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The Darkest Night Sky in Southern CanadaCamera
The Milky Way casts a shadow and some 10,000 stars are visible to the unaided eyes. The gegenschien, zodiacal light and natural sky glow are all common sights. The site has the darkest night skies from Windsor to Québec City.

Where you can see your shadow from the light of 500 billion stars!

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111,724,800 pixels

Camera
The OMI will use the largest monolithic digital camera in the world, Cooled to -100°C, with 94% quantum efficiency and download times of 2 seconds, the camera will offer an extremely high level of performance.
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Ultra Wide Field of View

The Optical Tube Assembly (OTA)The OMI is the only large field of view telescope in the world to a have a monolithic image sensor. The CCD image sensor is contiguous and gapless thus offering a seamless field of view of 5 deg², 25X the full moon.

Widefield Imaging
Terrestrial Planet Finder
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One Metre Initiative Logo


A New World Class Telescope in Canada

OMI --- The One Metre Initiative -- is a state-of-the-art telescope design for a wide-field autonomous imaging facility, set to become the most powerful telescope on Canadian soil. The One Metre Initiative will also be one the most powerful wide-field telescopes in the world!

The One Meter Initiative grew out of a passion for the night sky, a deep interest in engineering and a desire to make a significant contribution to our understanding of the universe. The idea of building a world class telescope materialized in the fall of 2007. The OMI will be located in the Madawaska Highlands and has the darkest night skies in southern Canada, where an horizon-horizon Milky Way cast a shadow and some 10,000 stars can be seen with the unaided eye! The OMI as been described as "Very Impressive" by René Racine, Canada's most prominent astronomer and "Extremely Impressive" by Neil Turok, Scientific Director at the Perimeter Institute of Theoretical Physics in Waterloo. The ability to image very deep, very wide and vary fast gives it a performance unmatched by any one-metre class in the world. Indeed the OMI will be capable of outperforming much larger instruments including all Canadian based telescopes. The OMI will become a valuable asset to professional astronomers.

The OMI has sufficient performance to make contributions across many areas of astronomy and astrophysics. Such as cosmology where its ability to image very wide and deep will permit the discovery of a large number of high-z type 1a supernovae, a crucial measuring candle. The search for Near-Earth-Asteroids is another area where the OMI's large Field of View (FOV), deep limiting magnitude and fast download times could detect many small asteroids. Indeed the OMI is extremely well suited to this task. Another very exiting area of research is the detection of Earth-Sized planets orbiting nearby red-dwarf stars which comprise some 80% of all the stars in the Galaxy. The OMI with its large view and faint limiting magnitude could detect many such objects using the transit method, whereas a planet passes in front of its star, the slight dimming announcing its presence.

The OMI will be the only professional Observatory in North America with time devoted to education and outreach. Schools, colleges, students, teachers, amateur astronomers and the general public will be able to book queuing time on the instrument and make their own discoveries. The imaging capabilities of the OMI will be unprecedented in its ability to image very deep and very wide and thus offering the observer a view of the universe not possible with any other telescope in Canada. Indeed the One Metre Initiative will be amongst the best wide field imaging telescopes in the world.

The facility will host a Visitor Centre with a variety of amenities and divided into two phases. At the core of the visitor Centre is a building housing displays; exploring astronomy, cosmology, the technology behind the One-Metre, research conducted at the Observatory, a boutique where posters generated by the One-Metre and other relevant products will be available, a lecture area where astronomers will be invited to give presentations and speak about the latest research conducted at the One Metre Initiative. Guided tours of the One-Metre, the 0.7m Observatories and its control room and of the visitor Centre will be offered.

There will be large 36"x 48" backlit LED displays of the extremely spectacular images and a 'live' High Definition display of the latest images from the One-Metre. The Visitor Centre will feature a large 0.6m telescope for viewing with lectures under the Milky Way in the summertime. The Centre will be equipped with washroom facilities, office space and the control room will be located here. Phase 2 will feature a planetarium, cafeteria/restaurant, expanded display areas and outside exhibits. Schools and groups special arrangements will be provided.

The One Metre Initiative is offering an extraordinary opportunity for interested parties to have a direct participation in the venture. An extremely limited number of shares will be made available for early stage investors. For more information see here.


  

2010 The One Metre Initiative, Ottawa, Canada.
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