Mt John University Observatory is New Zealands only professional research observatory for optical astronomy. In 1965, Mt John University Observatory was founded at Lake Tekapo in the Mackenzie Basin to take advantage of the favorable conditions for astronomy. Telescopes were installed, and in 1981 a lighting ordinance helped protect the site from light pollution. Astronomical research had been thriving on Mt John for 40 years when astrotourism started to take off. Today Mt John is both a research observatory and a mecca for stargazing astrotourists, who come to see the pristine landscape and the amazing dark night skies. It is one of the most beautiful astronomical observatories in the world, but also a place with an often turbulent history, having been rocked by personality battles, funding shortfalls, student demonstrations, and, on one occasion, a destructive fire. In spite of all that, its scientific work has been an outstanding success, and Mt Johns research work, especially in stellar astronomy, is known and respected around the world. This richly illustrated account follows the development of an iconic New Zealand scientific institution.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 305 x 235mm
Publication Date: 01 Mar 2015
Publisher: Canterbury University Press
Publication City/Country: New Zealand
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781927145623
About Alan HearnshawJohn & GilmoreJohn & Gilmore Alan Hearnshaw
John Hearnshaw is Emeritus Professor of Astronomy at the University of Canterbury New Zealand. He is the former director of Mt John Observatory has won the Mechaelis Prize for Astronomy and was elected foreign research associate for the Royal Astronomical Society London.Alan Gilmore worked at Wellingtons Carter Observatory and established with his wife Pam Kilmartin a program tracking southern comets and near-Earth asteroids. He was Mt John superintendent (site manager) from 1996 until 2014 and has won the Royal Astronomical Society of New Zealands Murray Geddes Prize and the Nova Award of the American Association of Variable Star Observers.