Queloz-Mayor L2 Orbital Observatory

This is a full spectrum telescope array orbiting the Sol at the Earth L2 Lagrange point. It was named for Didier Queloz and Michaels Mayor, the discoverers of the first extra-solar planets orbiting 51 Pegasi. Queloz-Mayor is comprised of six, six node telescope interferometer that are the equivalent in the optical spectrum of 10,000km mirror. Each array included a 10.5m optical telescope, a 300m radio telescope and high energy (X-ray and Gamma ray), ultra-violet (UV), infrared (IR) and far infrared (FIR) sensor arrays. It had an optical resolution of .000000001" (arcseconds) which was sufficient to resolve an image of Earth-sized planets at a distance of six light-years. The orbital observatory was a joint project of the Japanese and United States of America Space Agencies as part of the NASA Origins mission. Development began in 2012 CE and the observatory became fully operational March 13, 2021 CE. Eight years were spent in defining and organizing the first Origins Survey which began in 2029 CE and continued until 2049 CE (see – NASA Origins I Planetary Survey).