Astronomer Daniel Jaffe named president of the Giant Magellan Telescope project
Astronomer Daniel Jaffe has been appointed the next president of the Giant Magellan Telescope Corporation – the international consortium building the $2.5bn Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT). He succeeds Robert Shelton, who announced his retirement last year after eight years in the role.
A former head of astronomy at the University of Texas at Austin from 2011 to 2015, Jaffe became vice president for research at the university from 2016 to 2025 where he also served as interim provost from 2020 to 2021.
Jaffe has sat on the board of directors of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy and the Gemini Observatory and played a role in establishing the University of Texas at Austin’s partnership in the GMT.
Under construction in Chile and expected to be complete in the 2030s, the GMT consists of seven mirrors to create a 25.4 m telescope. From the ground it will produce images 4-16 times sharper than the James Webb Space Telescope and will investigate the origins of the chemical elements, and search for signs of life on distant planets.
“I am honoured to lead the GMT at this exciting stage,” notes Jaffe. “[It] represents a profound leap in our ability to explore the universe and employ a host of new technologies to make fundamental discoveries.”
“[Jaffe] brings decades of leadership in research, astronomy instrumentation, public-private partnerships, and academia,” noted Taft Armandroff, board chair of the GMTO Corporation. “His deep understanding of the Giant Magellan Telescope, combined with his experience leading large research enterprises and cultivating a collaborative environment, make him exceptionally well suited to lead the observatory through its next phase of construction and toward operations.”
Jaffe joins the GMT at a pivotal time, as it aims to secure the funding necessary to complete the telescope with just over $1bn from private funds having been pledges so far. The collaboration recently added Northwestern University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to its international consortium taking the number of members to 16 universities and research institutions.
In June 2025 the GMT, which is already 40% completed, received NSF approval confirming that the observatory will advance into its “major facilities final design phase”, one of the final steps before becoming eligible for federal construction funding.
Yet it faces competition from another next-generation telescope – the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) that will use a segmented primary mirror consisting of 492 elements of zero-expansion glass for a 30 m-diameter primary mirror.
The TMT team chose Hawaii’s Mauna Kea peak as its location. However, protests by indigenous Hawaiians, who regard the site as sacred, have delayed the start of construction with officials identifying the island of La Palma, belonging to Spain’s Canary Islands, as an alternative site in 2019.
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