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Royal Observatory, Greenwich

The Royal Observatory, Greenwich (ROG;[1] known as the Old Royal Observatory from 1957 to 1998, when the working Royal Greenwich Observatory, RGO, temporarily moved south from Greenwich to Herstmonceux) is an observatory situated on a hill in Greenwich Park in south east London, overlooking the River Thames to the north. It played a major role in the history of astronomy and navigation, and because the Prime Meridian passes through it, it gave its name to Greenwich Mean Time, the precursor to today's Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The ROG has the IAU observatory code of 000, the first in the list.[2] ROG, the National Maritime Museum, the Queen's House and the clipper ship Cutty Sark are collectively designated Royal Museums Greenwich.[1]

Royal Observatory
Royal Observatory, Greenwich. A time ball sits atop the Octagon Room.
Alternative namesRoyal Greenwich Observatory
Observatory code 000 
LocationGreenwich, Royal Borough of Greenwich, Greenwich, United Kingdom
Coordinates51°28′40″N 0°00′05″W / 51.4778°N 0.0014°W / 51.4778; -0.0014Coordinates: 51°28′40″N 0°00′05″W / 51.4778°N 0.0014°W / 51.4778; -0.0014
Altitude68 m (223 ft)
Established1675 
Websitewww.rmg.co.uk/royal-observatory/
Telescopes
  • Altazimuth Pavilion At The Royal Observatory 
Location of Royal Observatory, Greenwich
  Related media on Commons
Flamsteed House in 1824
Royal Observatory, Greenwich, c. 1902, as depicted on a postcard

The observatory was commissioned in 1675 by King Charles II, with the foundation stone being laid on 10 August. The old hilltop site of Greenwich Castle was chosen by Sir Christopher Wren, a former Savilian Professor of Astronomy; as Greenwich Park was a royal estate, no new land needed to be bought.[3] At that time the king also created the position of Astronomer Royal, to serve as the director of the observatory and to "apply himself with the most exact care and diligence to the rectifying of the tables of the motions of the heavens, and the places of the fixed stars, so as to find out the so much desired longitude of places for the perfecting of the art of navigation." He appointed John Flamsteed as the first Astronomer Royal. The building was completed in the summer of 1676.[4] The building was often called "Flamsteed House", in reference to its first occupant.

The scientific work of the observatory was relocated elsewhere in stages in the first half of the 20th century, and the Greenwich site is now maintained almost exclusively as a museum, although the AMAT telescope became operational for astronomical research in 2018.

History

Chronology

  • 1675 – 22 June, Royal Observatory founded by King Charles II.
  • 1675 – 10 August, construction began.
  • 1714 Longitude Act established the Board of Longitude and Longitude rewards. The Astronomer Royal was, until the Board was dissolved in 1828, always an ex officio Commissioner of Longitude.
  • 1767 The fifth Astronomer Royal Nevil Maskelyne began publication of The Nautical Almanac, based on observations made at the Observatory.
  • 1818 Oversight of the Royal Observatory was transferred from the Board of Ordnance to the Board of Admiralty; at that time the observatory was charged with maintaining the Royal Navy's marine chronometers.
  • 1833 Daily time signals began, marked by dropping a time ball.
  • 1838 – Sheepshanks equatorial, a 6.7 inch (170 mm) aperture refracting telescope installed.[5]
  • 1893 – The 28-inch Great refractor installed.[6]
  • 1899 The New Physical Observatory (now known as the South Building) was completed.
  • 1924 Hourly time signals (Greenwich Time Signal) from the Royal Observatory were first broadcast on 5 February.
  • 1931 Yapp telescope ordered.
  • 1948 Office of the Astronomer Royal was moved to Herstmonceux in East Sussex.
  • 1957 Royal Observatory completed its move to Herstmonceux, becoming the Royal Greenwich Observatory (RGO). The Greenwich site was renamed the Old Royal Observatory.
  • 1990 RGO moved to Cambridge.
  • 1998 RGO closed. Greenwich site was returned to its original name, the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, and was made part of the National Maritime Museum.
  • 2011 The Greenwich museums, including the ROG, became collectively the Royal Museums Greenwich.

Site

 
Greenwich Observatory (Latinized as "Observatorium Anglicanum Hoc Grenovici prope Londinum"), as illustrated in Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr's map of the southern celestial hemisphere, ca. 1730

There had been significant buildings on this land since the reign of William I.[7][page needed] Greenwich Palace, on the site of the present-day Maritime Museum, was the birthplace of both Henry VIII and his daughters Mary I and Elizabeth I; the Tudors used Greenwich Castle, which stood on the hilltop that the Observatory presently occupies, as a hunting lodge. Greenwich Castle was reportedly a favourite place for Henry VIII to house his mistresses, so that he could easily travel from the Palace to see them.[8][page needed]

In 1676 the main building of the observatory, now known as Flamsteed House, was completed on Greenwich hill.[9]

Establishment

 
Royal Observatory, Greenwich
 
Dome of the Greenwich 28 inch refractor telescope and tree

The establishment of a Royal Observatory was proposed in 1674 by Sir Jonas Moore who, in his role as Surveyor-General of the Ordnance, persuaded King Charles II to create the observatory, with John Flamsteed installed as its director.[10] The Ordnance Office was given responsibility for building the Observatory, with Moore providing the key instruments and equipment for the observatory at his own personal cost. Flamsteed House, the original part of the Observatory, was designed by Sir Christopher Wren, probably assisted by Robert Hooke, and was the first purpose-built scientific research facility in Britain. It was built for a cost of £520 (£20 over budget; equivalent to £83,000 in 2021) out of largely recycled materials on the foundations of Duke Humphrey's Tower, the forerunner of Greenwich Castle, which resulted in the alignment being 13 degrees away from true North, somewhat to Flamsteed's chagrin.[citation needed]

Moore donated two clocks, built by Thomas Tompion, which were installed in the 20 foot high Octagon Room, the principal room of the building. They were of unusual design, each with a pendulum 13 feet (3.96 metres) in length mounted above the clock face, giving a period of four seconds and an accuracy, then unparalleled, of seven seconds per day.

The original observatory housed the astronomer royal, his assistant and his family as well as the scientific instruments to be used by Flamsteed in his work on stellar tables. Over time the institution became a more established institution, thanks to its links to long-lasting government boards (the Board of Ordnance and Board of Longitude) and oversight by a Board of Visitors, founded in 1710 and made up of the President and Members of the council of the Royal Society.[11] By the later 18th century it incorporated additional responsibilities such as publishing the Nautical Almanac, advising government on technical matters, disseminating time, making meteorological and magnetic observations and undertaking astrophotography and spectroscopy. The physical site[12] and the numbers of staff[13] increased over time as a result.

