The Greenland Telescope (GLT): Antenna status and future plans
Philippe Raffin, Juan Carlos Algaba-Marcos, Keichi Asada, Raymond, Blundell, Roberto Burgos, Chih-Cheng Chang, Ming-Tang Chen, Robert, Christensen, Paul K. Grimes, C.C. Han, Paul T.P. Ho, Yau-De Huang, Makoto, Inoue, Patrick M. Koch, Derek Kubo, Steve Leiker, Ching-Tang Liu

TL;DR
This paper details the refurbishment and upgrade of the ALMA prototype antenna for Arctic operation in Greenland, focusing on component replacements and future VLBI observational plans.
Contribution
It reports the extensive refurbishment process of the Greenland Telescope antenna, including redesigns of key components for Arctic conditions and upcoming testing and deployment plans.
Findings
Major components replaced for Arctic suitability
Successful refurbishment of the antenna support structure
Upcoming VLBI observation capabilities in Greenland
Abstract
The ALMA North America Prototype Antenna was awarded to the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) in 2011. SAO and the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy & Astrophysics (ASIAA), SAO's main partner for this project, are working jointly to relocate the antenna to Greenland to carry out millimeter and submillimeter VLBI observations. This paper presents the work carried out on upgrading the antenna to enable operation in the Arctic climate by the GLT Team to make this challenging project possible, with an emphasis on the unexpected telescope components that had to be either redesigned or changed. Five-years of inactivity, with the antenna laying idle in the desert of New Mexico, coupled with the extreme weather conditions of the selected site in Greenland have it necessary to significantly refurbish the antenna. We found that many components did need to be replaced, such as the…
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