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Lowell Observatory

Lowell Observatory is an astronomical observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, United States. Lowell Observatory was established in 1894, placing it among the oldest observatories in the United States, and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965.[2][3] In 2011, the Observatory was named one of "The World's 100 Most Important Places" by Time Magazine.[4] It was at the Lowell Observatory that the dwarf planet Pluto was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh.

Lowell Observatory
The Clark Telescope Dome on Mars Hill
Alternative namesFlagstaff Observatory
OrganizationPrivate institution
Observatory code 690 
LocationFlagstaff, Arizona
Coordinates35°12′10″N 111°39′52″W / 35.20278°N 111.66444°W / 35.20278; -111.66444Coordinates: 35°12′10″N 111°39′52″W / 35.20278°N 111.66444°W / 35.20278; -111.66444
Altitude2,210 m (7,250 ft)
Established1894
Websitehttp://www.lowell.edu
Telescopes
Lowell Discovery Telescope4.28 m (169 in) telescope (located at Happy Jack, Arizona)
Perkins Telescope180 cm (72 in) cassegrain telescope (located at Anderson Mesa)
John S. Hall Telescope110 cm (42 in) Ritchey-Chretien telescope (located at Anderson Mesa)
Unnamed telescope79 cm (31 in) reflecting telescope (located at Anderson Mesa)
LONEOS Schmidt Telescope64 cm (25 in) catadioptric (located at Anderson Mesa)
24-inch Clark Telescope61 cm (24 in) Alvan Clark refractor
Unnamed telescope53 cm (21 in) reflecting telescope
Unnamed telescope46 cm (18 in) astrograph
John Vickers McAllister Telescope41 cm (16 in) Boller and Chivens cassegrain telescope
Abbot L. Lowell Astrograph (Pluto Discovery Telescope)33 cm (13 in) astrograph
Planet Search Survey Telescope(located at Anderson Mesa)
Navy Precision Optical Interferometersix-aperture astronomical interferometer with baselines up to 437 m (1,434 ft) (located at Anderson Mesa, operated in partnership with the USNO (through NOFS) and the NRL)
Lowell Observatory
The Slipher Rotunda Museum at Lowell Observatory
Built1894
MPSFlagstaff MRA (AD)
NRHP reference No.66000172
Significant dates
Added to NRHPOctober 15, 1966[1]
Designated NHLDecember 21, 1965[2]
Location of Lowell Observatory
  Related media on Commons

The observatory was founded by astronomer Percival Lowell of Boston's Lowell family and is overseen by a sole trustee, a position historically handed down through the family. The first trustee was Lowell's third cousin Guy Lowell (1916–1927). Percival's nephew Roger Putnam served from 1927 to 1967, followed by Roger's son Michael (1967–1987), Michael's brother William Lowell Putnam III (1987–2013), and current trustee W. Lowell Putnam.

Multiple astronauts attended the Lowell Observatory in 1963 while the moon was being mapped for the Apollo Program.[4]

The observatory operates several telescopes at three locations in the Flagstaff area. The main facility, located on Mars Hill just west of downtown Flagstaff, houses the original 61-centimeter (24-inch) Clark Refracting Telescope, which is now used for public education, with 85,000 annual visitors. The telescope, built in 1896 for $20,000, was assembled in Boston by Alvan Clark & Sons and then shipped by train to Flagstaff. Also located on the Mars Hill campus is the 33-centimeter (13-inch) Pluto Discovery Telescope, used by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 to discover the dwarf planet Pluto.

In 2014, the 8,000 square feet (740 m2) Putnam Center was opened.[5] This observatory included many rooms with tools that were useful to observers including a library for research, a room for processing photographic glass plates, multiple antique instruments used by previous astronomers, and many artifacts. The observatory does contain areas that are closed to the public view, although there are multiple places that tourists are welcome to visit.[4]

Lowell Observatory currently operates four research telescopes at its Anderson Mesa dark-sky site, located 20 km (12 mi) southeast of Flagstaff, including the 180-centimeter (72-inch) Perkins Telescope (in partnership with Boston University) and the 110-centimeter (42-inch) John S. Hall Telescope. Lowell is a partner with the United States Naval Observatory and Naval Research Laboratory in the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer (NPOI) also located at that site. The Observatory also operates smaller research telescopes at its historic site on Mars Hill and in Australia and Chile.

