Arecibo Observatory (located near the town of Arecibo in Puerto Rico) is home to the world's largest radio telescope. The telescope consists of a 305-meter spherical dish which collects incoming radio waves and focuses them onto a group of receivers housed in a dome suspended from a platform some 400 feet from the bottom of the center of the dish. Three towers placed equidistantly around the dish provide support for the dome, which is suspended by an arrangement of cables.

The main reflector dish (the 305-m one) is actually made up of several thousand individual panels. When it comes time to check the alignment of the dish and correct it for shape, workers go out under the dish and manually adjust several thousand screws that are responsible for the positioning of each separate panel.

The surface of the reflector is constructed from a fine mesh, which is made possible by the extremely long wavelengths of the radio waves being collected. The mesh allows sunlight to pass directly through the dish, and produces a thriving ecosystem with surprisingly lush vegetation. (Supposedly it also has the perfect conditions for growing pot, but what with it being a nationally funded research facility, let's forget that for the moment.) However, contrary to the view painted in the movie Golden Eye -- parts of which were filmed at Arecibo -- the mesh does not hold water. (People have been known to call and ask what days the dish will be filled with water so they know not to come for the tour that day.)

On the observatory grounds are a number of housing units where visiting scientists can stay for the length of their observing run, a full-service cafeteria serving authentic (if rather greasy) Puerto Rican cuisine, and two office buildings. There is also a LIDAR facility, which uses a technique similar to radar to probe the ionosphere, only instead of radio waves, it makes use of light waves in the form of several high power lasers. There is also a trailer that is home to the SETI Pegasus Project which gathers data from the telescope for use with its SETI@home efforts.

The Arecibo Observatory Visitor's Center has a number of educational displays and an observation deck with a great view of the dish and dome. The Visitor's Center also shows a short documentary film on the day-to-day activities of the observatory on a regular basis throughout the day.