Positional astronomy and star charts

 
The Airy Transit Circle, used for over a century (1851–1953) as the reference point when charting the heavens and determining times, thus earning for it the epithet "the centre of time and space"

When the observatory was founded in 1675, one of the best star catalogues was Tycho Brahe's 1000-star catalogue from 1598.[14] However, this catalogue was not accurate enough to determine longitudes.[14] One of Flamsteed's first orders of business was creating more accurate charts suitable for this purpose.[14]

One of the noted charts made at Greenwich was by the Astronomer Royal James Bradley, who between 1750 and 1762 charted sixty thousand stars, so accurately his catalogues were used even in the 1940s.[14] Bradley was the third Astronomer Royal, and his tenure started in 1742.[15]

In the early 19th century, the main positional devices were the Troughton Transit instrument and a mural circle, but after George Biddell Airy took over as Astronomer Royal in 1835, he embarked on a plan to have better instruments at Greenwich observatory.[16]

Positional astronomy was one of the primary functions of Greenwich for the Admiralty.[17] The Astronomer Royal Airy was an advocate of this and the transit circle instrument he had installed in 1851 was used for a century for positional astronomy.[17] One of the difficulties with positional astronomy, is accounting for the refraction of light through Earth's atmosphere.[18] Sources of error include the precision of the instrumentation, and then there has to be accounting for precession, nutation, and aberration.[19] Sources of error in the instrument have to be tracked down and accounted for to produced more accurate results.[16]

The transit circle makes two measurements; along with a clock, the time a star passed a certain point in the sky as the Earth rotates, and the vertical angle of the location of the star.[20] The instrument can be used to plot the locations of stars, or alternately, with an accurate star chart, the time at the location of the instrument.[20]

1832 Transit of Mercury

The Shuckburgh telescope of the Royal Observatory in London was used for the 1832 transit of Mercury.[21] It was equipped with a filar micrometer by Peter Dollond and was used to provide a report of the events as seen through the small refractor.[21] By observing the transit in combination with timing it and taking measures, a diameter for the planet was taken.[21] They also reported the peculiar effects that they compared to pressing a coin into the Sun.[21] The observer remarked:

I afterwards observed, that immediately around the planet there was a dusky tinge, making it appear as if, in a small degree sunk below the sun's surface;"

— Royal Astronomical Society, Vol II, No. 13[21]

Greenwich Meridian

 
The building housing the origin of the Greenwich Prime Meridian
 
Laser projected from the observatory marking the Prime Meridian line
 
Laser at night

British astronomers have long used the Royal Observatory as a basis for measurement. Four separate meridians have passed through the buildings, defined by successive instruments.[22] The basis of longitude, the meridian that passes through the Airy transit circle, first used in 1851, was adopted as the world's Prime Meridian at the International Meridian Conference at Washington, DC, on 22 October 1884 (voting took place on 13 October).[23] Subsequently, nations across the world used it as their standard for mapping and timekeeping. The Prime Meridian was marked by a brass (later replaced by stainless steel) strip in the Observatory's courtyard once the buildings became a museum in 1960, and, since 16 December 1999, has been marked by a powerful green laser shining north across the London night sky.

Since the first triangulation of Great Britain in the period 1783–1853, Ordnance Survey maps have been based on an earlier version of the Greenwich meridian, defined by the transit instrument of James Bradley. When the Airy circle (5.79 m to the east) became the reference for the meridian, the difference resulting from the change was considered small enough to be neglected. When a new triangulation was done between 1936 and 1962, scientists determined that in the Ordnance Survey system the longitude of the international Greenwich meridian was not 0° but 0°00'00.417" (about 8 m) East.[24] Besides the change of the reference line, imperfections of the surveying system added another discrepancy to the definition of the origin, so that the Bradley line itself is now 0°00'00.12" East of the Ordnance Survey Zero Meridian (about 2.3m).[25]

This old astronomical prime meridian has been replaced by a more precise prime meridian. When Greenwich was an active observatory, geographical coordinates were referred to a local oblate spheroid called a datum known as a geoid, whose surface closely matched local mean sea level. Several datums were in use around the world, all using different spheroids, because mean sea level undulates by as much as 100 metres worldwide. Modern geodetic reference systems, such as the World Geodetic System and the International Terrestrial Reference Frame, use a single oblate spheroid, fixed to the Earth's gravitational centre. The shift from several local spheroids to one worldwide spheroid caused all geographical coordinates to shift by many metres, sometimes as much as several hundred metres. The Prime Meridian of these modern reference systems, called IERS (International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service) Reference Meridian (shortly called IRM), is 102.5 metres east of the Greenwich astronomical meridian represented by the stainless steel strip, which is now 5.31 arcseconds West. The modern location of the Airy Transit is 51°28′40.1″N 0°0′5.3″W / 51.477806°N 0.001472°W / 51.477806; -0.001472 (Airy Transit) as the IRM is at 0 degree in longitude nowadays.[26]

International time from the end of the 19th century until UT1 was based on Simon Newcomb's equations, giving a mean sun about 0.18 seconds behind UT1 (the equivalent of 2.7 arcseconds) as of 2013; it coincided in 2013 with a meridian halfway between Airy's circle and the IERS origin: 51°28′40.1247″N 0°0′2.61″W / 51.477812417°N 0.0007250°W / 51.477812417; -0.0007250.[27]

Greenwich Mean Time

 
Shepherd Gate Clock at Royal Greenwich Observatory
 
One of the hyper-accurate timekeepers at the observatory

Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) was until 1954 based on celestial observations made at Greenwich, and later on observations made at other observatories. GMT was formally renamed as Universal Time in 1935, but is still commonly referred to as GMT, though they are not identical. It is now calculated from observations of extra-galactic radio sources.

The observatory is noted as the home of the prime meridian and Greenwich mean time.[28]

A key instrument for determining time was the Airy Transit Circle, which was used primarily from 1851 to 1938.[29] It was agreed in 1884 that the "meridian line marked by the cross-hairs in the Airy Transit Circle eyepiece would indicate 0° longitude and the start of the Universal Day" according to RMG.[29] The time is determined by marking the time a star of known location would pass through the aimpoint of the telescope.[29] In a reverse case, this type of instrument was also used for making star charts.[29]

The stars whose position was known precisely enough for being used for time determination, were called "clock stars."[29]

Greenwich Time Ball

 
The time ball is the red ball on a post – when it drops a certain time is signalled. This allowed clocks to be set from afar with great accuracy, particularly the chronometers of ships on the River Thames below, prior to sailing. The observatory would first determine the time by stellar observations.

