The large radio telescope (in French:
le Grand Radiotélescope, or affectionately
le Grand Miroir) was constructed between 1960 and 1965. Initially, only the central 20% of the
primary and
secondary mirrors were erected as a proof of concept. The mirrors were extended to their full, current size in 1964 and the telescope was officially opened in 1965 by
Charles de Gaulle. Scientific observations began in 1967. The large radio telescope is a
transit telescope of the
Kraus-type design. The primary mirror at the north end of the installation is a planar mirror measuring 200 m in width and 40 m in height. This is tiltable to adjust to the
altitude of the observed object. It consists of five 20 m wide segments, each of 40 t mass. The radio waves are reflected horizontally into the secondary mirror 460 m to the South. The shape of the secondary is that of a segment of a sphere 300 m wide and 35 m high. The secondary reflects the radio waves back into its
focal point 280 m to its North and about 60% the distance back to the primary. A cabin with further mirrors and the receiver is located at the focus. During an observation, the cabin is moved west to east to track the observed object for about an hour around its transit through the
meridian. The primary and secondary mirrors are formed by metal wire mesh with holes of 12.5 mm. The reflecting surfaces are accurate to 4 mm, permitting use at wavelengths upwards of about 8 cm. The telescope is thus designed for decimeter waves, including the
21 cm spectral line of neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) and the 18 cm spectral line of the
OH radical. The radio wave detector is cooled to 20 K to reduce
noise from the receiver and thereby to improve
sensitivity to the celestial radiation. The large radio telescope observes at frequencies between 1.1 GHz and 3.5 GHz, continuum emission as well as spectral emission or absorption lines. The
autocorrelator spectrometer can observe eight spectra at different frequencies with 1024 channels each and a spectral resolution of 0.3 kHz. The instrument is particularly suited to large statistical surveys and the monitoring of objects of variable brightness. Observational projects include: • 21 cm HI emission of
galaxies to study their rotation, distance, clustering and movement. This includes galaxies obscured in visible light by the
Milky Way, blue compact galaxies, galaxies of low surface brightness (in visible light), and
active galactic nuclei. •
Pulsars, including pulse timing, distance, and the
interstellar medium on the lightpath to Earth. Nançay is part of the
European Pulsar Timing Array • Stellar envelopes,
eruptive stars and
red giants. • 18 cm OH emission and absorption in
comets to determine their loss rate of water and gas. == The radio heliograph ==