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Royal Observatory, Edinburgh

Coordinates:55°55′23″N3°11′16″W / 55.92306°N 3.18778°W /55.92306; -3.18778
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Observatory
Royal Observatory, Edinburgh
Gate and East Tower
Alternative namesRoyal Observatory, EdinburghEdit this at Wikidata
OrganizationScience and Technology Facilities Council
University of Edinburgh
Observatory code277
LocationBlackford Hill,Edinburgh,Scotland,United Kingdom
Coordinates55°55′23″N3°11′16″W / 55.92306°N 3.18778°W /55.92306; -3.18778
Altitude146 m
Established1896
Websitewww.roe.ac.uk
Telescopes
Student lab50 cm reflector
East Dome90 cmCassegrain reflector
West Dome40/60 cmSchmidt camera (removed 2010)
Royal Observatory, Edinburgh is located in the United Kingdom
Royal Observatory, Edinburgh
Location of Royal Observatory, Edinburgh
Map
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TheRoyal Observatory, Edinburgh (ROE) is anastronomical institution located onBlackford Hill inEdinburgh. The site is owned by theScience and Technology Facilities Council (STFC). The ROE comprises theUK Astronomy Technology Centre (UK ATC) of STFC, the Institute for Astronomy of theSchool of Physics and Astronomy of theUniversity of Edinburgh, and the ROE Visitor Centre.

The observatory carries out astronomical research and university teaching; design, project management, and construction of instruments and telescopes forastronomical observatories; and teacher training in astronomy andoutreach to the public. The ROE Library includes the Crawford Collection of books and manuscripts gifted in 1888 bythe 26th Earl of Crawford. Before it moved to the present site in 1896, the Royal Observatory was located onCalton Hill, close to the centre of Edinburgh, at what is now known as theCity Observatory.

History

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Calton Hill

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TheUniversity of Edinburgh in 1785 and by Royal Warrant ofGeorge III created theRegius Chair of Astronomy and appointedRobert Blair first Regius Professor of Astronomy. After his death in 1828 the position remained vacant until 1834. In 1811 private citizens had founded theAstronomical Institution of Edinburgh withJohn Playfair – professor of natural philosophy – as its president. The Institution acquired grounds onCalton Hill to build an observatory, which was designed by John's nephewWilliam Henry Playfair; it remains to this day as the Playfair building of theCity Observatory.

During his visit of Edinburgh in 1822,George IV bestowed upon the observatory the title of "Royal Observatory of King George the Fourth". In 1834 – with Government funding – the instrumentation of the observatory was completed. This cleared the way to uniting the observatory with the Regius Chair, andThomas Henderson was appointed the firstAstronomer Royal for Scotland and second Regius Professor of Astronomy. The main instruments of the new observatory were a 6.4-inch (16 cm)transit telescope and a 3.5-inch (9 cm)azimuth circle.

In 1852Charles Piazzi Smyth – second Astronomer Royal for Scotland – came up with the idea of building astronomical observatories on high mountains with good weather. He travelled toTenerife a few years later for site testing. Nothing came of it until about 100 years later, when this mode of operation became common practice the world over. Atime service was established in 1858. Timings of star transits were used to keep the observatory clock accurate. The clock was wired up to control the drop of atime ball onNelson's Monument. This is visible from the port ofLeith, thus providing accurate time for shipping. Another wire led to atime gun onEdinburgh Castle.

Chronic underfunding by the Government eventually led to Smyth's resignation in 1888. The Government then intended to close the Royal Observatory and to abolish the post of Astronomer Royal for Scotland.

Asteroids discovered: 7
(6222) 1980 PB38 August 1980
(14801) 1980 PE315 August 1980
(22262) 1980 PZ24 August 1980
(24625) 1980 PC38 August 1980
(29086) 1980 PY24 August 1980
(52241) 1980 PW24 August 1980
(129439) 1980 PX24 August 1980

Blackford Hill

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When theEarl of Crawford learned of the plans to close the Royal Observatory, he offered to give the instruments of his ownDunecht observatory and his unique astronomical library to the nation on condition that the Government build and maintain a new Royal Observatory to replace the one on Calton Hill.Ralph Copeland was appointed third Astronomer Royal for Scotland and oversaw the move of the two observatories from Dunecht and Calton Hill toBlackford Hill. The new site was opened in April 1896.

The instruments to move into the domes were a 15-inch (38 cm)refractor (East Dome) and a 24-inch (0.6 m) reflector (West Dome). An 8.5-inch (22 cm)transit circle was housed in a separate building further west. The time service continued to control the time ball on Calton Hill and the time gun on Edinburgh Castle by telegraph wire. It also controlled a time gun in Dundee and a clock atRosyth dockyard. In the 1910s and 1920s research at the ROE led to more accuratependulum clocks, which remained in service until they had to give way toquartz clocks in the 1960s.

