From: Phil deHaan (dehp@calvin.edu)
Date: Wed Mar 05 2003 - 09:57:29 EST
March 5, 2003 == MEDIA ADVISORY
A new telescope at Calvin College, funded by a $130,000 grant from the
National Science Foundation, will be put into place in the school's observatory
on Thursday, March 6 between 2 and 4 p.m.
The approximately 800-pound system, which includes the telescope, framework
and a pedestal, will be lifted into place from the ground with an industrial
strength crane. The plan is for the crane to roll onto campus sometime around
2 p.m. on Thursday and begin its work by about 3 p.m. The process of putting
the telescope into place and bolting it in should take about an hour.
The new telescope from Optical Guidance Systems, which replaces a telescope
purchased in 1970, has a 16-inch-diameter mirror and precision computer
pointing. That computer pointing means more time spent looking through the
eyepiece and less time waiting in the cold while the position is adjusted. The
pointing precision also allows long-time exposures of faint stars and galaxies,
resulting in clear images of planets at the edge of the solar system and
galaxies in the distant reaches of the universe. The imaging techniques used
are the same as those used by professional astronomers at major observatories.
As part of the $130,000 project, an identical telescope will be installed this
summer on the campus of Rehoboth Christian School, near Gallup, NM. The New
Mexico telescope will be controlled by Calvin students via the internet.
Altogether, students will get some hands-on experience with the Grand Rapids
telescope, while also obtaining high-quality data from the clear, dry skies of
New Mexico, even when Grand Rapids is overcast.
The telescopes will be used to support general classes at Calvin as well as
classes for the newly added astronomy minor. They will also complement a
number of smaller instruments in use on the observing deck. All will be
available for public use.
For more information see http://www.calvin.edu/observatory
NOTE: Contact Calvin astronomy professors Larry Molnar and Deborah Haarsma at
526-6341 and 526-6340 respectively. Contact Phil de Haan, director of media
relations, at 526-6475. Also, digital pics of the event will be available by
Monday, March 10 (or perhaps sooner).
-end-
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