This is one of two interchangeable cameras used with the Prime Focus Spectrograph of the 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar. The field flattening lens of this f / 1.0 solid Schmidt-type camera is made from sapphire and the solid Schmidt is made of quartz. This instrument was designed primarily to determine the spectra of faint extragalactic objects. Called either the prime focus spectrograph or the nebular spectrograph fopr the 200-inch telescope, it was designed by Rudolph Minkowski and built at the California Institute of Technology in the late 1940s. The instrument remained in use from 1951 through 1973, providing a wealth of data on the redshift of distant galaxies, on white dwarf stars, and on the nature of radio galaxies, found to be optically stellar and hence called quasi-stellar radio sources, or quasars.
This is the slower of the two cameras. This instrument assembly was donated to NASM by the California Institute of Technology in 1998. In the accesison process, the Museum conducted video interviews with two astronomers who had intimate knowledge of the device.
This object is not on display at the National Air and Space Museum. It is either on loan or in storage.