Category Archives: Observatories

Cycles of Life

Mauna Kea from Space (Courtesy NASA and GoHawaii)
Mauna Kea from Space (Courtesy NASA and GoHawaii)

Eight years ago this month I had the happy privilege of doing an observation run at the University of Hawai’i 88-inch telescope on Mauna Kea on the Big Island of Hawai’i. For eight nights I explored comets and asteroids with a small team of UH astronomers. It was a giddy experience, partly because it was my first “Big Astro” esperience, but also because we were working at 13,792 feet above sea level—a rarefied environment indeed! The image above is a great view of Mauna Kea from the space shuttle, and a wonderful reminder that no matter how high up we go to use our observatories, there’s always a higher vantage point.

At the time I did my observations, the Gemini North telescope was still under construction, so we could go out on the catwalk on our telescope and look down on the site as the workers were knocking off for the day. In fact, two of us (James Bauer and I) managed to get our picture taken by a web cam that snapped images of Gemini as it was being constructed. If you look closely at the image below, you can see two dark dots on the far right limb of the catwalk girdling the 88-inch facility (the horn-shaped building up the hill from the Gemini site). That’s us, waving at the camera about 30 minutes before sunset and the beginning of our “work day” on the mountain.

View of Gemini Observatory, November 1996
View of Gemini Observatory, November 1996

Well, life moves in interesting cycles. Today, the Gemini North Observatory is a complete, functioning facility, cranking out good science every day, along with its twin observatory in Chile. And, I’ve moved on from my comet research days. Nowadays I’m working as an astronomy writer, bringing the wonders of the cosmos to my audiences (whether they’re reading my books and articles or attending planetarium shows that I’ve written). In a most wonderful development, I’ve also been working closely with the Gemini Observatory public relations office, helping them get the word out about all their achievements. Sometimes the cycles of the cosmos are logical, indeed!

A Great Place to Work

Courtesy European Southern Observatory.
Courtesy European Southern Observatory.

Astronomers are some of the luckiest people in the world because they get to work in some of the most beautiful places in the world! Imagine going to work each night and seeing the beauty of the starry sky above you, and getting paid to study it! I thought of that again today when I saw this image from the European Southern Observatory at La Silla in Chile. The folks at this site have amazing views of the sky nearly year-round. This view is of the early spring skies (southern hemisphere) taken on September 14, and features a radio dish with the stars shining through it. In the distance is the 3.6-meter telescope. And, arching over the scene is the Milky Way in all its splendor.

There’s something very primal about being under a night sky like this. I’ve only experienced it a few times in my life: for eight nights on Mauna Kea in 1996, a 3-week visit to Peru in 1986, and a 3-week cruise around South America in 2001 as an astronomy lecturer onboard an ocean liner. Each time I’d step out under the dark skies and feel as if the skies were about to swallow me up! It’s an eerie feeling, yet once you get used to it, you almost feel as if you’ve come home to the stars.

Whether you work under the stars as an astronomer or simply enjoy them as a hobby or pastime, the night time skies are a treasure to protect and enjoy!