On May 21, 1913, at 01:00, a bomb planted bysuffragettes detonated. No one was inside the building but there was damage to floors and stone walls.[1]

During the first half of the 20th century the ROE pursued the new fields of photographic andphotoelectric recording of stellar positions,brightnesses andspectra. From the 1950s onwards the ROE has concentrated even more on instrumentation and automation. In 1965 the ROE moved from the responsibility of theScottish Office into the new Science Research Council (SRC), which in 1981 became theScience and Engineering Research Council (SERC).

Outstations and national facilities

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From 1961 to 1973 the ROE's Earlyburn Outstation some 20 miles (30 km) south of Edinburgh was used for optical tracking of artificial satellites. From 1967 to 1976 the observatory operated a 16/24-inch (0.4/0.6 m) Schmidt camera – matching the one in Edinburgh – at its Monte Porzio Catone observing station near Rome. A division of labour developed: By 1976 the ROE as an SRC/SERC establishment spent most of its resources on running and supporting national facilities, while astronomical research was left to the university's Department of Astronomy.

The ROE operated theUK Schmidt Telescope (UKST) since it was opened in 1973. This took photographic plates in blue light of the entire southern sky. Together with red-light plates taken by theEuropean Southern Observatory (ESO) they form the ESO/SERC Southern Sky Survey, which in turn extends thePalomar Observatory Sky Survey beyond its southern limit. In 1988 the telescope was handed over to theAnglo-Australian Observatory, which until 2010 operated it forAustralia and theUnited Kingdom (UK); in July 2010, theAustralian Astronomical Observatory was formed, to operate the telescope as part of a facility entirely under Australian control. The photographic laboratory and plate library for the UKST remained at the ROE in Edinburgh.

Since 1967 the ROE had been operating a machine (GALAXY –GeneralAutomaticLuminosityAndX-Y) to digitise photographic plates. After the opening of the UKST, this was upgraded to become the COSMOS (COordinates, Sizes, Magnitudes, Orientations and Shapes) machine in 1975. It operated until 1993 and was replaced by a new SuperCOSMOS machine. When in 1980 theStarlink Project was formed to support astronomical image processing in the UK, the ROE became one of the six original nodes of the Starlink network.

Over the years 1973–1979 the ROE built the 3.8-metreUK Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) onMauna Kea inHawaii. This is an early example of the use of thin mirrors in large telescopes. The ROE operated UKIRT in cooperation with theUniversity of Hawaii and built instruments for it, including the first ever common-user infrared camera. In 1987 theJames Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) – also on Mauna Kea – was handed over to the ROE after theRutherford Appleton Laboratory had completed its construction. The JCMT is a 15-metre diameter, millimetre- and sub-millimetre-wavelength telescope, which was run by a partnership of the UK, theNetherlands andCanada until 2014.

Reviews and international involvement

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AfterMalcolm Longair – ninth Astronomer Royal for Scotland – left in 1990, astronomy in Edinburgh underwent a period of re-organisation and uncertainty.Andrew Lawrence became Regius Professor of Astronomy in the University of Edinburgh, whereas the title ofAstronomer Royal for Scotland went toJohn Brown of theUniversity of Glasgow. For a whilePaul Murdin was acting director of the ROE. In 1993 the observatories of the UK – theRoyal Greenwich Observatory (RGO), the Royal Observatory Edinburgh, theIsaac Newton Group of Telescopes, and theJoint Astronomy Centre in Hawaii (operating UKIRT and JCMT) – came under the single directorship ofAlec Boksenberg, until then director of the RGO.

In 1994 the SERC was split up and the ROE became part of theParticle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC). In 1995 the merged observatories were dissolved into four independent entities. Having lost the UKST in 1988 – the ROE now also lost the UKIRT and the JCMT, operated by the independentJoint Astronomy Centre. ROE retained its role of building instruments for telescopes and satellites. It also became the UK project office for the construction of theGemini Observatory, a pair of 8.1-metre telescopes run by seven countries.

A review of the Royal Observatories in 1996 concluded that the running of observatories and building of instruments should be put out to competitive tender, raising the fear of privatisation or closure. In 1997 this came to a halt and instead it was decided to reduce the RGO and the ROE into a smaller single astronomy technology centre. In 1998 the RGO was closed, while the ROE escaped lightly: The Plate Library and SuperCOSMOS machine were handed over to the University of Edinburgh, while the technology and project management expertise of the ROE – and to a lesser degree of the RGO – was retained by the newly formedUK Astronomy Technology Centre, which superseded the ROE as the Edinburgh establishment of the PPARC. (The ROE name remains as an umbrella term for UKATC; IfA, Edinburgh University; and the Visitor Centre).

