- Yale University Observatory
History
Yale's first
observatory , the Atheneum, was situated in a tower, which from 1830 housed Yale's first and America's largestrefractor , a convert|5|in|mm|sing=on Dollond donated bySheldon Clark . With this telescope Olmsted andElias Loomis made the first American sighting of the return ofHalley's Comet in 1835. (August 31 ; seen inEurope August 6 , but no news of this had reached America). The telescope was mounted on casters and moved from window to window, but it could not reach altitudes much over 30 deg above thehorizon .Still later, in 1870, a cylindrical turret was added above the tower, so that all altitudes could be reached. The building was demolished in 1893 and the telescope is now at the
Smithsonian Institution inWashington, D.C. The observatory, in the turret (modelled after the gun turret of the ironclad ship
USS Monitor ), housed a convert|9|in|mm|sing=onAlvan Clark refractor donated byJoseph E. Sheffield . The telescope was later housed in the dome on Bingham Hall (the dome later converted to a smallplanetarium , and now used as an experimentalaquarium ).An convert|8|in|mm|sing=on telescope financed by E.M. Reed of
New Haven was first used for photographing theSun during theTransit of Venus onDecember 6 ,1882 .The observatory also possessed an
heliometer , ordered fromRepsold and Sons by H. A. Newton in 1880, delivered in time for measurements of theTransit of Venus onDecember 6 ,1882 for determination of solar parallax. This is the same type of instrument thatFriedrich Bessel used in 1838 for the first significant determination of a stellar parallax (of the star61 Cygni ). Under the direction of W. L. Elkin from 1883 to 1910 the heliometer yielded (according toFrank Schlesinger ) the most (238) and the best parallaxes obtained before the advent ofphotographic astrometry .In the late 1890s, W. L. Elkin built two batteries of
cameras equipped with rotating shutters for obtaining thevelocities as well as theheights ofmeteors , pioneering work in the study of meteors. [*cite web
last=Schlesinger | first=Frank
title=Biographical Memoir of William Lewis Elkin, 1855–1933
url=http://books.nap.edu/html/biomems/welkin.pdf
format=PDF | publisher=National Academy of Sciences
accessdate=2008-07-29 ]The Loomis Tower on Canner Street, erected in 1923 in memory of Elias Loomis (1811-1889), was at the time the largest polar telescope in America. The installation was originally designed for the comfort of the observer who sat at the
eyepiece in a warm room at the top of the tower. The tube (beneath the stairs) was parallel to the polar axis of theEarth . The building at the base of the tower had a sliding roof and housed a convert|30|in|mm|sing=onoptical flat coelostat mirror driven equatorially and reflecting light from any unobscured part of the sky through both a convert|15|in|mm|sing=onphotographic and a convert|10|in|mm|sing=onvisual guide telescope, both of the samefocal length , 600 inches.In 1945, the telescope was reversed, with the convert|15|in|mm|sing=on objective at the top, the plate holder at the foot of the tube. The telescope was thus rigidly mounted for photographing the polar region only, for the purpose of investigating the wobbling of the axis of rotation of the earth and redetermining the constants of
precession andnutation .The Loomis Telescope was moved to
Bethany, Connecticut in 1957, to continue monitoring the apparent motion of the axis of the earth. Carol Williams analyzed plates for her Ph.D. thesis, 1967. She found apparent motions largely correlated withtidal disturbances of theearth's crust .References
External links
* [http://www.astro.yale.edu/dept/overview/history.html History of the Department of Astronomy at Yale University]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.