The red time ball of Greenwich was established in 1833, and is noted as a public time signal.[30] The time ball in modern times is normally in a lowered position, then starting at 12:55 pm, the ball begins to rise, then at 12:58 it reaches the top; at 1 pm the ball drops.[30]

To help mariners at the port and others in line of sight of the observatory to synchronise their clocks to GMT, Astronomer Royal John Pond installed a very visible time ball that drops precisely at 1 pm (13:00) every day atop the observatory in 1833. Initially it was dropped by an operator; from 1852 it was released automatically via an electric impulse from the Shepherd Master Clock.[31] The ball is still dropped daily at 13:00 (GMT in winter, BST in summer).[32]

The original time ball system was built by Messrs Maudslay and Field, and cost £180.[33] The five-foot diameter ball was made of wood and leather.[33] In the original ball system, it was hoisted by a rope up from the Octagon room, and there was catch at the top to hold it.[33] This could then be triggered by hand, while observing the time on an astronomical month clock, that was regulated to the mean solar time.[33]

By dropping the ball, the public, mariners, and clock makers could then get a time signal by viewing it from afar.[33] The ball drop would be repeated at 2 pm also if possible.[33]

The reason why 12 noon was not chosen was because astronomers at the observatory would record when the Sun crossed the meridian at that time on that day.[34]

In rare occasions where the ball could get stuck due to icing or snow, and if the wind was too high it would not be dropped.[33][35] In 1852, it was established to distribute a time signal by the telegraph wires also.[33]

The time ball was extremely popular with the public, chronometers, railways, mariners, and there was a petition to have another time ball established in Southampton also.[33]

1890s

 
Dome of the Great Equatorial Building overlooking Greenwich Park
 
21st-century view of the Altazimuth Pavilion

The 1890s marked the addition of a new larger refractor, the 28-inch Grubb in the Great Equatorial Dome. Because the new telescope was longer than the old Great refractor, the new dome had to be bigger; thus the famous "onion dome" that expands beyond the diameter of the turret was established. For the tricentennial, it was revitalized with a fibre-glass dome; the old one made of papier-mâché and iron had been taken down.

The telescope was installed by 1893, with 28-inch diameter glass doublet lens made by Grubb from Chance of Birmingham glass.[36][page needed] The new dome was made by T. Cooke and Sons.[36][page needed] This replaced a smaller drum-shaped dome.[36]

The Lassell two-foot reflector was a famous metal-mirror telescope that had been used to discover the Moons Triton and Hyperion.[37] It was donated to the observatory in the 1880s, but was taken down in the 1890s.[37]

The 1890s also saw the construction of the Altazimuth Pavilion, completed in 1896 and designed by William Crisp.[38] In 1898 the Christie Enclosure was established to house sensitive magnetic instruments that had been disrupted by the use of iron at the main facility.[39]

The Observatory underwent an attempted bombing on 15 February 1894. This was possibly the first "international terrorist" incident in Britain.[40] The bomb was accidentally detonated while being held by 26-year-old French anarchist Martial Bourdin in Greenwich Park, near the Observatory building. Bourdin died about 30 minutes later. It is not known why he chose the observatory, or whether the detonation was intended to occur elsewhere. The novelist Joseph Conrad used the incident in his 1907 novel The Secret Agent.[41]

Early 20th century

 
Standard lengths on the wall of the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, London – 1 yard (3 feet), 2 feet, 1 foot, 6 inches (1/2-foot), and 3 inches. The separation of the inside faces of the marks is exact at an ambient temperature of 60 °F (16 °C) and a rod of the correct measure, resting on the pins, will fit snugly between them.[42][43]

For major parts of the twentieth century, the Royal Greenwich Observatory was not at Greenwich, because it moved to Herstmonceux in Sussex in 1957. The last time that all departments were in Greenwich was 1924: in that year electrification of the railways affected the readings of the Magnetic and Meteorological Departments, and the Magnetic Observatory moved to Abinger in Surrey. Prior to this, the observatory had had to insist that the electric trams in the vicinity could not use an earth return for the traction current.[44]

After the onset of World War II in 1939, many departments were temporarily evacuated out of range of German bombers, to Abinger, Bradford on Avon, Bristol,[45] and Bath,[46] and activities in Greenwich were reduced to the bare minimum.

On 15 October 1940, during the Blitz, the Courtyard gates were destroyed by a direct bomb hit. The wall above the Gate Clock collapsed, and the clock's dial was damaged. The damage was repaired after the war.[47]

The Royal Observatory at Herstmonceux

 
Aerial view of the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux site in East Sussex; the dome that formerly housed the Isaac Newton Telescope is the single dome to the right. The telescope was moved to La Palma in the Canary Isles in 1979.

After the Second World War, in 1947, the decision was made to move the Royal Observatory to Herstmonceux Castle[48] and 320 adjacent acres (1.3 km2), 70 km south-southeast of Greenwich near Hailsham in East Sussex, due to light pollution in London. The Observatory was officially known as the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux. Although the Astronomer Royal Harold Spencer Jones moved to the castle in 1948, the scientific staff did not move until the observatory buildings were completed, in 1957. Shortly thereafter, other previously dispersed departments were reintegrated at Herstmonceux, such as the Nautical Almanac Office, Chronometer Department, the library, and observing equipment.[49]

The largest telescope at Greenwich at that time, the Yapp telescope 36-inch reflector, was moved out to Herstmonceux in 1958.[50] There it was reconstructed in Dome B of the facility.[50] There it was used for astronomy in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. It was left behind at Herstmonceux in 1990 in its dome when the organization moved once again.[49]

The tricentennial of Sir Isaac Newton had passed during the Second World War, delaying festivities. One of the ground-swells was to build a 'big better' telescope in honour of the celebrated inventor of the Newtonian reflecting telescope. Some two decades of development led to the commissioning of the Isaac Newton Telescope at Herstmonceux. It proved so successful that the cloudy weather was felt to be a bottleneck to its productivity, and plans were made to get it to a higher spot with better weather.

On 1 December 1967, the Isaac Newton Telescope of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux was inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II.[51] The telescope was the biggest telescope by aperture in the British Isles.[52] It was moved to Roque de los Muchachos Observatory in Spain's Canary Islands in 1979. In 1990 the RGO moved to Cambridge.[53] At Herstmonceux, the castle grounds became the home of the International Study Centre of Queen's University, Kingston, Canada, and The Observatory Science Centre,[54] which is operated by an educational charity Science Project.

 
Former Royal Greenwich Observatory, Herstmonceux, East Sussex

The Observatory Science Centre opened in April 1995.[55] Some of the remaining telescopes, which were left behind in the move, have public observation events as part of operations of the centre.[55] The centre has established itself as a noted tourist and education attraction in its own right, featuring many old observatory items as exhibits.[56] It was getting 60,000 visitors per year in the early 21st century.[55]

The Royal Observatory at Cambridge

 
Greenwich House at Cambridge

In 1990 the Royal Observatory moved from Herstmonceux to a new site at Cambridge, adjacent to the University's Institute of Astronomy, where it occupied Greenwich House just to the north of the Cambridge Observatory. By now, the RGO's focus had moved from carrying out observations from the British Isles to providing technical support, acting as a conduit between scientists in British universities and the powerful British-owned telescopes (such as the Isaac Newton Telescope, the Anglo-Dutch Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope, and the William Herschel Telescope) on the Canary Islands and Hawaii.[57]

After abandoning a plan to privatise the RGO and the Royal Observatory Edinburgh, the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC) as the RGO's funding body made the decision to close the institution and the Cambridge site by 1998.[57] When the RGO was closed as an institution, the HM Nautical Almanac Office transferred to the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (Harwell Science and Innovation Campus, Chilton, Oxfordshire), while other work went to the UK Astronomy Technology Centre in Edinburgh. The old observatory site at Greenwich returned to its original name – the Royal Observatory, Greenwich – and was made part of the National Maritime Museum.

