The Future of Astronomy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 20 pages of information about The Future of Astronomy.

The Future of Astronomy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 20 pages of information about The Future of Astronomy.
the great fire of 1871, and the work was assumed and carried to completion by the Dudley Observatory at Albany.  The zone from +50 deg. to +55 deg. was undertaken by Harvard.  An observer and corps of assistants worked on this problem for a quarter of a century.  The completed results now fill seven quarto volumes of our annals.  Of the southern zones, that from -14 deg. to -18 deg. was undertaken by the Naval Observatory at Washington, and is now finished.  The zone from -10 deg. to -14 deg. was undertaken at Harvard, and a second observer and corps of assistants have been working on it for twenty years.  It is now nearly completed, and we hope to begin its publication this year.  The other zones were taken by European astronomers.  As a result of the whole, we have the precise positions of nearly a hundred and fifty thousand stars, which serve as a basis for the places of all the objects in the sky.

Another example of cooperative work is a plan proposed by the writer in 1906, at the celebration of the two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of Franklin.  It was proposed, first to find the best place in the world for an astronomical observatory, which would probably be in South Africa, to erect there a telescope of the largest size, a reflector of seven feet aperture.  This instrument should be kept at work throughout every clear night, taking photographs according to a plan recommended by an international committee of astronomers.  The resulting plates should not be regarded as belonging to a single institution, but should be at the service of whoever could make the best use of them.  Copies of any, or all, would be furnished at cost to any one who wished for them.  As an example of their use, suppose that an astronomer at a little German University should discover a law regulating the stars in clusters.  Perhaps he has only a small telescope, near the smoke and haze of a large city, and has no means of securing the photographs he needs.  He would apply to the committee, and they would vote that ten photographs of twenty clusters, each with an exposure of an hour, should be taken with the large telescope.  This would occupy about a tenth part of the time of the telescope for a year.  After making copies, the photographs would be sent to the astronomer who would perhaps spend ten years in studying and measuring them.  The committee would have funds at their disposal to furnish him, if necessary, with suitable measuring instruments, assistants for reducing the results, and means for publication.  They would thus obtain the services of the most skilful living astronomers, each in his own special line of work, and the latter would obtain in their own homes material for study, the best that the world could supply.  Undoubtedly, by such a combination if properly organized, results could be obtained far better than is now possible by the best individual work, and at a relatively small expense.  Many years of preparation will evidently be needed to carry out such a plan, and to save time we have taken the first step and have sent a skilful and experienced observer to South Africa to study its climate and compare it with the experience he has gained during the last twenty years from a similar study of the climate of South America and the western portion of the United States.

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The Future of Astronomy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.