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22 Nov 2009

NJIT physics professor directs effort to install 1.2 meter telescope in NJ

- 15 Sep 2008
By New Jersey Institute of Technology   
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Andrew Gerrard, PhD, NJIT Physics Professor.
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NJIT physics professor Andrew Gerrard hopes by the end of October to be able to peer through what will be the second largest optical telescope east of Texas. Under his direction, a 1.2-meter diameter, fully-steerable Itek optical telescope will soon be installed far from city lights atop Jenny Jump Mountain, Hope. http://www.state.nj.us/dep/parksandforests/parks/jennyjump.html The site, 1100 feet above sea level, is one of the few dark sky locations left in New Jersey.

"The effort to construct this unique facility has been multi-institutional featuring researchers from NJIT, Penn State University, and the United Astronomy Clubs of New Jersey, Inc.," said Gerrard. The $1.1 million instrument will allow amateurs to peer into the heavens at professional levels and at the same time allow academics to study how growing metropolitan areas can generate gravity waves. These waves affect earth's circulation and may play into climate change. Target date for first light will be next spring when state rangers open access to the forest.

From now through late October, the Club field site, Greenwood Observatory, is undergoing construction to accommodate the new instrumentation. Changes include a new building for the optical telescope, equipment sheds to store power supplies and control electronics plus supporting instrumentation. Delivery of the new telescope, currently in New Mexico, is scheduled for around Oct. 15, 2008. The Club sponsors public viewings Saturday nights from April through October. For updates regarding schedule changes, visit http://www.uacnj.org/.

The telescope will be used by Gerrard and colleagues to study lower and middle atmospheric gravity waves. "By using the telescope as an optical receiver in a lidar system," says Gerrard, "we will be able to push volume scanning methods, study cloud formations, and explore atmospheric gravity wave sources. We will share operations time with the United Astronomy Clubs to allow public access to the telescope for discovering and tracking asteroids, monitoring eclipses of planets around other stars and searching for supernovas." The telescope will actually be the largest in the US open to the public.

 
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