Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT)
The Large Millimeter Telescope (or Gran Telescopio Milimétrico Alfonso Serrano) is the world’s largest single-dish steerable millimeter-wavelength telescope designed specifically for astronomical observations in the wavelength range of 0.85 – 4mm. This binational project between México and the United States of America represents the largest and most complex scientific instrument constructed in México. Situated on the summit of Volcán Sierra Negra at an altitude of 4600 meters, the LMT has begun its exploration of the physical processes that lead to the formation and evolution of planetary systems, stars, black-holes and galaxies throughout the 13.7 billion year history of the Universe.