NSF NOIRLab’s cover photo
NSF NOIRLab

NSF NOIRLab

Research Services

Tucson, Arizona 4,126 followers

Discovering Our Universe Together

About us

NSF NOIRLab is the preeminent US national center for ground-based, nighttime optical and infrared astronomy. The mission of NOIRLab is to enable breakthrough discoveries in astrophysics by developing and operating state-of-the-art ground-based observatories and providing data products and services for a diverse and inclusive community.

Website
https://noirlab.edu/public/
Industry
Research Services
Company size
501-1,000 employees
Headquarters
Tucson, Arizona
Type
Government Agency
Founded
2019

Locations

Employees at NSF NOIRLab

Updates

  • It’s Global Astronomy Month, and we’re launching 8 exclusive stickers to celebrate! 🌠 Next up: the McMath-Pierce Solar Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory, a Program of NSF NOIRLab 🌅. This strange structure was once an active a solar telescope, will soon be a center for astronomy outreach, and is a sticker right now! 🌞 Visit us at www.noirlab.edu/stickers to download your copy to use anywhere ✨ What telescope do you think we will announce next? Let us know in the comments! ⬇️ #GAM2025 #GlobalAstronomyMonth #Astronomy

  • Seeing Double? 👀 No, you are not seeing double in this panorama of telescopes that make up the SMARTS (Small and Moderate Aperture Research Telescope System) Consortium at the NSF Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO), a Program of NSF NOIRLab. Though they look similar from the outside, the SMARTS–GSU 0.9-meter Telescope (left) and the SMARTS–GSU 1.5-meter Telescope (right) have slightly different observing roles. Petr Horálek, the photographer, is a NOIRLab Audiovisual Ambassador. https://lnkd.in/dQ2DskFS 📷CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/P. Horálek (Institute of Physics in Opava)

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  • 🌌 What if YOU could help protect the night sky with just a smartphone? Astronomer Connie Walker shares how you can be part of the Globe at Night project—a global citizen science effort to measure light pollution from your own backyard. 📱🔭 It’s simple. It’s powerful. And it’s a beautiful way to reconnect with the stars above. 😉 Globe at Night is sponsored by NSF NOIRLab and DarkSky International. Check out their page for more ways to get involved this #DarkSkyWeek 🤩 #GlobeAtNight #CitizenScience #NOIRLab #LightPollutionAwareness

  • It’s Global Astronomy Month, and we’re launching 8 exclusive stickers to celebrate! 🌠 Next up: the SOAR Telescope, a part of Cerro Tololo Inter American Observatory, a Program of NSF NOIRLab. 🌌SOAR is one of only three telescopes on Cerro Pachón, so this new sticker is “SOAR-t” of a big deal! 💫🔭 Visit us at www.noirlab.edu/stickers to download your copy to use anywhere ✨ What telescope do you think we will announce next? Let us know in the comments! ⬇️ #GAM2025 #GlobalAstronomyMonth #Astronomy

  • For International Dark Sky Week here's a fun and simple way you can show your love and appreciation for the night! Step 1: On an 8.5x11 sheet of paper, print the “I 💜 Dark Skies” poster (attached). *Don't have a printer, no problem! You can create your own sign or take a video without it! Step 2: Record a short video (3 to 15 seconds) holding the sign and starting with the phrase: “I love…” then tell us why the night matters to you! Examples: “I love stargazing with my friends in Big Bend National Park.” “I love looking at distant planets through telescopes.” “I love hearing nocturnal animals in the forests around my home—especially the owls!” How to submit your video: Email it to engagement@darksky.org Or share it on Instagram by posting it and using the hashtags #DarkSky and #DarkSkyWeek At the end of the week, we’ll compile all the submissions into a special celebration video to showcase the global love for the night sky. Join in and help us make this International Dark Sky Week one to remember!

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  • This column of red and purple light spouting from the clouds is so otherworldly, it looks like it must be a special effect. However, this breathtaking image is real 😲 – it is a lightning phenomenon known as a red sprite. Red sprites are distinctive because of their color and the direction in which they strike, measuring up to 90 kilometers above the cloud deck. It is extremely rare to catch one on camera. This image was captured in 2017 by a cloud camera at Gemini North, one half of the International Gemini Observatory, operated by NSF NOIRLab. Gemini North sits at an altitude of around 4200 meters (13,800 feet) on Maunakea in Hawai’i. 📷: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/A. Smith

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  • "It’s Global Astronomy Month, and we’re launching 8 exclusive stickers to celebrate! 🌠 Sticker #4: the SMARTS Consortium at Cerro Tololo Inter American Observatory, a Program of NSF NOIRLab .The telescopes here don’t just make cute stickers– they can spot exoplanets around nearby stars AND monitor Near-Earth Asteroids to defend our planet 🌎☄️ Visit us at www.noirlab.edu/stickers to download your copy to use anywhere ✨ What telescope do you think we will announce next? Let us know in the comments! ⬇️ #GAM2025 #GlobalAstronomyMonth #Astronomy

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