Home Star Charts About us Committee Members NAS Minutes Astronomy Library contact us
The Astronomer
 
News
NAS Newsletters
Become a Member
The Astronomer
Astro-Photography
For Sale
Telescope Building
Sitemap
President's Page
Astronomy Links
NAS Activities
Viewing Nights
NAS Presentations
NAS Meetings


 
 

SKY AND SPACE with Dr Colin Keay

Colin has published a vast array of articles over the years with the Newcastle Herald. Here you will find those articles with a new feature article presentation on this page each month.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------

Siding Spring Observatory

Sky and Space December 1987
By Dr Colin Keay, University of Newcastle


The holiday season is fast approaching and many families will be heading with their caravans or camping gear for the Warrumbungle Mountains, one of the best beauty spots of inland New South Wales. The Warrumbungles are the home of Australia’s greatest collection of telescopes at the Siding Spring Observatory not far from Coonabarabran. A visit to the Observatory is a must for travelers and holidaymakers in the region.

In the largest dome atop the Siding Spring Mountain is the Anglo-Australian 3.9 metre telescope. That’s 150 inches in ancient measure, and refers to the diameter of the telescope’s primary mirror which gathers the light from stars and galaxies less than one millionth as bright as the faintest star our feeble eyes can perceive. Its only rivals in the Southern Hemisphere are the Inter American Observatory’s 4.0metre telescope at Cerro Tololo and the European Sothern Observatory’s 3.6metre instrument at La Cilla, both in Chile.

In many respects the AAT, as it is generally called, is the best telescope of the three. This is due to two factors: its excellent design and the superb instrumentation developed for it, which in increases the telescope’s power considerable. Tiny semi-conductor devices called “charge-coupled detectors”, or CCD’s can register single photons of light, which is rather more economical than the hundred or so needed to form a star image on a photographic plate.

When night falls over Siding Spring Mountain the dome doors slide open and every moment of clear-sky viewing is used to greatest advantage. British and Australian astronomers have strictly equal shares of the viewing time, which is so keenly sought after that even the top astronomers get only a few nights per year. There is no time for idle star-gazing. As far as visitors are concerned, a view through the telescope would be a disappointment: far better are the beautiful photographs on display taken by such experts as David Malin. Look for on of the Tarantula Nebula and the Supernova 1987A. Remember that the whole picture is of an area of sky smaller than the size of the Moon and you will begin to appreciate the power of the AAT.

Mention of the Supernova brings to mind one of the observing feats of the AAT. Every night since the Supernova burst forth last February, one hour of AAT observing time has been specially ear-marked to monitor this greatest astronomical event since the invention of the telescope. A group of astronomers from Imperial College in London have used a special computing technique to combine many images of the Supernova. Due to distortion by the Earth’s atmosphere, each image is unavoidably blurred. Its like hot-day shimmer, except that big telescopes suffer from it at night. Anyway, the combination of images revealed a second object 70 thousandths of an arc-second away from the supernova that had not been there beforehand! The nature of the second object is a mystery, some astronomers are inclined to think that it could be the flash of the supernova being reflected off a previously invisible gas cloud nearby. Making such an observation is equivalent to photographing from Mount Sugarloaf a shirt button on a man walkng beside the Obelisk!

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 


20th birthday celebration for the Australia Telescope at Narrabri, NSW.
Antenna tours
Control building tours
Astronomer talks
Ask a expert
Art display

Have a look at the most advanced radio telescope in the southern hemisphere.
For safety, enclosed flat-soled shoes are required for some tours.

Saturday 19 July 2008
10am - 4 pm
Paul Wild Observatory
20 mins west of Narrabri on the Yarrie Lake Rd

www.csiro.au/narrabriobservatory

 
 
Dr Colin Keay

View news article documents by Dr Colin Keay.





 

    Back Next    
  Copyright 2008 Newcastle Astronomical Society inc. All rights reserved