The Last Stargazers
The Enduring Story of Astronomy's Vanishing Explorers
Emily Levesque 2020 Beaverton Library 520.92 LEV
Very enjoyable and interesting book, an astronomer's "coming of age" story, and the transition of astronomy from eyepieces to data-mining software.
Introduction, using the Subaru telescope on Maunakea Hawai'i, 14000 ft elevation, 57% oxygen
- loud noise, mechanical support failure, 4 foot 400 pound secondary mirror still attached
- "I broke the telescope" stories, Green Bank WV 100 meter radio telescope, 1988 collapse, replaced 2001
p001 May 2004 MIT sophomore, Arizona Kitt Peak, study red super-giants with Phil Massey
- p005 1986 parents teachers Taunton MA Celestron C8
- p007 Geoffrey T. William's Planetron books
- p008 7yo, Astronomy night, Wheaton College professor says "Take as much mathematics as you can"
p016 2002 MIT matriculation, first physics course Really Hard, prof Frank Wilcek
- two blackboard mathematical proof, "the simplicity of this is deceptive"
p019 sophomore observational astronomy course by Jim Elliot died 2021/3/3 67yo
p019 George R. Wallace Jr. Observatory Westford MA supporter Wallace MIT 1913, dedicated 1971
p023 Jan 2004 visits Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, worked with Sally Oey
p024 first paper, largest observed star 1500 R☉, 7 AU, Jupiter 5.2 AU
p027 George Wallerstein, 86 yo emeritus at UW 2016
- p028 fewer than 100 top notch telescopes around the world
- p033 1 meter naked eye Eta Carinae
- p034-38 Kodak photographic plates
- p039 astronomer handling plates at prime focus, assistant moving the dome
- p039-49 plate telescope stories, p49 CCD imagers
p050 Palomar 200 inch largest before 1975 Russian 6 meter 1975, surpassed by Keck in 1990
- p056 Travelling astronomers; dressed too warm, awake late; departing pale and half-asleep
- p057 newbie drivers on steep summit roads. High-centering over only curb on the mountain, fortuitous tow truck
- p064 nights (cold, moon) assigned by target: blue, no moon; IR, moon no problem. photometric? excellent. weather?
- p065 photometric? excellent. weather? reschedule, retravel, months later
- p066 wacky superstitions, clothing, food, tables in the cafeteria
p070 computers point the telescopes, astronomers are absolutely terrible finding things by eyeball in the night sky
p071 worse than wasting time is observing the wrong thing
- p071 best telescopes cost $15K to $55K per night to operate
- p072 raw data looks awful before processing
- p072 imaging (with filters) or spectroscopy
p074 reducing the data, removing contamination such as varied pixel sensitivity
- p075 "leaf blower" reductions during observation to ensure all is going well
- p076 romance gets you to 3am, then energetic music to combat haze
- p077 classical music or no music? untrustworthy
- p078 first Las Campanas observations canceled by wind, but naked eye viewing awesome
- p082 earthquake
p085 Apache Point Observatory mirrors sandblasted with gypsum sand
- p086 Canary Island telescopes and Saharan dust / lightning
- p088 2003 Canberra brushfires devastated Mount Stromlo Observatory
- p088 "There's about to be an earthquake" because tiny tremors make stars skitter
- p089 shaking stops, immediately return to dead center
p089 vog volcanic sulfur dioxide makes mildly acidic fog
- p091 Best volcano story, Manatash ridge 90 mi east of Mount Saint Helens, UW Doug Geisler log entry:
- Hours lost: 6 Reason: Volcano (good excuse, huh?) Sky Condition: Black + smelly.