In 2002 the UK joined the European Southern Observatory, building the VISTA infrared telescope at the Paranal Observatory as an in-kind contribution.

The Astronomer Royal Martin Rees called PPARC "irresponsible" for how it handled the RGO.[58]

Greenwich site returns to active use

 
The Queen's House (centre left) at Greenwich, with the Royal Observatory on the skyline behind, in 2017.

In 2018 the Annie Maunder Astrographic Telescope (AMAT) was installed at the ROG in Greenwich.[59][60] AMAT is a cluster of four separate instruments, to be used for astronomical research; it had achieved first light by June 2018, and contains:[61]

  • A 14-inch reflector that can take high-resolution images of the sun, moon and planets.
  • An instrument dedicated to observing the sun.
  • An instrument with interchangeable filters to view distant nebulae at different optical wavelengths.
  • A general-purpose telescope.

The telescopes and the works at the site required to operate them cost about £150,000, from grants, museum members and patrons, and public donations.

The telescope was installed in the Altazimuth Pavilion,[62] from which the multi-purpose telescope is controlled by a computer system.[62]

Magnetic observations

 
The Magnetic Pavilion, 1900

The first magnetic observation was taken in 1680 by the first Astronomer Royal, John Flamsteed, using a magnetic needle from the Royal Society.[63] The second and third Astronomers Royal, Edmond Halley and then James Bradley, also took some magnetic measurements during their tenure.[63]

In the 19th century George Airy established the Magnetical and Meteorological Department.[63]

The first Magnetic House was built next to the observatory but by 1900 a second, about 300–400 metres from the main observatory, was built to reduce magnetic interference.[64] Both houses were made of non-magnetic materials.[64] The older building was called the Magnet House, but iron added to buildings in the 1890s at the observatory was throwing off measurements, so the instruments were moved to the Magnetic Pavilion.[64] A new Magnetograph House was also completed by 1914.[64]

One of the special events that occurred in the study of magnetism was when François Arago and Alexander von Humboldt took magnetic observations at Greenwich in 1822.[65] In 1825 Arago won the Copley Gold Medal for this research[65] (see also Arago's rotations).

Observatory museum

 
Tourists flock to the Observatory museum, 2009

The observatory buildings at Greenwich became a museum of astronomical and navigational tools, which is part of the Royal Museums Greenwich.[66] Notable exhibits include John Harrison's pioneering chronometer, known as H4, for which he received a large reward from the Board of Longitude, and his three earlier marine timekeepers; all four are the property of the Ministry of Defence. Many additional horological artefacts are displayed, documenting the history of precision timekeeping for navigational and astronomical purposes, including the mid-20th-century Russian-made F.M. Fedchenko clock (the most accurate pendulum clock ever built in multiple copies). It also houses the astronomical instruments used to make meridian observations and the 28-inch equatorial Grubb refracting telescope of 1893, the largest of its kind in the UK. The Shepherd Clock outside the observatory gate is an early example of an electric slave clock.[citation needed]

In 1997 the observatory site was getting 400,000 visitors per year.[67]

In February 2005 a £16 million redevelopment comprising a new planetarium and additional display galleries and educational facilities was started; the ROG reopened on 25 May 2007 with the new 120-seat Peter Harrison Planetarium.[68]

For a year between 2016 and 2017 the Museum reported 2.41 million visitors.[69]

Site

 
The centuries-old Flamsteed House overlooking Greenwich Park in London. The statue at left is of Major General James Wolfe, who died capturing Quebec in 1759, and was buried in St Alfege Church, Greenwich.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "List of Observatory Codes". Minor Planet Center. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Greenwich and the Millennium". 2015. Retrieved 6 September 2015.
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  6. ^ "The Royal Observatory Greenwich - where east meets west: Telescope: 28-inch Refractor (1893)". www.royalobservatorygreenwich.org. Retrieved 25 October 2019.
  7. ^ John Timbs' Abbeys, Castles and Ancient Halls of England and Wales
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  38. ^ "The Royal Observatory Greenwich - where east meets west: The Altazimuth Pavilion". www.royalobservatorygreenwich.org. Retrieved 8 November 2019.
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Further reading

  • Greenwich Observatory: ... the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and Herstmonceux, 1675–1975. London: Taylor & Francis, 1975 3v. (Vol. 1. Origins and early history (1675–1835), by Eric G. Forbes. ISBN 0-85066-093-9; Vol. 2. Recent history (1836–1975), by A.J. Meadows. ISBN 0-85066-094-7; Vol. 3. The buildings and instruments by Derek Howse. ISBN 0-85066-095-5)

External links

  • Royal Museums Greenwich (RMG) Web site – includes section on Royal Observatory Greenwich (ROG)
    • ROG on RMG Web site
  • Online catalogue of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Archives (held at Cambridge University Library)
  • "Where the Earth's surface begins—and ends", Popular Mechanics, December 1930
  • Aerial View of The Royal Observatory, Greenwich at Google Maps
  • Castle in the sky – The story of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux
  • Map of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux
  • A Personal History of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux Castle, 1948–1990 by George Wilkins, a former staff member
  • The Observatory Science Centre
  • Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes
  • A pictorial catalogue of meridian markers

