observatory.
      • noMoreFavre 2 hrs 45 mins ago
        @ EJ4mNJ: Our TV's at that time offered the equivalent of 640 x 480 resolution AT BEST! My modest HDTV that my step-daughter just bought us (Thanks Lisa) is still outstanding at 1920 x 1080 (1080p) resolution. Even so, it can't display a 16 megapixel image at full resolution, it can only show about an 8th of the image at a time. Imagine what it would have been like if the apollo missions had been broadcast at that kind of resolution; we would ALL be astronauts
      • charles 13 hrs ago
        James, that is assuming there is a "heaven".
      • JAMES 1 day 2 hrs ago
        Vernon ... And what if it is.. I would think heaven is more pleasureable then here...
    • Jam  •  Davenport, Iowa  •  18 mins ago
      we should invest more in space exploration
    • Chris  •  Grayslake, Illinois  •  1 hr 33 mins ago
      Got to love first light on a scope.
    • Giantniner  •  Houston, Texas  •  20 hrs ago
      this is some amazin ish.....out of the zillions and zillions stars i know it has to be a system like ours out there.....or one similiar with two or three suns.....really out of this world stuff.....ni9ce escape from stories of murder and scandals
    • Abu Jedal  •  1 hr 54 mins ago
      What?????NO pictures of Uranus???????? Embrace for queeeeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrrs outrage!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • Beard  •  Mebane, North Carolina  •  19 hrs ago
      People need to stop complaining about the cost. It was is privately funded.
    • Walter  •  Livingston, New Jersey  •  4 hrs ago
      Cool. Great story. Thank you.
    • Rick L  •  17 hrs ago
      I wonder how long they had to wait for the pictures to come back from the drugstore.
    • Dafuq  •  23 hrs ago
      It's a shame this government is more interested in funding crack babies than funding science.
    • lonelystar  •  New York, New York  •  1 day 13 hrs ago
      That is amazing to be able to see our Universe and to imagine what a tiny little specs we are:)))
    • jesse  •  1 day 1 hr ago
      and what are the other Networks doing, reality TV. Ha.
    • Witzelsucht  •  19 hrs ago
      We will see the stars like never before very soon.
    • Chaos  •  Silver Spring, Maryland  •  1 day 8 hrs ago
      What a Beautiful picture!
    • Vu  •  20 hrs ago
      I surf the net sometimes just for laugh at stupid comments posted by people who have caca for brains.
    • Capone  •  20 hrs ago
      sweet images!
    • Bubba  •  21 hrs ago
      Amazing Pictures..Carl Sagan said there's more planets in the universe..Than there are grains of sand on earth..Space is an amazing place..
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