| By
Peter N. Spotts (pspotts@nasw.org)
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
TUCSON,
ARIZ.
Twilight
has barely stretched an indigo veil over the southern Arizona
sky when astronomer Kenneth Hinkle swivels his chair to
face a bearded figure at the control panel of the closest
machine humanity has to a star ship.
"Let's
try Alpha Tauri," he says.
NIGHT WORK: Flame Nebula
is currently a hot subject for astronomers.
JASON WARE
"Alpha Tauri it is," comes the reply.
With
the tap of a keyboard and click of a mouse, Hal Halbedel
triggers a delicate ballet between a massive telescope and
its protective 100-ton dome.
As the
dome's opening and the telescope's mirror align, the shimmering
star - the bull's eye in the constellation Taurus - appears
on a TV monitor, and Mr. Halbedel begins to tweak the telescope's
focus.
"Ooh,
you're good," Dr. Hinkle says with a grin.
"Hey,
I do this for a living," Halbedel replies, smiling.
Indeed,
if you have a star, nebula, or galaxy you need to visit,
Halbedel is one of a small group of people worldwide who
will get you there. Known by various titles, most of them
polite, these modern-day Han Solos are linchpins of astronomy.
Many headline-grabbing discoveries would never be made without
mountaintop star pilots, who must act as technicians, weather
forecasters, and (unlike Han Solo) diplomats, as well as
operate telescopes.
"You
can't overstate what these people do. They are absolutely
critical," says Ben Oppenheimer, an astronomer at the
University of California at Berkeley. "They don't get
much credit, but they can make or break a research project."
For
theorists who spend their time trying to explain how the
cosmos works, a computer, white board, markers, and a stack
of results from others' observing runs are their stock in
trade. For observational astronomers, however, the currency
is telescope time.
Competition
for time "on the sky" is fierce. For example,
the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) in Tucson,
which runs telescopes in Chile and Hawaii as well as at
the Kitt Peak National Observatory, gets requests for an
average of three to four times more nights on its glass
than are available.
IN DEMAND: The 4-meter telescope
on Kitt Peak, west of Tucson, Ariz. is one of 23 differently
sized scopes currently in operation on the mountain.
DAVID SANDERS/AP
Even when reviewers approve a project, an astronomer is
likely to get only two or three nights on the largest telescopes.
That's it for at least six months - often for the year.
To an astronomer with tenure at a major university and who
may have several projects under way at once, telescope time
truncated or lost to weather, technical problems, or a poor
operator is annoying. For a graduate student struggling
to earn a PhD, a postdoc hoping for a full-time job at a
college or university, or an assistant professor looking
for tenure, delays or marginally productive observing runs
could mean the difference between studying the cosmos or
selling insurance.
The
star pilots are there to help ensure the visiting researchers
remain astronomers by helping them gather as much information
as possible during their observing period. At Kitt Peak,
a mountaintop Mecca for astronomy some 55 miles west of
Tucson, Halbedel is the éminence grise among seven
telescope operators. They work six or seven nights in a
row, then get several consecutive days off. They can face
observing schedules that list dozens of targets a night,
or they can keep the telescope locked on a faint object
for hours while the instruments tease as many photons as
possible from the night sky.
Star
pilots come with mechanical or technical skills, a deep
appreciation for the night sky, and a sufficiently even
temperament to remain calm in the face of broken pumps or
grumpy astronomers who apply less-than-polite monikers to
observing assistants who close the dome because rain, snow,
or excessively high winds threaten the telescope.
"All
you can do is tell them that you understand their situation,"
Halbedel says. The alternative to shutting down for one
night is risking damage that may take weeks to repair, he
adds, ruining the opportunities for several astronomers.
The time may belong to the astronomer, but the operator
rules the telescope.
Tonight,
Halbedel and Hinkle - who oversees the spectrograph at the
business end of the 4-meter Mayall telescope - are working
with Craig Kulesa, a graduate student at the University
of Arizona who is studying conditions in stellar nurseries
such as the Flame Nebula, part of a structure known formally
as NGC2024.