- ... I've heard of the dark run but this is ridiculous
- p092 Chilean wildlife, tarantulas common
p093 miller moths scourge of American West observatories
- p093 mothinator: lamp, fan, and industrial sized garbage bucket that fills in days
p094 scorpions, Sarah Tuttle painful sting, legend evolved to helicopter evacuation
p095 Chilean viscacha love watching sunsets, astronomer favorites
p098 1988 November 15 Green Bank 300 ft radio telescope collapse
But It Was Fun 2007 author Greg Monk
replaced with 100m telescope August 2000 website
- p102 optical mirror accuracy must be 20 nanometers, Hubble Space telescope too flat by 2.5 micrometers
p110 "Ohio gunman" (actually failed new-hire) shoots McDonald Observatory 107 inch telescope mirror (Cassegrain focus, big hole in center )
- still functional, one percent less light
- p111 altitude: confusion and gibberish, Mauna Kea 14000 feet (60% of sea level oxygen), dorms at 9000 ft (70%)
- p112 hours from medical care, PBS interviewer Alan Alda suffered intestinal strangulation
- p115 interlocks depower dome motors, but 500 tonne Kitt Peak dome silently coasts for several feet before stopping. In 1987, that killed astronomer Marc Aaronson as he stepped through a door to the exterior catwalk
- p117-20, middle-aged male Caltech astronomer doesn't understand 5 foot 2 inch 25yo Dr. Emily is PI and observer at Keck that night
p122 1955, Mount Wilson grants observing time to Geoff Burbidge, enabling Margaret Burbidge to actually observe. They stayed in a small promitive cottage because Margaret was banned from "the Monastery" male-only astronomer's dormitory.
B²FH paper "Synthesis of the Elements in Stars"
- p124 Vera Rubin anomalous rotation
p127 women earned 40% of the 186 astronomy PhDs awarded in 2017
- p128 running joke at Las Campanas Observatory "a woman behind every tree" on the treeless summit
- p133 Mount Graham, Mauna Kea protests
p134-142 Thirty Meter Telescope
alternative: $1.5B Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) on Cerro Armazones mountain in Chile
what if $5/kg spacelaunch could put 30 meter telescope mirror segments in high orbit?
- ELT: 39 meter primary mirror, 798 hexagonal segments, 1.4 meters across, 50 mm thick, 0.17m³
- 2500 kg/m3 for borosilicate glass, so 430 kg for solid glass segments, less if waffled
- Est 500 kg with supports, $2500 per segment, $2M to launch with launchloop
- less with segment waffling, more with shroud and apogee motors ...
Overwhelmingly Large Telescope 100 meter €1.5e9? €2.1e10?
p143 Very Large Array, VLA radio telescope in New Mexico
- 27 + 1 spare 25-meter dishes in Y-shaped array, 73 MHz to 50 GHz, 13,250 m²
- p146 "... if less than a millijansky per beam ..." (mJy = 1e-29 W/m²-Hz )
- p148 combined interferometry spread across Earth to take first picture of black hole 53 Mly away
p150 155 mph Hurricane Maria (2017) Arecibo observatory kept observing
- note: decommissioned mid-2020 after receiver platform cable breaks, partial collapse December 1 2020
p152 quote from Bartel 1987 VLBI Observations ..., page 507 of paper:
No data were taken at station D during the period 0830 to 1630 GST due to the presence of a red racer snake (Coluber constrictor) draped across the high-tension wires (33,000 V) serving the station. Howenorthern lightsver, even though this snake, or rather a three-foot section of its remains, was caught in the act of causing an arc between the transmission lines, we do not consider it responsible for the loss of data. Rather, we blame the incompetence of a red-tailed hawk (Buteo borealis) who had apparently built a defective nest that fell off the top of a nearby transmission tower, casting her nestlings to the ground, along with their entire food reserve consisting of a pack rat, a kangaroo rat, and several snakes, with the exception of the above-mentioned snake who had a somewhat higher destiny. No comparable loss of data occurred at the other antenna sites.
p152 kittens in ceiling of Tucson astronomy bulding, https://twitter.com/ObservatoryCats, Observatory Cats
p153 radio telescopes, noise. Restricted wavelengths protected by law, VLA surrounded by mountains, dishes colocated with mountain telescopes, WV/VA 34,000 km² National Radio Quiet Zone,
especially 20 km radius around Green Bank Observatory (not even digital cameras and sparkplug engines within the property)
p154 "perytrons" ... due to opening door of running microwave ovens at Parkes radio observatory
p155 Jocelyn Bell discovers pulsars, thesis advisor Anthony Hewish gets Nobel Prize
p157 Fast Radio Bursts sources speculative
status unicorn, different faces perhaps this?
