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Telescopes include the 2.24-m/88-in University of Hawaii reflector (1970). In 1979 three telescopes were erected: the 3.8-m/150-in United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) (also used for optical observations); the 3-m/120-in NASA Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF); and the 3.6-m/142-in Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), designed for optical and infrared work. The 15-m/600-in diameter UK/Netherlands James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) is the world's largest telescope specifically designed to observe millimetre wave radiation from nebulae, stars, and galaxies. The JCMT is operated via satellite links by astronomers in Europe. The world's largest optical telescopes, the Keck Telescopes, are also situated on Mauna Kea. In 1999 the 8.1-m/319-in Gemini North reflector saw first light. It is partnered with an identical telescope, Gemini South, at Cerro Pachón in the Chilean Andes.
In 1996 the capacity of the JCMT was enhanced by the addition of SCUBA (Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array). SCUBA is a camera comprising numerous detectors cooled to within a tenth of a degree of absolute zero (0 K) and is the world's most sensitive instrument at the 0.31.0-mm/0.010.04-in wavelength.
Red recalls the previous flag. Green represents agricultural produce. Effective date: 24 November 1992.
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