Now that February is here, the temperatures at the South Pole Station have begun to drop again, and the station is preparing to close for the winter. Most of the people currently working at the station will fly out within the next couple of weeks, leaving only a core group of "winterovers" here who will stay through the extremely cold and dark months of the Antarctic winter.
The University of Chicago "reflector assembly team", consisting of Tom, Jeff, Joaquin and Ryan, has already left the ice. But many members of the SPT project are still here until the very end of the summer season to work on the receiver, the last few details of the telescope itself, and the software used to control the telescope and interpret the data that we take with it. At the moment, we are busy cooling down the receiver and the secondary optics in order to test how everything works when we put it all together. It's a very busy time, with people working around the clock.
Even though we all tend to be very focused on whatever tasks are currently at hand, everyone in the team finds themselves sometimes just staring at this beautiful telescope and admiring everything that has already been achieved this year. It really is a gorgeous instrument, and it's especially impressive to see how smoothly it moves. From the windows of the indoor laboratories where most of our work is taking place, we can see the last remaining crews who are working on the telescope outside in the cold. To assemble this enormous telescope has taken teams of iron workers, electricians, insulation workers, carpenters, and many other specialists here at the Station and back in the U.S. It's been incredible to be here and see how the whole South Pole Station is pushing for the success of this project.
Before the Chicago reflector assembly team left, we had a chance to take some pictures of them together with the iron workers and telescope specialists who played big roles in the construction of the telescope. Many of these individuals went through the process of test-building the telescope in Texas last summer, and here they are at the completion of the final instrument in one of the harshest places on earth. It's truly a great group of people and they've done an amazing job. All of the rest of us are in awe!