royal, observatory, greenwich, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, known, royal, observatory, from, 1957, 1998, when, working, royal, greenwich, observatory, temporarily, moved, south, from, greenwich, herstmonceux, observatory, situated, hill, green. RGO redirects here For other uses see RGO disambiguation The Royal Observatory Greenwich ROG 1 known as the Old Royal Observatory from 1957 to 1998 when the working Royal Greenwich Observatory RGO temporarily moved south from Greenwich to Herstmonceux is an observatory situated on a hill in Greenwich Park in south east London overlooking the River Thames to the north It played a major role in the history of astronomy and navigation and because the Prime Meridian passes through it it gave its name to Greenwich Mean Time the precursor to today s Coordinated Universal Time UTC The ROG has the IAU observatory code of 000 the first in the list 2 ROG the National Maritime Museum the Queen s House and the clipper ship Cutty Sark are collectively designated Royal Museums Greenwich 1 Royal ObservatoryRoyal Observatory Greenwich A time ball sits atop the Octagon Room Alternative namesRoyal Greenwich ObservatoryObservatory code000 LocationGreenwich Royal Borough of Greenwich Greenwich United KingdomCoordinates51 28 40 N 0 00 05 W 51 4778 N 0 0014 W 51 4778 0 0014 Coordinates 51 28 40 N 0 00 05 W 51 4778 N 0 0014 W 51 4778 0 0014Altitude68 m 223 ft Established1675 Websitewww wbr rmg wbr co wbr uk wbr royal observatory wbr TelescopesAltazimuth Pavilion At The Royal Observatory Location of Royal Observatory Greenwich Related media on Commons edit on Wikidata Flamsteed House in 1824 Royal Observatory Greenwich c 1902 as depicted on a postcard The observatory was commissioned in 1675 by King Charles II with the foundation stone being laid on 10 August The old hilltop site of Greenwich Castle was chosen by Sir Christopher Wren a former Savilian Professor of Astronomy as Greenwich Park was a royal estate no new land needed to be bought 3 At that time the king also created the position of Astronomer Royal to serve as the director of the observatory and to apply himself with the most exact care and diligence to the rectifying of the tables of the motions of the heavens and the places of the fixed stars so as to find out the so much desired longitude of places for the perfecting of the art of navigation He appointed John Flamsteed as the first Astronomer Royal The building was completed in the summer of 1676 4 The building was often called Flamsteed House in reference to its first occupant The scientific work of the observatory was relocated elsewhere in stages in the first half of the 20th century and the Greenwich site is now maintained almost exclusively as a museum although the AMAT telescope became operational for astronomical research in 2018 Contents 1 History 1 1 Chronology 1 2 Site 1 3 Establishment 1 4 Positional astronomy and star charts 1 5 1832 Transit of Mercury 1 6 Greenwich Meridian 1 7 Greenwich Mean Time 1 8 Greenwich Time Ball 1 9 1890s 1 10 Early 20th century 1 11 The Royal Observatory at Herstmonceux 1 12 The Royal Observatory at Cambridge 1 13 Greenwich site returns to active use 2 Magnetic observations 3 Observatory museum 4 Site 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditChronology Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1675 22 June Royal Observatory founded by King Charles II 1675 10 August construction began 1714 Longitude Act established the Board of Longitude and Longitude rewards The Astronomer Royal was until the Board was dissolved in 1828 always an ex officio Commissioner of Longitude 1767 The fifth Astronomer Royal Nevil Maskelyne began publication of The Nautical Almanac based on observations made at the Observatory 1818 Oversight of the Royal Observatory was transferred from the Board of Ordnance to the Board of Admiralty at that time the observatory was charged with maintaining the Royal Navy s marine chronometers 1833 Daily time signals began marked by dropping a time ball 1838 Sheepshanks equatorial a 6 7 inch 170 mm aperture refracting telescope installed 5 1893 The 28 inch Great refractor installed 6 1899 The New Physical Observatory now known as the South Building was completed 1924 Hourly time signals Greenwich Time Signal from the Royal Observatory were first broadcast on 5 February 1931 Yapp telescope ordered 1948 Office of the Astronomer Royal was moved to Herstmonceux in East Sussex 1957 Royal Observatory completed its move to Herstmonceux becoming the Royal Greenwich Observatory RGO The Greenwich site was renamed the Old Royal Observatory 1990 RGO moved to Cambridge 1998 RGO closed Greenwich site was returned to its original name the Royal Observatory Greenwich and was made part of the National Maritime Museum 2011 The Greenwich museums including the ROG became collectively the Royal Museums Greenwich Site Edit Greenwich Observatory Latinized as Observatorium Anglicanum Hoc Grenovici prope Londinum as illustrated in Johann Gabriel Doppelmayr s map of the southern celestial hemisphere ca 1730 There had been significant buildings on this land since the reign of William I 7 page needed Greenwich Palace on the site of the present day Maritime Museum was the birthplace of both Henry VIII and his daughters Mary I and Elizabeth I the Tudors used Greenwich Castle which stood on the hilltop that the Observatory presently occupies as a hunting lodge Greenwich Castle was reportedly a favourite place for Henry VIII to house his mistresses so that he could easily travel from the Palace to see them 8 page needed In 1676 the main building of the observatory now known as Flamsteed House was completed on Greenwich hill 9 Establishment Edit Royal Observatory Greenwich Dome of the Greenwich 28 inch refractor telescope and tree The establishment of a Royal Observatory was proposed in 1674 by Sir Jonas Moore who in his role as Surveyor General of the Ordnance persuaded King Charles II to create the observatory with John Flamsteed installed as its director 10 The Ordnance Office was given responsibility for building the Observatory with Moore providing the key instruments and equipment for the observatory at his own personal cost Flamsteed House the original part of the Observatory was designed by Sir Christopher Wren probably assisted by Robert Hooke and was the first purpose built scientific research facility in Britain It was built for a cost of 520 20 over budget equivalent to 83 000 in 2021 out of largely recycled materials on the foundations of Duke Humphrey s Tower the forerunner of Greenwich Castle which resulted in the alignment being 13 degrees away from true North somewhat to Flamsteed s chagrin citation needed Moore donated two clocks built by Thomas Tompion which were installed in the 20 foot high Octagon Room the principal room of the building They were of unusual design each with a pendulum 13 feet 3 96 metres in length mounted above the clock face giving a period of four seconds and an accuracy then unparalleled of seven seconds per day The original observatory housed the astronomer royal his assistant and his family as well as the scientific instruments to be used by Flamsteed in his work on stellar tables Over time the institution became a more established institution thanks to its links to long lasting government boards the Board of Ordnance and Board of Longitude and oversight by a Board of Visitors founded in 1710 and made up of the President and Members of the council of the Royal Society 11 By the later 18th century it incorporated additional responsibilities such as publishing the Nautical Almanac advising government on technical matters disseminating time making meteorological and magnetic observations and undertaking astrophotography and spectroscopy The physical site 12 and the numbers of staff 13 increased over time as a result Positional astronomy and star charts Edit The Airy Transit Circle used for over a century 1851 1953 as the reference point when charting the heavens and determining times thus earning for it the epithet the centre of time and space When the observatory was founded in 1675 one of the best star catalogues was Tycho Brahe s 1000 star catalogue from 1598 14 However this catalogue was not accurate