The Southern African Large Telescope
At 11 metres in diameter, the Southern Africa Large Telescope (SALT) is the largest single optical telescope in the southern hemisphere, able to detect stars one billion times dimmer than the faintest visible to the unaided eye. It is sited at the Southern Africa Observatory site near Sutherland, Northern Cape.
The main mirror, however, is not one single piece of glass, but made up of 91 hexagonal mirror segments which are all carefully joined and aligned to reflect the light as if they were one mirror.
![]() South African Large Telescope |
Some facts about the telescope:
|
|
SALT is of a slightly different design to most large telescopes in that
it points at a fixed angle of 37° (i.e. cannot move up and down), so can only rotate
in a circle.
To compensate for its limited ability to point at the whole sky, there is a sophisticated tracker system that can move around over the main mirror and capture light from 70% of the night sky. And because the Earth rotates, this means that all objects are visible at some point during the night. |
![]() Haxagonal Segments of the main mirror |