Past Anderson Mesa, on the peak of Happy Jack, Lowell Observatory built the 4.28-meter (169-inch) Lowell Discovery Telescope in partnership with Discovery Communications, Inc.

History

The observatory has carried out a wide array of research. One of its programs was the measurement of the variability of solar irradiance.[6] When Harold L. Johnson took over as the director in 1952, the stated objective became to focus on light from the Sun reflecting from Uranus and Neptune.[6] In 1953, the current 53 cm (21-inch) telescope was erected.[6] Beginning in 1954, this telescope began monitoring the brightness of these two planets, and comparing these measurements with a reference set of Sun-like stars.[6]

Self-taught astronomer Robert Burnham Jr. was an employee at Lowell observatory from 1958 – 1979, being known for his Celestial Handbook.

Beginning in 2012, Lowell Observatory began offering camps for children known as LOCKs (Lowell Observatory Camps for Kids). The first camp was established for elementary students. Later on, in 2013, they added an additional camp program for preschool children. The following year they added another program for middle school students. (“Kelly”, Manager at Lowell Observatory). Kids have the opportunity to learn hands-on about science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) through a variety of activities that include games, experiments, story time, art, music, and more.

In 2016, Kevin Schindler published Lowell Observatory, a 128-page book containing over 200 captions and pictures. Arcadia Publishing’s Images of America included it in their series, which increased the enthusiasm of space in the public. The book itself features the popular reputation of Lowell Observatory, encompassing the revolutionary research of scientists and how they contributed to the field of astronomy.[4][7]

Exhibits

  • The Rotunda Museum: Built in 1916, it is used by the observatory as a library and collection area for artifacts. It features displays that discuss the Lowell family history and the discoveries made at the observatory. It also houses many different measuring tools including Thatcher’s Calculating Instrument.[8]
  • Putnam Collection Center/ Lowell’s Lunar Legacy: When the Rotunda Museum is closed, the Putnam Collection Center and Lowell’s Lunar Legacy, are open to the public. The Center highlights the Observatories history and features artifacts from Lowell’s past and other scientific discoveries.[8]
  • The Giovale Open Deck Observatory: It is the newest addition to the Lowell observatory that allows guests to learn astronomy during the day and night. It features six telescopes, six plinths on the deck’s circumference, and an APS spectrum display. The six telescopes on the deck are a 5.5-inch TEC wide-field refractor, an 8-inch Moonraker Victorian refractor, a 32-inch Starstructure Dobsonian reflector, a 16-inch Meade ACF catadioptric reflector, a 17-inch PlaneWave CDK catadioptric reflector, and a 14-inch PlaneWave CDK catadioptric reflector.[9]

Lowell Discovery Telescope

 
Lowell Discovery Telescope

Lowell Observatory owns and operates the Lowell Discovery Telescope (LDT, formerly the Discovery Channel Telescope) located near Happy Jack, Arizona. This 4.3-meter reflecting telescope is the fifth-largest telescope in the contiguous United States and one of the most powerful in the world, thanks to a unique housing that can accommodate up to five instruments at the Ritchey-Chrétien focus. The LDT can switch between any of these instruments in about a minute, making it uniquely suited for time-domain programs as well as opportunity targets such as gamma ray bursts and supernovae.

The 6700-pound primary mirror measures 4.3 m (170 in) in diameter yet only about 10 cm (3.9 in) in thickness. This finely figured, thin meniscus mirror, held in shape by a 156-element active optics system, regularly delivers sub-arcsecond seeing. The mirror was ground and polished into its hyperbolic shape at the Optical Fabrication and Engineering Facility of the College of Optical Sciences of the University of Arizona in Tucson.

The LDT is housed in a 73-foot-tall, 62-foot-diameter metal dome located at an elevation of 7,800 feet (2,400 m) and about 40 miles (64 km) southeast of Flagstaff. Groundbreaking for the facility occurred on July 11, 2005. A little over six years later, the first image from just the primary mirror was recorded, using a small test camera mounted where the secondary mirror would eventually go. The secondary mirror was installed in January 2012. To celebrate first light, Lowell hosted a gala celebration on July 21, 2012, featuring a keynote address by Neil Armstrong. This was his final public appearance before his death several weeks later.