enough to determine longitudes 14 One of Flamsteed s first orders of business was creating more accurate charts suitable for this purpose 14 One of the noted charts made at Greenwich was by the Astronomer Royal James Bradley who between 1750 and 1762 charted sixty thousand stars so accurately his catalogues were used even in the 1940s 14 Bradley was the third Astronomer Royal and his tenure started in 1742 15 In the early 19th century the main positional devices were the Troughton Transit instrument and a mural circle but after George Biddell Airy took over as Astronomer Royal in 1835 he embarked on a plan to have better instruments at Greenwich observatory 16 Positional astronomy was one of the primary functions of Greenwich for the Admiralty 17 The Astronomer Royal Airy was an advocate of this and the transit circle instrument he had installed in 1851 was used for a century for positional astronomy 17 One of the difficulties with positional astronomy is accounting for the refraction of light through Earth s atmosphere 18 Sources of error include the precision of the instrumentation and then there has to be accounting for precession nutation and aberration 19 Sources of error in the instrument have to be tracked down and accounted for to produced more accurate results 16 The transit circle makes two measurements along with a clock the time a star passed a certain point in the sky as the Earth rotates and the vertical angle of the location of the star 20 The instrument can be used to plot the locations of stars or alternately with an accurate star chart the time at the location of the instrument 20 1832 Transit of Mercury Edit The Shuckburgh telescope of the Royal Observatory in London was used for the 1832 transit of Mercury 21 It was equipped with a filar micrometer by Peter Dollond and was used to provide a report of the events as seen through the small refractor 21 By observing the transit in combination with timing it and taking measures a diameter for the planet was taken 21 They also reported the peculiar effects that they compared to pressing a coin into the Sun 21 The observer remarked I afterwards observed that immediately around the planet there was a dusky tinge making it appear as if in a small degree sunk below the sun s surface Royal Astronomical Society Vol II No 13 21 Greenwich Meridian Edit Main article Greenwich Meridian The building housing the origin of the Greenwich Prime Meridian Laser projected from the observatory marking the Prime Meridian line Laser at night British astronomers have long used the Royal Observatory as a basis for measurement Four separate meridians have passed through the buildings defined by successive instruments 22 The basis of longitude the meridian that passes through the Airy transit circle first used in 1851 was adopted as the world s Prime Meridian at the International Meridian Conference at Washington DC on 22 October 1884 voting took place on 13 October 23 Subsequently nations across the world used it as their standard for mapping and timekeeping The Prime Meridian was marked by a brass later replaced by stainless steel strip in the Observatory s courtyard once the buildings became a museum in 1960 and since 16 December 1999 has been marked by a powerful green laser shining north across the London night sky Since the first triangulation of Great Britain in the period 1783 1853 Ordnance Survey maps have been based on an earlier version of the Greenwich meridian defined by the transit instrument of James Bradley When the Airy circle 5 79 m to the east became the reference for the meridian the difference resulting from the change was considered small enough to be neglected When a new triangulation was done between 1936 and 1962 scientists determined that in the Ordnance Survey system the longitude of the international Greenwich meridian was not 0 but 0 00 00 417 about 8 m East 24 Besides the change of the reference line imperfections of the surveying system added another discrepancy to the definition of the origin so that the Bradley line itself is now 0 00 00 12 East of the Ordnance Survey Zero Meridian about 2 3m 25 This old astronomical prime meridian has been replaced by a more precise prime meridian When Greenwich was an active observatory geographical coordinates were referred to a local oblate spheroid called a datum known as a geoid whose surface closely matched local mean sea level Several datums were in use around the world all using different spheroids because mean sea level undulates by as much as 100 metres worldwide Modern geodetic reference systems such as the World Geodetic System and the International Terrestrial Reference Frame use a single oblate spheroid fixed to the Earth s gravitational centre The shift from several local spheroids to one worldwide spheroid caused all geographical coordinates to shift by many metres sometimes as much as several hundred metres The Prime Meridian of these modern reference systems called IERS International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service Reference Meridian shortly called IRM is 102 5 metres east of the Greenwich astronomical meridian represented by the stainless steel strip which is now 5 31 arcseconds West The modern location of the Airy Transit is 51 28 40 1 N 0 0 5 3 W 51 477806 N 0 001472 W 51 477806 0 001472 Airy Transit as the IRM is at 0 degree in longitude nowadays 26 International time from the end of the 19th century until UT1 was based on Simon Newcomb s equations giving a mean sun about 0 18 seconds behind UT1 the equivalent of 2 7 arcseconds as of 2013 it coincided in 2013 with a meridian halfway between Airy s circle and the IERS origin 51 28 40 1247 N 0 0 2 61 W 51 477812417 N 0 0007250 W 51 477812417 0 0007250 27 Greenwich Mean Time Edit Main article Greenwich Mean Time Shepherd Gate Clock at Royal Greenwich Observatory One of the hyper accurate timekeepers at the observatory Greenwich Mean Time GMT was until 1954 based on celestial observations made at Greenwich and later on observations made at other observatories GMT was formally renamed as Universal Time in 1935 but is still commonly referred to as GMT though they are not identical It is now calculated from observations of extra galactic radio sources The observatory is noted as the home of the prime meridian and Greenwich mean time 28 A key instrument for determining time was the Airy Transit Circle which was used primarily from 1851 to 1938 29 It was agreed in 1884 that the meridian line marked by the cross hairs in the Airy Transit Circle eyepiece would indicate 0 longitude and the start of the Universal Day according to RMG 29 The time is determined by marking the time a star of known location would pass through the aimpoint of the telescope 29 In a reverse case this type of instrument was also used for making star charts 29 The stars whose position was known precisely enough for being used for time determination were called clock stars 29 Greenwich Time Ball Edit The time ball is the red ball on a post when it drops a certain time is signalled This allowed clocks to be set from afar with great accuracy particularly the chronometers of ships on the River Thames below prior to sailing The observatory would first determine the time by stellar observations The red time ball of Greenwich was established in 1833 and is noted as a public time signal 30 The time ball in modern times is normally in a lowered position then starting at 12 55 pm the ball begins to rise then at 12 58 it reaches the top at 1 pm the ball drops 30 To help mariners at the port and others in line of sight of the observatory to synchronise their clocks to GMT Astronomer Royal John Pond installed a very visible time ball that drops precisely at 1 pm 13 00 every day atop the observatory in 1833 Initially it was dropped by an operator from 1852 it was released automatically via an electric impulse from the Shepherd Master Clock 31 The ball is still dropped daily at 13 00 GMT in winter BST in summer 32 The original time ball system was built by Messrs Maudslay and Field and cost 180 33 The five foot diameter ball was made of wood and leather 33 In the original ball system it was hoisted by a rope up from the Octagon room and there was catch at the top to hold it 33 This could then