- p160 747-SP, 2.7 meter telescope in back, 4.1 meter wide rollup door, mounted on 1.2 meter ball bearing
- enhanced altitude 45 kft, 13700 m
- p165 Learjet in the 1960s, then 1965 Galileo 1 in a Convair 990, then
p165 KAO 1974-1995 a 0.9m Cassegrain in a Lockheed C-141A Starlifter ( 41 to 45kft, 1417 flights )
- p167 10 hour flights out of Palmdale CA or Christchurch NZ, stripped of sound insulation and LOUD
- p168 extensive safety instructions
- p169 SOFIA flies like regular passenger plane, telescope 17 tons
p172 grounded for weather, next for mechanical problems, p183-188 observed IR star, polar aurora
- p173 Astronomy balloons 130 kft ( KHL atmo tables, 0.3% of -24C atmosphere above )
- question: How much helium lost forever?
p178 Rocket astronomy: White Sands (with unexploded ordnance) and Roi-Namur in the Marshall Islands
p180 George Carruthers Far UV Telescopes, Apollo 16, ISS
p181 South Pole Telescope 10-meter at Amundsen–Scott
p189-198 2017 Eclipse at Jackson Hole Wyoming documentary
- p192 "black void where the sun had been, surrounded by a jagged white nimbus of light"
- p199 star occultations by asteroids
p200 2014 MU69 eclipsed 3 stars in July 2017 before the 2018 New Horizons flyby
- p205 Gravitational waves
- p206 Visit LIGO Hanford in May?
- p210 insulation in concrete barriers, mice built nests, bacteria in mouse urine burned holes in vacuum tubes
- p211 LVEA laser vucuum equipment area, footsteps on concrete slab reverberate for hours
- p211 test mass 13 inches across, 8 inches thick, 90 pounds fused silica glass, four pendulum link of 4 mm glass fiber
- p212 background noise - Pacific shore wave crashes, distant earthquakes prompt test mass reconfigurations to reduce sensitivity
- p213 "Thirsty the Raven" pecking on ice buildup on LN2 lines
- p215 Blind injections
- p217 2015 Sep 14 event, blind injection equipment not working
- Tell author U.O. Ray Frey coffee story
- p218 twitter cake picture 15min before official 2016 Feb 11 announcement
- This is why I've never been too worried about my colleagues concealing the existence of aliens
p222 GW 170817 LIGO plus gamma ray burst GRB 170817A measured by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope and the INTEGRAL space telescope
- same time as 2017 eclipse
p227 race for priority p228 [[ https://dcc.ligo.org/public/0145/P1700294/007/ApJL-MMAP-171017.pdf | LIGO consortium paper with 3684 authors, 33 papers in Astrophysical Journal
p229 Large Magellanic Cloud LMCSN1987A
- p232 !ToO target of opportunity astronomy
- p238 1962-8 potassium flares at Haute-Provence laboratory turned out to be match strikes, many observers were pipe smokers
p241 1992 Dave Jewitt and Jane Luu first discovery of a Kuiper Belt Trans-Neptunian object (list), Albion
p245 SN 2009ip. Levesque scooped
- p247 we've discovered tens of thousands of supernovae
- p250 remote automated observation at Apache Point New Mexico and also Cerro Pachón in Chile while in NYC
- p252 university astronomy departments have remote observing rooms p255 in-person opportunities becoming hard to come by
- p256 queue observing, astronomers prepare ordered list of observations months in advance
- p259 ... installed a disconnected switch labeled "astronomer" to flip back and forth
- p261 Robotic telescope makes standard set of observations of particular patches of sky combined with an AI scheduler
p262 Mike Brown (How I Killed Pluto and Why it Had it Coming) robotic search for Kuiper Belt objects p263 found Eris
- p264 robotic observatories safer
p266 picture of under-construction Vera Rubin Observatory, formerly LSST Large Synoptic Survey Telescope
- p267 streamlined to minimize airflow disturbance
- p269 two cleanrooms to work on 3.2 Gpx camera, elevator and rail system to move 8.4 meter mirror to recoating chamber
- p268 server racks, earthquake proofing, 600gbps fiber to La Serena base
- p269 repeatedly image same enormous swath of sky every few days for 10 years
- p269 expected to detect more than one thousand new supernovae every night p270 science factory p271 no spectroscope
- p272 other telescopes will follow up
p272 2011/09 very strange red supergiants, Thorne–Żytkow objects with neutron star cores
- p273 expected to find excess molybdenum, rubidium, lithium
- p277 Rubin will complement other larger telescopes, capturing enough light for spectroscopy
- p284 Why do we stargaze? We don't know exactly why, but we must
- ... p280