The telescope is named for the Discovery Channel television network. Discovery founder and CEO John Hendricks has long been a member of Lowell Observatory’s Advisory Board, and Discovery and John and his wife Maureen made gifts of $16 million toward the $53 million cost of the project. These were gifts, not purchases: Discovery has no ownership in the telescope, nor any direction of the research conducted with it. In return for their contributions, they received naming rights and first right of refusal for use of images in educational broadcasts. Research use proceeds as it would at any other professional telescope.

Boston University, the University of Maryland, the University of Toledo, Northern Arizona University, and Yale University have joined Lowell as partners with access to DCT.

Current research

Lowell Observatory's astronomers conduct research on a wide range of solar system and astrophysical topics using ground-based, airborne, and space-based telescopes. Among the many current programs are a search for near-Earth asteroids, a survey of the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune, a search for extrasolar planets, a decades-long study of the brightness stability of the sun, and a variety of investigations of star formation and other processes in distant galaxies. In addition, the Observatory staff designs and builds custom instrumentation for use on Lowell's telescopes and elsewhere. For example, Lowell staff built a sophisticated high-speed camera for use on the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA). SOFIA is a joint project of NASA and DLR, the German space agency, and consists of a 2.5-meter (8.2-foot) telescope on board a Boeing 747 SP.

Discoveries

See also

References

Footnotes
  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "Lowell Observatory". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved September 27, 2007.
  3. ^ Marilynn Larew (October 31, 1977). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Lowell Observatory" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved May 5, 2009. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) and Accompanying six photos, exterior, from 1964 and 1976
  4. ^ a b c d "History". Lowell Observatory. Retrieved April 1, 2019.
  5. ^ "Putnam Collection Center".
  6. ^ a b c d Wotkyns, Steele (2006). "Lowell Observatory's 21-inch Telescope Delivering Long-Term Results". Reflector. the Astronomical League. LVIII (2): 16.
  7. ^ "Lowell Observatory". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved April 3, 2019.
  8. ^ a b "Museum Exhibits | Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, AZ". Lowell Observatory. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  9. ^ "The Giovale Open Deck Observatory". Lowell Observatory. Retrieved November 12, 2019.
  10. ^ Schleicher, David G.; Millis, Robert L.; Thompson, Don T.; Birch, Peter V.; Martin, Ralph; et al. (1990). "Periodic variations in the activity of Comet P/Halley during the 1985/1986 apparition". Astronomical Journal. 100: 896–912. Bibcode:1990AJ....100..896S. doi:10.1086/115570.
Sources
  • Strauss, David (1994). "Lowell, Percival, Pickering, W.H. and the founding of the Lowell Observatory". Annals of Science. 51 (1): 37–58. doi:10.1080/00033799400200121.
  • Strauss, David (2001), Percival Lowell: The Culture and Science of a Boston Brahmin, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0674002913, OCLC 44613096
  • Hoyt, William Graves (1996), Lowell and Mars, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, ISBN 978-0816505142, OCLC 18744671
  • Putnam, William Lowell (1994), The Explorers of Mars Hill: A Centennial History of Lowell Observatory, 1894–1994, New Hampshire: Phoenix Publishing, ISBN 978-0914659693, OCLC 243795932

External links

  • Lowell Observatory
  • Lowell Observatory Camps for Kids
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lowell Observatory
  • Flagstaff Clear Sky Clock Forecasts of observing conditions covering Lowell Observatory.
  • National Historic Landmarks Program: Lowell Observatory
Historic American Buildings Survey (photographic survey)
  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. AZ-206, "Lowell Observatory, 1400 West Mars Hill Road, Flagstaff, Coconino County, AZ"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-A, "Lowell Observatory, Slipher Building"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-B, "Lowell Observatory, Clark Dome"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-C, "Lowell Observatory, Pluto Dome"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-D, "Lowell Observatory, Mausoleum"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-E, "Lowell Observatory, Water Tank"
  • HABS No. AZ-206-F, "Lowell Observatory, Lodge"