be triggered by hand while observing the time on an astronomical month clock that was regulated to the mean solar time 33 By dropping the ball the public mariners and clock makers could then get a time signal by viewing it from afar 33 The ball drop would be repeated at 2 pm also if possible 33 The reason why 12 noon was not chosen was because astronomers at the observatory would record when the Sun crossed the meridian at that time on that day 34 In rare occasions where the ball could get stuck due to icing or snow and if the wind was too high it would not be dropped 33 35 In 1852 it was established to distribute a time signal by the telegraph wires also 33 The time ball was extremely popular with the public chronometers railways mariners and there was a petition to have another time ball established in Southampton also 33 1890s Edit Dome of the Great Equatorial Building overlooking Greenwich Park 21st century view of the Altazimuth Pavilion The 1890s marked the addition of a new larger refractor the 28 inch Grubb in the Great Equatorial Dome Because the new telescope was longer than the old Great refractor the new dome had to be bigger thus the famous onion dome that expands beyond the diameter of the turret was established For the tricentennial it was revitalized with a fibre glass dome the old one made of papier mache and iron had been taken down The telescope was installed by 1893 with 28 inch diameter glass doublet lens made by Grubb from Chance of Birmingham glass 36 page needed The new dome was made by T Cooke and Sons 36 page needed This replaced a smaller drum shaped dome 36 The Lassell two foot reflector was a famous metal mirror telescope that had been used to discover the Moons Triton and Hyperion 37 It was donated to the observatory in the 1880s but was taken down in the 1890s 37 The 1890s also saw the construction of the Altazimuth Pavilion completed in 1896 and designed by William Crisp 38 In 1898 the Christie Enclosure was established to house sensitive magnetic instruments that had been disrupted by the use of iron at the main facility 39 The Observatory underwent an attempted bombing on 15 February 1894 This was possibly the first international terrorist incident in Britain 40 The bomb was accidentally detonated while being held by 26 year old French anarchist Martial Bourdin in Greenwich Park near the Observatory building Bourdin died about 30 minutes later It is not known why he chose the observatory or whether the detonation was intended to occur elsewhere The novelist Joseph Conrad used the incident in his 1907 novel The Secret Agent 41 Early 20th century Edit Standard lengths on the wall of the Royal Observatory Greenwich London 1 yard 3 feet 2 feet 1 foot 6 inches 1 2 foot and 3 inches The separation of the inside faces of the marks is exact at an ambient temperature of 60 F 16 C and a rod of the correct measure resting on the pins will fit snugly between them 42 43 For major parts of the twentieth century the Royal Greenwich Observatory was not at Greenwich because it moved to Herstmonceux in Sussex in 1957 The last time that all departments were in Greenwich was 1924 in that year electrification of the railways affected the readings of the Magnetic and Meteorological Departments and the Magnetic Observatory moved to Abinger in Surrey Prior to this the observatory had had to insist that the electric trams in the vicinity could not use an earth return for the traction current 44 After the onset of World War II in 1939 many departments were temporarily evacuated out of range of German bombers to Abinger Bradford on Avon Bristol 45 and Bath 46 and activities in Greenwich were reduced to the bare minimum On 15 October 1940 during the Blitz the Courtyard gates were destroyed by a direct bomb hit The wall above the Gate Clock collapsed and the clock s dial was damaged The damage was repaired after the war 47 The Royal Observatory at Herstmonceux Edit Aerial view of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Herstmonceux site in East Sussex the dome that formerly housed the Isaac Newton Telescope is the single dome to the right The telescope was moved to La Palma in the Canary Isles in 1979 After the Second World War in 1947 the decision was made to move the Royal Observatory to Herstmonceux Castle 48 and 320 adjacent acres 1 3 km2 70 km south southeast of Greenwich near Hailsham in East Sussex due to light pollution in London The Observatory was officially known as the Royal Greenwich Observatory Herstmonceux Although the Astronomer Royal Harold Spencer Jones moved to the castle in 1948 the scientific staff did not move until the observatory buildings were completed in 1957 Shortly thereafter other previously dispersed departments were reintegrated at Herstmonceux such as the Nautical Almanac Office Chronometer Department the library and observing equipment 49 The largest telescope at Greenwich at that time the Yapp telescope 36 inch reflector was moved out to Herstmonceux in 1958 50 There it was reconstructed in Dome B of the facility 50 There it was used for astronomy in the 1960s 1970s and 1980s It was left behind at Herstmonceux in 1990 in its dome when the organization moved once again 49 The tricentennial of Sir Isaac Newton had passed during the Second World War delaying festivities One of the ground swells was to build a big better telescope in honour of the celebrated inventor of the Newtonian reflecting telescope Some two decades of development led to the commissioning of the Isaac Newton Telescope at Herstmonceux It proved so successful that the cloudy weather was felt to be a bottleneck to its productivity and plans were made to get it to a higher spot with better weather On 1 December 1967 the Isaac Newton Telescope of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux was inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II 51 The telescope was the biggest telescope by aperture in the British Isles 52 It was moved to Roque de los Muchachos Observatory in Spain s Canary Islands in 1979 In 1990 the RGO moved to Cambridge 53 At Herstmonceux the castle grounds became the home of the International Study Centre of Queen s University Kingston Canada and The Observatory Science Centre 54 which is operated by an educational charity Science Project Former Royal Greenwich Observatory Herstmonceux East Sussex The Observatory Science Centre opened in April 1995 55 Some of the remaining telescopes which were left behind in the move have public observation events as part of operations of the centre 55 The centre has established itself as a noted tourist and education attraction in its own right featuring many old observatory items as exhibits 56 It was getting 60 000 visitors per year in the early 21st century 55 The Royal Observatory at Cambridge Edit Greenwich House at Cambridge In 1990 the Royal Observatory moved from Herstmonceux to a new site at Cambridge adjacent to the University s Institute of Astronomy where it occupied Greenwich House just to the north of the Cambridge Observatory By now the RGO s focus had moved from carrying out observations from the British Isles to providing technical support acting as a conduit between scientists in British universities and the powerful British owned telescopes such as the Isaac Newton Telescope the Anglo Dutch Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope and the William Herschel Telescope on the Canary Islands and Hawaii 57 After abandoning a plan to privatise the RGO and the Royal Observatory Edinburgh the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council PPARC as the RGO s funding body made the decision to close the institution and the Cambridge site by 1998 57 When the RGO was closed as an institution the HM Nautical Almanac Office transferred to the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory Harwell Science and Innovation Campus Chilton Oxfordshire while other work went to the UK Astronomy Technology Centre in Edinburgh The old observatory site at Greenwich returned to its original name the Royal Observatory Greenwich and was made part of the National Maritime Museum In 2002 the UK joined the European Southern Observatory building the VISTA infrared telescope at the Paranal Observatory as an in kind contribution The