Following the work on Gemini, the UK ATC was put in charge of managing the construction of the 4-metre f/1VISTA (Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy). In the tradition of the UKST this is a survey telescope with a wide field of view. It works in the infrared and uses an array of 16 large infrared detectors. The telescope is located at theParanal Observatory of theEuropean Southern Observatory (ESO). In 1962 five European countries had founded the ESO; the UK joined in 2002 as the tenth member country. VISTA was handed over to ESO in 2009 as part of the UK's joining fee.

Directors

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AlsoAstronomer Royal for Scotland andRegius Professor of Astronomy in theUniversity of Edinburgh:

  1. 1834–1844,Thomas Henderson
  2. 1846–1888,Charles Piazzi Smyth
  3. 1889–1905,Ralph Copeland
  4. 1905–1910,Frank Dyson
  5. 1910–1937,Ralph Sampson
  6. 1938–1955,W.M.H. Greaves
  7. 1957–1975,Hermann Brück
  8. 1975–1980,Vincent Reddish
  9. 1980–1990,Malcolm Longair

Directors of ROE or UK ATC after amalgamation and dissolution of "The Royal Observatories":

  • 1995–1997, Stuart Pitt
  • 1998–2004, Adrian Russell
  • 2005–2012, Ian Robson
  • 2012–2024,Gillian Wright
  • 2024–present, Christophe Dumas

Present day

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Telescopes

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The original 1894 building includes two cylindrical copper domes on top of the East and West Towers. These were refurbished in 2010.[2] The East Dome still shelters a 36-inch (0.9 m)Cassegrain reflector that was installed in 1930. This is part of the visitor centre exhibition, but is not operational any more. A 16/24-inch (0.4/0.6 m)Schmidt camera was installed in the West Dome in 1951. In 2010 this was removed to theNational Museum of Scotland.[3] The only working telescope is a Meade MAX 20in ACF (0.5 m)reflector in a hemispherical dome on top of the teaching laboratories. This telescope is used for undergraduate teaching. As of April 2012, the 1967 telescope and mount have been removed to Mid-Kent Astronomical Society; a replacement telescope will be installed later in 2012.[4]

Crawford Collection

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The Crawford Collection has first editions of most books relevant to the history of astronomy. This includes many works by the likes ofBrahe,Copernicus,Galileo,Kepler andNewton. For the most part,Lord Lindsay collected this library in the 1870s and 1880s. An early addition was that of over 2500 items fromCharles Babbage's library after his death in 1871.

Visitor Centre

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The Visitor Centre hosts public events, including astronomy lectures and public open nights. The Observatory also holds classes, professional development courses, and other educational events for primary and secondary schools.[5]

Gallery

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  • East Tower with copper dome
    East Tower with copper dome
  • Tower after replacement of copper
    Tower after replacement of copper
  • The observatory complex
    The observatory complex
  • A "flexure rig" for simulating the operational movement of instruments on telescopes as they change altitude
    A "flexure rig" for simulating the operational movement of instruments on telescopes as they change altitude
  • The Crawford labs of the UK Astronomy Technology Centre
    The Crawford labs of the UK Astronomy Technology Centre

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Plea over Edinburgh Royal Observatory suffragette bomb mystery".BBC News. 21 May 2013. Retrieved4 October 2023.
  2. ^"Dome repairs at the Royal Observatory".ROE press release, 2009-12-04. Retrieved 2010-03-02.
  3. ^"Royal Observatory Telescope acquired by the National Museum of Scotland".ROE What's New, 2010-03-04. Retrieved 2012-05-02.
  4. ^"Mid-Kent Astronomical Society begins work with the telescope".ROE What's New, 2012-04-02. Retrieved 2012-05-02.
  5. ^"Visitor Centre".www.roe.ac.uk. Retrieved14 April 2021.
  • Reddish, V.C. (1976).Royal Observatory Edinburgh, annual report for the year ended 30 September 1976. Science Research Council.ISSN 0309-0108.ISBN 0-902553-16-X.
  • Brück, H.A. (1983).The story of astronomy in Edinburgh from its beginnings until 1975. Edinburgh University Press.ISBN 0-85224-480-0.
  • Longair, M.S. (1983).Royal Observatory Edinburgh, research and facilities 1983. Royal Observatory, Edinburgh.
  • Longair, M.S. (1987).Royal Observatory Edinburgh, research and facilities 1987. Royal Observatory, Edinburgh.ISSN 0267-6281.
  • Pounds, K. (1995). "Alec Boksenberg moves to Cambridge University".Spectrum, Newsletter of the Royal Observatories,9. p. 20.ISSN 1353-7784.
  • Wall, J. (1996).Spectrum, Newsletter of the Royal Greenwich Observatory,16.ISSN 1353-7784.
  • Pitt, S. (1997).Royal Observatory Edinburgh, astronomy and technology. Royal Observatory, Edinburgh.

External links

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