lowell, observatory, confused, with, lovell, telescope, astronomical, observatory, flagstaff, arizona, united, states, established, 1894, placing, among, oldest, observatories, united, states, designated, national, historic, landmark, 1965, 2011, observatory, . Not to be confused with Lovell Telescope Lowell Observatory is an astronomical observatory in Flagstaff Arizona United States Lowell Observatory was established in 1894 placing it among the oldest observatories in the United States and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965 2 3 In 2011 the Observatory was named one of The World s 100 Most Important Places by Time Magazine 4 It was at the Lowell Observatory that the dwarf planet Pluto was discovered in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh Lowell ObservatoryThe Clark Telescope Dome on Mars HillAlternative namesFlagstaff ObservatoryOrganizationPrivate institutionObservatory code690 LocationFlagstaff ArizonaCoordinates35 12 10 N 111 39 52 W 35 20278 N 111 66444 W 35 20278 111 66444 Coordinates 35 12 10 N 111 39 52 W 35 20278 N 111 66444 W 35 20278 111 66444Altitude2 210 m 7 250 ft Established1894Websitehttp www lowell eduTelescopesLowell Discovery Telescope4 28 m 169 in telescope located at Happy Jack Arizona Perkins Telescope180 cm 72 in cassegrain telescope located at Anderson Mesa John S Hall Telescope110 cm 42 in Ritchey Chretien telescope located at Anderson Mesa Unnamed telescope79 cm 31 in reflecting telescope located at Anderson Mesa LONEOS Schmidt Telescope64 cm 25 in catadioptric located at Anderson Mesa 24 inch Clark Telescope61 cm 24 in Alvan Clark refractorUnnamed telescope53 cm 21 in reflecting telescopeUnnamed telescope46 cm 18 in astrographJohn Vickers McAllister Telescope41 cm 16 in Boller and Chivens cassegrain telescopeAbbot L Lowell Astrograph Pluto Discovery Telescope 33 cm 13 in astrographPlanet Search Survey Telescope located at Anderson Mesa Navy Precision Optical Interferometersix aperture astronomical interferometer with baselines up to 437 m 1 434 ft located at Anderson Mesa operated in partnership with the USNO through NOFS and the NRL Lowell ObservatoryU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkThe Slipher Rotunda Museum at Lowell ObservatoryShow map of ArizonaShow map of the United StatesBuilt1894MPSFlagstaff MRA AD NRHP reference No 66000172Significant datesAdded to NRHPOctober 15 1966 1 Designated NHLDecember 21 1965 2 Location of Lowell Observatory Related media on Commons edit on Wikidata The observatory was founded by astronomer Percival Lowell of Boston s Lowell family and is overseen by a sole trustee a position historically handed down through the family The first trustee was Lowell s third cousin Guy Lowell 1916 1927 Percival s nephew Roger Putnam served from 1927 to 1967 followed by Roger s son Michael 1967 1987 Michael s brother William Lowell Putnam III 1987 2013 and current trustee W Lowell Putnam Multiple astronauts attended the Lowell Observatory in 1963 while the moon was being mapped for the Apollo Program 4 The observatory operates several telescopes at three locations in the Flagstaff area The main facility located on Mars Hill just west of downtown Flagstaff houses the original 61 centimeter 24 inch Clark Refracting Telescope which is now used for public education with 85 000 annual visitors The telescope built in 1896 for 20 000 was assembled in Boston by Alvan Clark amp Sons and then shipped by train to Flagstaff Also located on the Mars Hill campus is the 33 centimeter 13 inch Pluto Discovery Telescope used by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 to discover the dwarf planet Pluto In 2014 the 8 000 square feet 740 m2 Putnam Center was opened 5 This observatory included many rooms with tools that were useful to observers including a library for research a room for processing photographic glass plates multiple antique instruments used by previous astronomers and many artifacts The observatory does contain areas that are closed to the public view although there are multiple places that tourists are welcome to visit 4 Lowell Observatory currently operates four research telescopes at its Anderson Mesa dark sky site located 20 km 12 mi southeast of Flagstaff including the 180 centimeter 72 inch Perkins Telescope in partnership with Boston University and the 110 centimeter 42 inch John S Hall Telescope Lowell is a partner with the United States Naval Observatory and Naval Research Laboratory in the Navy Precision Optical Interferometer NPOI also located at that site The Observatory also operates smaller research telescopes at its historic site on Mars Hill and in Australia and Chile Past Anderson Mesa on the peak of Happy Jack Lowell Observatory built the 4 28 meter 169 inch Lowell Discovery Telescope in partnership with Discovery Communications Inc Contents 1 History 2 Exhibits 3 Lowell Discovery Telescope 4 Current research 5 Discoveries 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThis section needs expansion with missing history of the earliest telescope and observatory how funded when