Iowa State UniversityDepartment of Physics and Astronomy |
The Mather Telescope at Fick Observatory
My colleagues and I are pleased present the splendor of the Iowa skies as captured by the cameras at Iowa State University's Fick Observatory. The Fick Observatory is both a teaching and research facility whose operation is enhanced by the support of private contributors. It is with the help of their generosity, that we are able to share these images with you.---Professor Eli Rosenberg, Chair, ISU Dept. of Physics and Astronomy The Mather Telescope is the first-generation direct descendent of the original 24-inch diameter Cassegrain reflector originally located at Clarksville Iowa. The Clarksville instrument was built by Mr. Milo Mather (Iowa State University, Class of 1907), a very talented and well-known amateur astronomer. After Mr. Mather's death in 1960, the original telescope and observatory were donated to Iowa State University by the Mather family. It was placed in a new site just northwest of Ames where it served as the University's only astronomical equipment for several years. In 1966, ISU, with funds from the National Science Foundation, built the present modern observatory, now located southwest of Boone, Iowa. The mirror from the original Mather telescope was refigured and realuminized for use in the new telescope. Continued financial support of astronomical research by the Mather family, along with support from Iowa amateur astronomer Erwin W. Fick, has enabled the continued upgrade of instrumentation used at the Erwin W. Fick Observatory. The 1970s, 80s, and 90s saw Fick Observatory participating in a growing number of research projects as well as a continuing role in education for undergraduate and graduate astronomy students. With the advent of solid state imaging devices incorporated into new cameras for use at the observatory, the telescope continues to be a major research tool for Iowa State University. With its short focal length and sensitive cameras, ISU astronomers obtain wide-field views of the sky to very faint limits. Large observatories, and observatories in space, can probe astronomical objects in fine detail but have difficulty looking at large areas of sky - so the ISU telescope provides complementary data that is essential for understanding the structure of our Universe. |
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