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21 - Owens Valley and Mauna Kea

from Part 2 - Radio Observatories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 December 2016

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Summary

Owens Valley Radio Observatory

Edward G. (Taffy) Bowen, head of the Radiophysics Laboratory in Australia, paid a visit to some old wartime friends during a visit to the United States in 1951. These included Lee DuBridge, the president of Caltech, Robert Bacher, head of the physics department at Caltech, Vannevar Bush, president of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, and Alfred Loomis, a trustee of both the Carnegie Corporation and the Rockefeller Foundation.(1) His discussions with these luminaries of America's scientific establishment tended to focus on the tremendous advances in radio astronomy in Australia and the relatively poor situation of radio astronomy in the United States. So in December 1951 Bacher asked Bowen if he would produce a draft specification for a suitable telescope to get the USA back in the game, whilst shortly afterwards DuBridge asked Bowen to outline the sort of instruments that would be required to build the radio equivalent of the superb optical observatories on Mount Wilson and Palomar Mountain. DuBridge wanted Bowen to be the director of the radio observatory with John Bolton as his deputy. But at this stage Bowen was non-committal about his future as he was also interested in building a large radio telescope in Australia.

In August 1952 Bowen wrote to Vannevar Bush to ask whether Carnegie would consider funding both the proposed Caltech radio telescope and a similar instrument in the southern hemisphere as a collaborative development. This eventually resulted in the trustees of the Carnegie Corporation approving funding in May 1954 for what was to become the Parkes Radio Telescope in Australia (see Section 16.2). In the meantime, as mentioned in the previous chapter, an interdisciplinary conference had been held in Washington, DC in January 1954, jointly sponsored by the NSF, Caltech and the Carnegie Institution, to discuss the state of radio astronomy in the USA and what to do about it. This eventually resulted in the NSF funding the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, whilst Caltech decided to go it alone and build their own observatory which was largely funded in the early years by the US Office of Naval Research.

Type
Chapter
Information
Observatories and Telescopes of Modern Times
Ground-Based Optical and Radio Astronomy Facilities since 1945
, pp. 385 - 399
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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References

1. Robertson, Peter, Beyond Southern Skies; Radio Astronomy and the Parkes Telescope, Cambridge University Press, 1992, pp. 115–116.
2. Cohen, Marshall H., The Owens Valley Radio Observatory: Early Years, Engineering and Science, Spring 1994, pp. 8–24.Google Scholar
3. Whitford, A. E., et al., Ground-Based Astronomy; A Ten-Year Program, National Academy of Sciences – National Research Council, Washington, DC, 1964, pp. 52–53 and p. 75.
4. Cohen, Marshall H., A History of OVRO: Part II, Engineering and Science, No. 3, 2007, pp. 33–43, and Giant Radio Telescopes, Sky and Telescope, October 1967, p. 203.Google Scholar
5. Scoville, N., et al., The Owens Valley Millimeter Array, in Ishiguro, M. and Welch, Wm. J., (eds.), Astronomy with Millimeter and Submillimeter Wave Interferometry, ASP Conference Series, Vol. 59, 1994, pp. 10–17.
6. Holland, W. S., et al., SCUBA: a Common-user Submillimetre Camera Operating on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 303, 1999, 659–672.Google Scholar
7. Wiedner, M. C., et al., Introduction to the JCMT-CSO Interferometer, in Bender, Ralf, and Davies, Roger, (eds.), New Light on Galaxy Evolution, IAU symposium 171, June 1995, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996, p. 467.
8. Moran, James M., The Submillimeter Array, ASP Conference Series, 356, (2006), 45–57.Google Scholar
9. Blundell, Raymond, The Submillimeter Array, in Proceedings of the IEEE/MTT-S International Microwave Symposium 2007, pp. 1857–1860.
10. Ho, Paul T. P., Moran, James M., and Lo, Kwok Yung, The Submillimeter Array, Astrophysical Journal, 616, 2004, L1–L6.Google Scholar

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