built You can help by adding to it February 2022 The observatory has carried out a wide array of research One of its programs was the measurement of the variability of solar irradiance 6 When Harold L Johnson took over as the director in 1952 the stated objective became to focus on light from the Sun reflecting from Uranus and Neptune 6 In 1953 the current 53 cm 21 inch telescope was erected 6 Beginning in 1954 this telescope began monitoring the brightness of these two planets and comparing these measurements with a reference set of Sun like stars 6 Self taught astronomer Robert Burnham Jr was an employee at Lowell observatory from 1958 1979 being known for his Celestial Handbook Beginning in 2012 Lowell Observatory began offering camps for children known as LOCKs Lowell Observatory Camps for Kids The first camp was established for elementary students Later on in 2013 they added an additional camp program for preschool children The following year they added another program for middle school students Kelly Manager at Lowell Observatory Kids have the opportunity to learn hands on about science technology engineering and math STEM through a variety of activities that include games experiments story time art music and more In 2016 Kevin Schindler published Lowell Observatory a 128 page book containing over 200 captions and pictures Arcadia Publishing s Images of America included it in their series which increased the enthusiasm of space in the public The book itself features the popular reputation of Lowell Observatory encompassing the revolutionary research of scientists and how they contributed to the field of astronomy 4 7 Percival Lowell in the observer s chair of the Alvan Clark 61 cm 24 inch refractor Historic Clark telescope installed in 1896 and housed in a wooden dome resting on automobile tires 33 cm 13 inch astrograph used to discover PlutoExhibits EditThe Rotunda Museum Built in 1916 it is used by the observatory as a library and collection area for artifacts It features displays that discuss the Lowell family history and the discoveries made at the observatory It also houses many different measuring tools including Thatcher s Calculating Instrument 8 Putnam Collection Center Lowell s Lunar Legacy When the Rotunda Museum is closed the Putnam Collection Center and Lowell s Lunar Legacy are open to the public The Center highlights the Observatories history and features artifacts from Lowell s past and other scientific discoveries 8 The Giovale Open Deck Observatory It is the newest addition to the Lowell observatory that allows guests to learn astronomy during the day and night It features six telescopes six plinths on the deck s circumference and an APS spectrum display The six telescopes on the deck are a 5 5 inch TEC wide field refractor an 8 inch Moonraker Victorian refractor a 32 inch Starstructure Dobsonian reflector a 16 inch Meade ACF catadioptric reflector a 17 inch PlaneWave CDK catadioptric reflector and a 14 inch PlaneWave CDK catadioptric reflector 9 Lowell Discovery Telescope Edit Lowell Discovery Telescope Main article Lowell Discovery Telescope Lowell Observatory owns and operates the Lowell Discovery Telescope LDT formerly the Discovery Channel Telescope located near Happy Jack Arizona This 4 3 meter reflecting telescope is the fifth largest telescope in the contiguous United States and one of the most powerful in the world thanks to a unique housing that can accommodate up to five instruments at the Ritchey Chretien focus The LDT can switch between any of these instruments in about a minute making it uniquely suited for time domain programs as well as opportunity targets such as gamma ray bursts and supernovae The 6700 pound primary mirror measures 4 3 m 170 in in diameter yet only about 10 cm 3 9 in in thickness This finely figured thin meniscus mirror held in shape by a 156 element active optics system regularly delivers sub arcsecond seeing The mirror was ground and polished into its hyperbolic shape at the Optical Fabrication and Engineering Facility of the College of Optical Sciences of the University of Arizona in Tucson The LDT is housed in a 73 foot tall 62 foot diameter metal dome located at an elevation of 7 800 feet 2 400 m and about 40 miles 64 km southeast of Flagstaff Groundbreaking for the facility occurred on July 11 2005 A little over six years later the first image from just the primary mirror was recorded using a small test camera mounted where the secondary mirror would eventually go The secondary mirror was installed in January 2012 To celebrate first light Lowell hosted a gala celebration on July 21 2012 featuring a keynote address by Neil Armstrong This was his final public appearance before his death several weeks later The telescope is named for the Discovery Channel television network Discovery founder and CEO John Hendricks has long been a member of Lowell Observatory s Advisory Board and Discovery and John and his wife Maureen made gifts of 16 million toward the 53 million cost of the project These were gifts not purchases Discovery has no ownership in the