Very Large Telescope

The Very Large Telescope is a telescope facility operated by the European Southern Observatory on Cerro Paranal in the Atacama Desert of northern Chile. It consists of four individual telescopes, each with a primary mirror 8.2 m across, which are generally used separately but can be used together to achieve very high angular resolution. The four separate optical telescopes are known as Antu, Kueyen, Melipal, and Yepun, which are all words for astronomical objects in the Mapuche language. The telescopes form an array complemented by four movable Auxiliary Telescopes of 1.8 m aperture. The VLT operates at visible and infrared wavelengths. Each individual telescope can detect objects roughly four billion times fainter than can be detected with the naked eye, and when all the telescopes are combined, the facility can achieve an angular resolution of about 0.002 arcsecond. In single telescope mode of operation angular resolution is about 0.05 arcsecond.

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Ghostly 'zodiacal light' glows above the Very Large Telescope in Chile (photo)

Very Large Telescope photographs its lightest ever exoplanet

First image of an exoplanet — courtesy of the Very Large Telescope, European Southern Observatory, in 2004 — shows an exoplanet orbiting brown dwarf 2M1207