Institute of Applied Astronomy of the USSR Academy of Sciences (currently of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Work is underway on tthe Quazar-KVO project comprising three separate observatories making up a global radio telescope of the area of 12 million square kilometers with observation points over 4,000 km apart. The first observatory is located in Svetloye, Karelian Isthmus; the second one in Zelenchukskaya, North Caucasus, with Badary observatory in the Republic of Buryatia closing up the giant triangle. The Quazar-KVO project became the foundation of the future Russian satellite navigation system GLONASS.29.09.1989#6549189
Laboratory of readio astronomy receivers at the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the USSR Academy of Sciences (currently of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Work is underway on the the Quazar-KVO project comprising three separate observatories making up a global radio telescope of the area of 12 million square kilometers with observation points over 4,000 km apart. The first observatory is located in Svetloye, Karelian Isthmus; the second one in Zelenchukskaya, North Caucasus, with Badary observatory in the Republic of Buryatia closing up the giant triangle. The Quazar-KVO project became the foundation of the future Russian satellite navigation system GLONASS.29.09.1989#6549187
Employees of the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the USSR Academy of Sciences (currently of the Russian Academy of Sciences). Work is underway on the the Quazar-KVO project comprising three separate observatories making up a global radio telescope of the area of 12 million square kilometers with observation points over 4,000 km apart. The first observatory is located in Svetloye, Karelian Isthmus; the second one in Zelenchukskaya, North Caucasus, with Badary observatory in the Republic of Buryatia closing up the giant triangle. The Quazar-KVO project became the foundation of the future Russian satellite navigation system GLONASS.29.09.1989#6549183
Andrei Finkelshtein, right, a Soviet and Russian scientist, Doctor of Mathematics and Physics, director of the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the USSR Academy of Sciences (currently of the Russian Academy of Sciences). In 1986 he was appointed head of the Quazar-KVO project comprising three separate observatories making up a global radio telescope of the area of 12 million square kilometers with observation points over 4,000 km apart. The first observatory is located in Svetloye, Karelian Isthmus; the second one in Zelenchukskaya, North Caucasus, with Badary observatory in the Republic of Buryatia closing up the giant triangle. The Quazar-KVO project became the foundation of the future Russian satellite navigation system GLONASS.29.09.1989#6549182
Andrei Finkelshtein, a Soviet and Russian scientist, Doctor of Mathematics and Physics, director of the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the USSR Academy of Sciences (currently of the Russian Academy of Sciences). In 1986 he was appointed head of the Quazar-KVO project comprising three separate observatories making up a global radio telescope of the area of 12 million square kilometers with observation points over 4,000 km apart. The first observatory is located in Svetloye, Karelian Isthmus; the second one in Zelenchukskaya, North Caucasus, with Badary observatory in the Republic of Buryatia closing up the giant triangle. The Quazar-KVO project became the foundation of the future Russian satellite navigation system GLONASS.29.09.1989#6549181
Institute of Applied Astronomy of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (now RAS) in Leningrad, which is working on the Quasar-KVO project, a network of three radio telescopes located in various places across Russia forming a giant triangle.01.09.1989#8211189
Computer center at the Institute of Applied Astronomy of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (now RAS) in Leningrad. Researchers working on the Quasar-KVO project, a network of three radio telescopes located in various places across Russia forming a giant triangle.01.09.1989#8211184
Institute of Applied Astronomy of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR (now RAS) in Leningrad. Researchers working on the Quasar-KVO project, a network of three radio telescopes located in various places across Russia forming a giant triangle.01.09.1989#8211176