telescope nor any direction of the research conducted with it In return for their contributions they received naming rights and first right of refusal for use of images in educational broadcasts Research use proceeds as it would at any other professional telescope Boston University the University of Maryland the University of Toledo Northern Arizona University and Yale University have joined Lowell as partners with access to DCT Current research EditLowell Observatory s astronomers conduct research on a wide range of solar system and astrophysical topics using ground based airborne and space based telescopes Among the many current programs are a search for near Earth asteroids a survey of the Kuiper Belt beyond Neptune a search for extrasolar planets a decades long study of the brightness stability of the sun and a variety of investigations of star formation and other processes in distant galaxies In addition the Observatory staff designs and builds custom instrumentation for use on Lowell s telescopes and elsewhere For example Lowell staff built a sophisticated high speed camera for use on the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy SOFIA SOFIA is a joint project of NASA and DLR the German space agency and consists of a 2 5 meter 8 2 foot telescope on board a Boeing 747 SP Discoveries EditSee also Category Discoveries by the Lowell Observatory and Planets beyond Neptune The dwarf planet Pluto by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 Large recessional velocities of galaxies by Vesto Melvin Slipher between 1912 and 1914 that led ultimately to the realization our universe is expanding Co discovery of the rings of Uranus in 1977 The periodic variation in the activity of Comet Halley during the 1985 1986 apparition 10 The three largest known stars The atmosphere of Pluto Accurate orbits for two of Pluto s moons Nix and Hydra Oxygen on Jupiter s satellite Ganymede Carbon dioxide ice on three Uranian satellites The first Trojan of Neptune Evidence that the atmosphere of HD 209458 b contains water vaporSee also EditList of astronomical observatories List of largest optical telescopes in the continental United StatesReferences EditFootnotes National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 a b Lowell Observatory National Historic Landmark summary listing National Park Service Retrieved September 27 2007 Marilynn Larew October 31 1977 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Lowell Observatory PDF National Park Service Retrieved May 5 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help and Accompanying six photos exterior from 1964 and 1976 a b c d History Lowell Observatory Retrieved April 1 2019 Putnam Collection Center a b c d Wotkyns Steele 2006 Lowell Observatory s 21 inch Telescope Delivering Long Term Results Reflector the Astronomical League LVIII 2 16 Lowell Observatory www goodreads com Retrieved April 3 2019 a b Museum Exhibits Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff AZ Lowell Observatory Retrieved November 12 2019 The Giovale Open Deck Observatory Lowell Observatory Retrieved November 12 2019 Schleicher David G Millis Robert L Thompson Don T Birch Peter V Martin Ralph et al 1990 Periodic variations in the activity of Comet P Halley during the 1985 1986 apparition Astronomical Journal 100 896 912 Bibcode 1990AJ 100 896S doi 10 1086 115570 SourcesStrauss David 1994 Lowell Percival Pickering W H and the founding of the Lowell Observatory Annals of Science 51 1 37 58 doi 10 1080 00033799400200121 Strauss David 2001 Percival Lowell The Culture and Science of a Boston Brahmin Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674002913 OCLC 44613096 Hoyt William Graves 1996 Lowell and Mars Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0816505142 OCLC 18744671 Putnam William Lowell 1994 The Explorers of Mars Hill A Centennial History of Lowell Observatory 1894 1994 New Hampshire Phoenix Publishing ISBN 978 0914659693 OCLC 243795932External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lowell Observatory Lowell Observatory Lowell Observatory Camps for Kids U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Lowell Observatory Lowell Discovery Telescope Flagstaff Clear Sky Clock Forecasts of observing conditions covering Lowell Observatory National Historic Landmarks Program Lowell ObservatoryHistoric American Buildings Survey photographic survey Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No AZ 206 Lowell Observatory 1400 West Mars Hill Road Flagstaff Coconino County AZ HABS No AZ 206 A Lowell Observatory Slipher Building HABS No AZ 206 B Lowell Observatory Clark Dome HABS No AZ 206 C Lowell Observatory Pluto Dome HABS No AZ 206 D Lowell Observatory Mausoleum HABS No AZ 206 E Lowell Observatory Water Tank HABS No AZ 206 F Lowell Observatory Lodge Portals Arizona Astronomy Stars Spaceflight Outer space Solar System Education Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lowell Observatory amp oldid 1081669045, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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