made with the Aristarchos telescope
OPTICON-RadioNet The Aristarchos telescope is a full member of the OPTICON-Radionet Pilot (ORP) project since January 1, 2016. ORP is funded by the
European Union and its main goal is to promote cooperation between experts from the astronomy community. It is the largest and most comprehensive network of facilities and observatories across
Europe. The Aristarchos telescope has made quite a few observations under ORP awarded time, like a stellar occultation of
Neptune's moon
Triton and a transit of exoplanet
WASP-12b.
Space communications All the activities concerning
optical,
quantum, and deep space communications carried out at the Chelmos Observatory are identified by project HOTSPOT. The Aristarchos telescope was selected in August 2020 as the first ground-based station of the ScyLight program of
ESA. ScyLight supports the research, development and evolution of optical communication, photonics and quantum communication technologies, and provides flight opportunities for their in-orbit verification. On 23 July 2021, the installation of the equipment for the project was completed; and a test was successfully performed for
cummunication with the
Alphasat satellite. The Aristarchos telescope was also selected for another project, the
Deep Space Optical Communications (DSOC) demonstration of
NASA. On 7 July 2025, the telescope achieved
laser communication with the
Psyche spacecraft while it was on its way to the
main asteroid belt. A high-powered laser was fired from the nearby
Kryoneri Observatory and the Aristarchos telescope received the spacecraft's response. These two observatories were the only ones in Europe participating in this experiment. The Aristarchos telescope will communicate with Psyche again on 21 July, 28 July and 4 August.
Other studies The Aristarchos telescope has been operating for many years and has made multiple contributions to science. Just to name a few, in 2013 it helped discover the
exoplanets WASP-113b and WASP-114b, and in 2022 it proved that 55
asteroids believed to belong to a 4 Gyr
collisional family share a common origin and thus do form a collisional family. Another contribution of the telescope is that it has provided a measurement of the distance to the planetary nebula
KjPn 8. ==See also==