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The Pitch

6/5/2020

1 Comment

 
In college I helped lead the Astronomy Club and wanted to take on the project of installing a telescope (that was not being used) at a facility (also not being used). It would become the club telescope if it was possible. So I drafted a letter to go before the head of the Astronomy department (Dr. Strittmatter) as well as a well-liked Optics professor (Dr. Bickel) asking them to fund the project and match each other's monies. The pitch I wrote is below and both agreed to assist! Dr. Bickel in particular did something very nice. He wrote to me and explained that this proposal was far better than most of what crossed his desk in the professional world. This is was both a very  kind and a *very powerful* thing to do. I subsequently used this confidence to put forth more "pitches" that helped create the Kitt Peak National Observatory Visitor Center evening programs as well as the Mount Lemmon SkyCenter for the University of Arizona. I was probably 22-24  years old at the time.  Everyone has those things in life that determine the direction of the narrative... this was one of mine.


Tumamoc Hill Telescope Project

Located on a mountain just outside of  the Tucson complex there is a small abandoned structure once used to house a medium sized telescope. However, the building has remained unused longer than the lifetime of the author of this proposal. The  lack of desire to maintain this site or ambition to rectify the status of this structure certainly attributed to its current state of useless disrepair; however, the members of the University of Arizona Astronomy Club have had a long standing desire and motivation to rebuild this site and use it as a club privilege and educational tool. 
The owners of the site, namely Steward Observatory, have graciously allowed the club to repair the site and install a sixteen-inch reflecting telescope which sadly, suffered a similar past as the building into which it will be installed. This is what makes this project so inviting- it allows for existing resources to be repaired and recycled creating tools that may once again prove themselves useful and educational. Another advantage of this kind of project is, when it comes right down to it, it is cheap. The money required to repair the site and install the telescope is negligible compared to other projects which insist on new technologies and expensive materials and provide the same educational value.
Moreover, the members of the club strongly believe they are rebuilding something more than just a structure to put a out-of-commission telescope in- they also feel they are rebuilding an interest and motivation to engage in hands-on science, which is of mutual interest to both student and teacher.  
The ideas which are stated above are not result of years of wishful thinking. They are instead the product of determined action and patience. Major clean-up and rebuilding activities have already been executed with great success. New roofing material has been put on the structure and it has been sealed to prevent further water damage. A new deadbolt-lock was also installed over the winter break. The next couple of weeks will also be work intensive as the club paints the structure and redesigns a custom mount for the telescope.
In that respect, my personal contribution to this team effort will be to help in the restoration of the telescope and its installation on Tumamoc Hill. The first duty that needs to be performed is to clean the primary mirror of the telescope. Stellar Vision, a local store dedicated to astronomical equipment, quoted the club a price of forty dollars to collimate and clean the telescope. This is an excellent deal.
I am also involved in the designing of a new mount for the telescope. The mount that is currently on the two-pier foundation is made to hold a telescope smaller than the one we wish to install. Using the computer program AutoCad a new design based on the old one was drawn up and is ready to be submitted to the appropriate machine shop once funding is available.
I look forward to seeing this project reach its natural conclusion- that is, a telescope placed in an abandoned building by the end of the semester. The scope of this project will certainly encompass not only undergraduate club members, but also any activities that support the mission of the astronomy club such as giving children from various schools an opportunity to participate in astronomy related activities (as the club has done in the past). There is no doubt that the night of "first light" will be far brighter than any other atop Tumamoc Hill.


(Some day I might come back here and post the pictures of the work in progress and final installation of the telescope... Unfortunately in the decades that followed, not all future students were quite as motivated to maintain it... and once again things fell into disrepair. Ah...entropy.)

1 Comment
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    Adam has been interested in astronomy since the age of 4... maybe earlier. 

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I sit here at my computer trying to think of words to describe how impressive this image is to me. The best I can do falls so far short of acceptable that I will not even try... The wonder and awe of an image like this is why I love astronomy so very much. Thank you allowing me the pleasure of seeing it. - D. Mosely
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