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OBSERVATION SITES
The Observatory was planned as an astrometric institution, and its
first telescopes were the Wanschaff vertical circle (D=19 cm, F=2.5 m)
and the Tepfer double long-focus astrograph (D=40 cm, F=5.5 m).
The Wanschaff vertical circle (D=19 cm, F=250 cm)
was used for determining absolute declination of stars and planets.
Most observations are made by night, but the Sun, Venus, Mercury
and few bright stars are observed in the day-time. Observations
made with this instrument served as the basis for six catalogues.
As years went by, the field of investigations widened, new telescopes
were installed: the small solar telescope with a spectrograph (1954),
the chromospheric telescope (1957), the reflector AZT-2 (D=70 cm) in 1959,
the horisontal solar telescope ATsU-5 (D=44.5 cm, F=17 m) in 1965,
the Zeiss double wide-angle astrograph (D=40 cm, F=2 m) in 1975.
The Meridian Axial Circle (1987) is used for highly precision
positional observations of celestial objects.
Construction works at the Golosiiv site have gone over the course of
its existence: a mechanical workshop was built in 1964, a dome for the
double wide-angle astrograph was built in 1975, the main observatory
building was constructed in 1976, and the construction of the fine
mechanics and optics building and a new dome for the double long-focus
astrograph was completed in 1991.
The astrophysical observatory on Terskol Peak in the Northern Caucasus
(altitude 3100 m, near mountain Elbrus) was constructed in 1970−1991
by the Main Astronomical Observatory as its high-altitude observation
station. From 1992 this observatory forms a part of the
International
Centre for Astronomical, Medical and Ecological Research (ICAMER).
This Centre was created in 1992 by the National Academy of Sciences
of Ukraine, the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Government of
Kabardino-Balkaria. It is headed by Dr. V. Tarady.
The equipment of the Terskol Station consists of the Zeiss-600 telescope,
two solar telescopes (D=0.5 m and 0.2 m) and the 2-meter
Ritchey−Chretien coude telescope which was put into operation in 1995.

The 70 cm reflector AZT-2 |

The Tepfer double astrograph |

Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) |

The 2-m Ritchey-Chretien-Coude Telescope |

The Large Horizontal Solar Telescope ATsU-26 |

The Zeiss double wide-angle astrograph |

The Meridian Axial Circle |

The Horizontal Solar Telescope ATsU-26 |
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