Re-Opening the Universe

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa gives a short opening speech on the north steps of Griffith Observatory
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa gives a short opening speech on the north steps of Griffith Observatory

I’ve been writing off and on over the past year about the Griffith Observatory project, which has encompassed a complete renovation of the building as well as the addition of new exhibits. My part of the project has been to write the content for all the exhibits. Griffith Observatory opens to the public again this Friday, November 3rd.

We attended the opening Galactic Gala for the observatory last Sunday night, and it was a very memorable event. Mostly I wanted to attend to see the rest of the team I worked with all this time, but also to celebrate the re-opening of a singular institution—there is nothing like Griffith Observatory anywhere in the world. As director Ed Krupp has mentioned many times, it’s the only public observatory in the world that has had more people look through its telescope than any other telescope in the world. That alone is worth celebrating, because it means that a LOT of people have seen a little bit of the cosmos through the Observatory’s Zeiss.

The official ribbon-cutting is Thursday, and that will feature a number of public speakers. For the Galactic Gala, we heard a series of short introductory speeches, followed by the projection of the star Epsilon Cygni (72 light-years away) into the “O” of Observatory on the front of the Art Deco Griffith Observatory. The light we saw that night had left the star 72 years ago, when Griffith first opened its doors.

Dr. Ed Krupp, Griffith Observatory director, basks in the light of the Milky Way stars splayed across the observatorys front walls

Dr. Ed Krupp, Griffith Observatory director, basks in the light of the Milky Way stars splayed across the observatory’s front walls

Following the starlight ceremony the entire building was immediately bathed with an image of the Milky Way. It was a scientifically accurate and special light show entirely appropriate for the venue!

Most of the evening was taken up with dining, drinking, seeing the planetarium show, seeing a movie about the “re-making of Griffith” in the Leonard Nimoy Event Horizon theater (narrated by Leonard Nimoy, who donated the money for the theater), and visiting with other celebrants. Some of the more “luminary” attendees were the mayor of LA, many city council members, a congressman, at least one film star aside from Leonard Nimoy, as well as Apollo astronaut Buzz Aldrin. I think there were about 1,800 people there, taking in the sights and enjoying a sneak preview of a great building. It was great to hear what people said as they came out of the planetarium and the Leonard Nimoy theater, and as they moved through the exhibits. To hear people actually “get” what we were trying to do with all the attractions in the building was very gratifying.

Mark in front of one set of exhibits
Mark in front of one set of exhibits
Me in front of the same exhibit
Me in front of the same exhibit

For me the best part was seeing the exhibits I’ve worked on for a year and a half in real life. For so long they’ve been PDF files and Word documents. Now they’re real, and a tribute to the designers and curators and science support people who worked together to bring them about. Well, and to me, too, since I wrote them.

The overarching idea in the building is to turn visitors into observers, to show them the universe and let them explore for themselves. It’s an admirable goal, and now that Griffith is about to recommence its mission, I wish the staff (who comprise many close and cherished friends) the best of luck in the coming years. It’s been an honor to be part of it as the science writer who gave voice to all the things the observatory could tell visitors, if it could only talk.

Things that Make You Think

It was one of those dinnertime topics of conversations with a couple of friends and we got to talking about the whole issue of “intelligent design” and science and how the two should never mix. My own viewpoint is that science is pretty darned cool at giving us answers and that extraordinary claims (like invoking some deity for evolution) require extraordinary proof.

So, we got to talking about scientific things that inspire awe in people, that make them ask questions and want to search out answers. For one of our friends, it was a glimpse of a video about biology that set off the thoughts. And I got to thinking about the things I’ve seen in the cosmos that always make me think, “Hmmm…I wonder what that’s like?” or “Hmmm… how cool is that?”

So, what makes me think “Hmmm” and why?

A few years ago, a bunch of us went to Florida to observe Mars during opposition. We were going after a sort of rare vision: the glint of sunlight off of ice in Sinus Sabaeus. We actually managed to bag it, and several of us got our names in an IAU circular announcing the observation. I thought that was pretty cool. During the early morning viewing session when we all saw the glints, I had this really cool realization that I was looking at another world in real time. It may sound pretty banal now that we have spacecraft giving us, essentially, daily webcam views of Mars. But for that night and that experience, it was awe-inspiring.

Another thing that made me go “hmm” lately was a view of the Orion Nebula from HST. You know the one I’m talking about (from a couple of entries ago). It just gets better and better each time we look at that starbirth nursery. Well, that picture, coupled with an image of comet dust that I saw recently during my research for one of the Griffith Observatory exhibits, took me way back to the origins of our solar system. That piece of dust, which was created way back before the Sun and planets formed, came from the death of a star that blew up as a supernova a long, long time ago (at least more than 4.5 billion years ago).

Now, if I could pick up that dust, I’d be holding a piece of cosmic history in my hand.

But, even cooler than that is the fact that the blood coursing through my hand has elements that were created in stars that died long ago. I AM starstuff. And THAT, my friends, is an idea that truly has me saying, “Hmmm.”

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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