The mirror of the 2.4-meter Hiltner Telescope is aluminum-coated Cer-Vit, and usable foci include f/7.5 and f/13.5 Cassegrain foci.[2] The telescope was built in 1986 and the mirrors were re-polished in 1991.[3] It was named after astronomer W. Albert Hiltner (1914-1991).[4]
The Hiltner was one of the telescopes that observed the "turn on" transient of a galactic nucleus, along with the Swift space telescope (aka Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory since 2018) and the Gemini observatory (8 meter ground observatory).[5] The transient event was called PS1-13cbe and was located in the Galaxy SDSS J222153.87+003054.2.[5]
McGraw–Hill Telescope
The 1.3-meter McGraw-Hill Telescope, with a 1.27-meter clear aperture, is an aluminum-coated Cer-Vit (low thermal expansion glass) telescope. Its usable foci include f/7.5 and f/13.5.[6] The telescope was originally installed at Stinchfield Woods, Michigan in 1969, and moved in 1975 to MDM.[1]