"Where
do you want to go?" Halbedel asks.
"Zeta
Ori," Mr. Kulesa replies, referring to the easternmost
star in Orion's belt, NCG2024 lurks nearby.
Once
the telescope arrives at the target, the guide system kicks
in, and the spectrograph begins its work, Halbedel reflects
on the changing role observing assistants have undergone
over the 29 years he's worked on the mountain.
"There
were no computers, so there were always things to adjust.
You really had to learn how to massage the machinery,"
he says. Even today, microphones in the dome keep operators
in the control room attuned to every thump, grind, and whir
the telescope makes.
The
observing assistant's role "is constantly being redefined,"
adds Robert Thicksen, supervisor of the Mt. Palomar Observatory
near Escondido, Calif.
HAS THE SUN SET YET? Edward
Eastburn (r.), helps install a digital camera on Kitt Peak
observatory's 2.1 meter telescope. Far left is instrument
technician Skip Andree and (face hidden) Michael Hawes,
facilities coordinator.
PETER N. SPOTTS
At one time, he says, night assistants, observing assistants,
observing associates, or remote observers - as they are
variously known - were little more than chauffeurs for big
telescopes. At the observatory's famed 200-inch Hale telescope,
the NAs would monitor the scope from a control panel inside
the often frigid dome. The astronomer "rode the telescope"
in a cage at the telescope's prime focus, high above the
main mirror.
While
the NA controlled the dome and the telescope's most-sweeping
motions, fetched the midnight sandwiches, and stood ready
to act as mechanic or medic in an emergency, the astronomer
took photographs, using glass plates for film. The researcher
also would keep the telescope on target by looking at a
guide star through an eye piece and using a hand paddle
to control fine changes in the telescope's position.
If a
night assistant proved exceptionally competent, the astronomer
might eventually allow that person to take the images and
review the data.
Now,
telescopes have grown more sophisticated, with subsystems
monitoring or governing everything from mirror temperature
and shape to dome temperature. An increasing number of telescopes
use adaptive optics - a laser-based system for getting the
sharpest possible image by canceling the distorting effects
of the Earth's atmosphere. A variation is being installed
at a 3.5 meter telescope on the mountain that will constantly,
subtly shift the orientation of the telescope's smaller
"secondary" mirror to reduce the atmosphere's
"twinkle" effect. Halbedel notes that while the
Mayall telescope is modest by today's standard, it still
takes four computers talking with each other to run it.
And
while some astronomers may be repeat customers, as they
were in the old days, their visits are too rare to allow
them to become proficient at operating the larger telescopes
themselves.
If life
on the mountaintop can be technically and diplomatically
demanding, it also places constraints on an operator's social
life - constraints familiar to anyone who has to work the
swing shift regularly. You work nights, while your friends
work days.
Kitt
Peak's remoteness and a work schedule out of sync with much
of the rest of humanity's have contributed to a high turnover-rate
among observers recently, NOAO officials acknowledge. Yet
some observing assistants have found ways to avoid the social
penalties.
Bill
Gillespie, who has worked as an observing assistant for
three months, acknowledges that he came to the mountain
with years of experience at isolated jobs. Following high
school, he joined the Navy and served aboard the USS Corpus
Christi, a nuclear attack submarine. He also worked as an
electrician and welder in Alaskan oil fields where shifts
were defined as three months on and three off.
"I
like the schedule here," he allows. "You get blocks
of time off to work on projects like building small telescopes
or learning how to set up computer networks. Or you can
just go skiing."
The
job also can provide some operators with scientific rewards.
On Mt. Hopkins, about 50 miles southeast of Kitt Peak, Perry
Berlind has been taking observations for astronomers at
the Whipple Observatory for nine years. Unlike his counterparts
on Kitt Peak, he often works without an astronomer at his
side. Instead, he gets a list of targets, gathers the data
himself, then e-mails the results to the project's lead
investigator. He says he's been credited with discovering
five supernovae, stellar explosions whose violent bursts
of energy are valued as "standard candles" for
more accurately gauging the expansion rate of the universe.
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