Bilateral collaboration between Mexico and the United Kingdom for the construction of technical equipment (CHARM) for the Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT/GTM)
Paulina Carmona Rodriguez, Maria de la Paz Ramos-Lara

TL;DR
This paper details the international collaboration between Mexico and the UK in developing and installing the CHARM receiver for the Large Millimeter Telescope, enhancing high-frequency radio astronomy capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces the design, development, and installation of the innovative CHARM receiver through a bilateral partnership, showcasing a model for international scientific collaboration.
Findings
Successful installation of CHARM at LMT in 2019
Training of Mexican astronomers in high-frequency receiver construction
Collaboration facilitated by GCRF during international project execution
Abstract
The Large Millimeter Telescope Alfonso Serrano (LMT), is the largest millimeter radio telescope in the world, and was founded in 2006. This radio telescope is the final product of a collaboration agreement between Mexico and the United States in the 1990s. It is located on top of an extinct volcano in Mexico at an altitude of 4600 meters above sea level. In 2018, the University of Manchester and the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory signed an agreement with the Instituto Nacional de Astrofisica Optica y Electronica (INAOE) to train Mexican astronomers in high-frequency radio receiver construction techniques by designing an innovative device called Collaborative Heterodyne Amplifier Receiver for Mexico (CHARM) designed to work at a frequency of 345 GHz. The research team, composed of British and Mexican technicians and scientists, installed CHARM at the LMT in 2019 and began testing the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScience, Technology, and Education in Latin America · Technology in Education and Healthcare
