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Wise Observatory
OrganizationTel-Aviv University
LocationNegev, Israel
Coordinates
Altitude 875 meters (2,870 feet)
Webpage*
Telescopes
Boller and Chivens telescope 41.0 inch Ritchey-Chetien reflector
Centurion 18 telescope 18.0 inch prime focus reflector

The Florence and George Wise Observatory is an astronomical observatory owned and operated by Tel-Aviv University. It is located 5 km west of the city of Mitzpe Ramon in the Negev desert near the edge of the Ramon Crater.

History


Founded in October 1971 as a collaboration between Tel Aviv University and the Smithsonian Institution, and named after the late Dr. George S. Wise, the first President of the Tel-Aviv University. The observatory is a research laboratory of Tel Aviv University. It belongs to the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences and it serves mainly staff and graduate students from the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics of the Scool of Physics and Astronomy, and from the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences. Traditionally, the Wise Observatory Director is appointed by Tel Aviv University's Dean of Exact Sciences from the senior academic staff of the Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics.

The directors of the Wise Observatory since its foundation were:

Uri Feldman (1971-1973)

Asher Gottesman (1973-1975)

Dror Sadeh (1975-1977)

Elia Leibowitz (1977-1980)

Hagai Netzer (1980-1983)

Elia Leibowitz (1983-1988)

Tsevi Mazeh (1988-1990)

Hagai Netzer (1990-1991)

Elia Leibowitz (1991-1998)

Dan Maoz (1998-2000)

Noah Brosch (2000- )

Site


The number of clear nights (zero cloudiness) at the Wise Observatory site is about 170 a year. The number of useful nights, with part of the night cloud-free, is about 240. The best season, when practically no clouds are observed, is June to August, while the highest chance for clouds are in the period January to April. Winds are usually moderate mainly from North-East and North. Storm wind velocities (greater than 40 km/h) occur, but rarely. The wind speed tends to decrease during the night. Temperature gradients are small and fairly moderate. The average relative humidity is quite high with a tendency to decline during the night from April to August.

The average seeing is about 2-3 seconds of arc. A few good nights have seeing of 1" or less while some show seeing larger than 5".

An important advantage of the Wise Observatory at its location of ~35°E in the Northern Hemisphere is the possibility of cooperating with observatories at other longitudes for time-series studies. Such projects involve searches for stellar oscillations within the Whole Earth Telescope project, monitoring gravitational microlensing events, combined ground and space observing campaigns, etc.

Equipment


The observatory has a one-meter diameter Boller and Chivens telescope, which is a wide field Ritchey-Chretien reflector mounted on a rigid, off-axis equatorial mount. This telescope was originally a twin of the Las Campanas 1m Swope telescope*, which was described by Bowen and Vaughan (1973), though the two instruments diverged somewhat during the years. It also has two CCD cameras, a two-star "Nather-type" photometer, a "Faint-object spectrograph-camera" (FOSC), and an older Boller and Chivens spectrograph. The photoelectric photometer and the Boller and Chivens spectrograph have not been in use for more than a decade.

A dioptric focal reducer (Maala) can be used at f/7 to project a field of view almost one-degree wide on one of the CCDs (a SITe 2048x4096 pixel array) at the cost of slightly larger than opticmal PSF sampling and some edge-of-field distortions.

Two new CCD cameras will enter regular use in 2006: one is a Princeton Instruments Versarray with 1340x1300 pixels each 20 μm wide, and the other is a CCD mosaic covering at f/7 a one-degree field of view in a single exposure.

In 2004 a 46-cm prime-focus computer-controlled telescope was added to the Wise Observatory for minor planet photometry purposes. This is a Centurion-18 that has been extensively modified by the observatory staff in a continuous effort to transform it into a robotic telescope.

The observatory also operates a CONCAMall-sky CCD camera to monitor bright transient sources, and a Hungarian Automatic Telescope (HAT)[http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~gbakos/HAT/intro.htm.

Observing time


Observations at the Wise Observatory are allocated on a semestrial basis for the periods from the beginning of April to the end of September (first semester) and from the beginning of October to the end of March the following year (second semester). The allocation is competitive and is based on the scientific merit of each proposal. Over the years, most of the observing time during a given period has been allocated to one or two large, long-term, projects carried out by Tel-Aviv faculty and graduate students.

Research Highlights


A project to monitor photometrically and spectroscopically Active Galactic Nuclei is still running, following about 30 years of data collection. Other major projects include searches for supernovae and extrasolar planets (transiting or lensing). Lately, some emphasis is put on studies of Near Earth Objects.

External link


References


Bowen, I. and Vaughan, A.H., Jr. 1973, Applied Optics, 12, 1430

Astronomical observatories in Israel

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Wise Observatory".

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