Astronomer Royal Martin Rees called PPARC irresponsible for how it handled the RGO 58 Greenwich site returns to active use Edit The Queen s House centre left at Greenwich with the Royal Observatory on the skyline behind in 2017 In 2018 the Annie Maunder Astrographic Telescope AMAT was installed at the ROG in Greenwich 59 60 AMAT is a cluster of four separate instruments to be used for astronomical research it had achieved first light by June 2018 and contains 61 A 14 inch reflector that can take high resolution images of the sun moon and planets An instrument dedicated to observing the sun An instrument with interchangeable filters to view distant nebulae at different optical wavelengths A general purpose telescope The telescopes and the works at the site required to operate them cost about 150 000 from grants museum members and patrons and public donations The telescope was installed in the Altazimuth Pavilion 62 from which the multi purpose telescope is controlled by a computer system 62 Magnetic observations Edit The Magnetic Pavilion 1900 The first magnetic observation was taken in 1680 by the first Astronomer Royal John Flamsteed using a magnetic needle from the Royal Society 63 The second and third Astronomers Royal Edmond Halley and then James Bradley also took some magnetic measurements during their tenure 63 In the 19th century George Airy established the Magnetical and Meteorological Department 63 The first Magnetic House was built next to the observatory but by 1900 a second about 300 400 metres from the main observatory was built to reduce magnetic interference 64 Both houses were made of non magnetic materials 64 The older building was called the Magnet House but iron added to buildings in the 1890s at the observatory was throwing off measurements so the instruments were moved to the Magnetic Pavilion 64 A new Magnetograph House was also completed by 1914 64 One of the special events that occurred in the study of magnetism was when Francois Arago and Alexander von Humboldt took magnetic observations at Greenwich in 1822 65 In 1825 Arago won the Copley Gold Medal for this research 65 see also Arago s rotations Observatory museum Edit Tourists flock to the Observatory museum 2009 The observatory buildings at Greenwich became a museum of astronomical and navigational tools which is part of the Royal Museums Greenwich 66 Notable exhibits include John Harrison s pioneering chronometer known as H4 for which he received a large reward from the Board of Longitude and his three earlier marine timekeepers all four are the property of the Ministry of Defence Many additional horological artefacts are displayed documenting the history of precision timekeeping for navigational and astronomical purposes including the mid 20th century Russian made F M Fedchenko clock the most accurate pendulum clock ever built in multiple copies It also houses the astronomical instruments used to make meridian observations and the 28 inch equatorial Grubb refracting telescope of 1893 the largest of its kind in the UK The Shepherd Clock outside the observatory gate is an early example of an electric slave clock citation needed In 1997 the observatory site was getting 400 000 visitors per year 67 In February 2005 a 16 million redevelopment comprising a new planetarium and additional display galleries and educational facilities was started the ROG reopened on 25 May 2007 with the new 120 seat Peter Harrison Planetarium 68 For a year between 2016 and 2017 the Museum reported 2 41 million visitors 69 Site Edit The centuries old Flamsteed House overlooking Greenwich Park in London The statue at left is of Major General James Wolfe who died capturing Quebec in 1759 and was buried in St Alfege Church Greenwich See also EditList of astronomical observatoriesReferences Edit a b Rebekah Higgitt 6 September 2012 Royal Observatory Greenwich London BSHS Travel Guide A Travel Guide to Scientific Sites Retrieved 28 April 2017 List of Observatory Codes Minor Planet Center Retrieved 28 April 2017 Greenwich and the Millennium 2015 Retrieved 6 September 2015 Robert Chambers Book of Days The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west Telescope The Sheepshanks Equatorial 1838 www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 31 October 2019 The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west Telescope 28 inch Refractor 1893 www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 25 October 2019 John Timbs Abbeys Castles and Ancient Halls of England and Wales Hart Kelly 2010 The Mistresses of Henry VIII The History Press p 73 ISBN 978 0 7524 5496 2 Hilton Wallace A 1978 Tricentennial Greenwich Observatory The Physics Teacher 16 2 95 Bibcode 1978PhTea 16 95H doi 10 1119 1 2339829 Willmoth Frances 2004 Moore Sir Jonas 1617 1679 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19137 Subscription or UK public library membership required Higgitt Rebekah 2019 Greenwich near London the Royal Observatory and its London networks in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries The British Journal for the History of Science 52 2 297 322 doi 10 1017 S0007087419000244 ISSN 0007 0874 PMID 31084633 The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west The Buildings at Greenwich www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 20 May 2019 The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west People www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 20 May 2019 a b c d HAROLD SPENOER JONES F R S Astronomer Royal Sir The Royal Greenwich Observatory PDF Archived PDF from the original on 1 June 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Woolley Richard 1963 1963QJRAS 4 47W Page 47 Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 4 47 Bibcode 1963QJRAS 4 47W a b Satterthwaite Gilbert E 2001 2001JAHH 4 115S Page 115 Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 4 2 115 Bibcode 2001JAHH 4 115S a b Ratcliff Jessica 28 July 2015 The Transit of Venus Enterprise in Victorian Britain Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 31639 8 Forbes Eric Gray Meadows Arthur Jack Howse Derek 1975 Greenwich Observatory the Story of Britain s Oldest Scientific Institution the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and Herstmonceux 1675 1975 Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 978 0 85066 095 1 New International Encyclopedia Dodd Mead 1914 a b Airy s Transit Circle and the dawn of the Universal Day Royal Museums Greenwich UNESCO World Heritage Site In London 18 August 2015 Retrieved 3 December 2019 a b c d e Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Priestley and Weale 1831 Dolan Graham The Greenwich Meridian before the Airy Transit Circle The Greenwich Meridian Retrieved 2 May 2015 Howse Derek 1997 Greenwich time and the longitude London Phillip Wilson pp 12 137 ISBN 978 0 85667 468 6 Howse Derek 1980 Greenwich time and the discovery of the longitude p 171 Adams Brian 1994 Charles Close Society PDF pp 14 15 Archived PDF from the original on 7 April 2014 Malys Stephen Seago John H Palvis Nikolaos K Seidelmann P Kenneth Kaplan George H 1 August 2015 Why the Greenwich meridian moved Journal of Geodesy 89 12 1263 1272 Bibcode 2015JGeod 89 1263M doi 10 1007 s00190 015 0844 y Seago John H Seidelmann P Kenneth The mean solar time origin of Universal Time and UTC PDF Paper presented at the AAS AIAA Spaceflight Mechanics Meeting Kauai HI USA March 2013 Reprinted from Advances in the Astronomical Sciences v 148 pp 1789 1801 1805 Archived from the original PDF on 27 December 2013 Royal Observatory a b c d e Airy s Transit Circle and the dawn of the Universal Day Royal Museums Greenwich UNESCO World Heritage Site In London 18 August 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2019 a b The Greenwich Time Ball From The Royal Observatory The Greenwich Time Ball Londonist com 9 December 2009 Greenwich Time Ball a b c d e f g h i Laurie P S 1958 1958Obs 78 113L Page 113 The Observatory 78 113 Bibcode 1958Obs 78 113L Betts Jonathan 4 January 2018 Marine Chronometers at Greenwich Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199641383 Observations Made at the Royal Observatory Greenwich in the Year in Astronomy Magnetism and Meteorology H M Stationery Office 1921 a b c Observatory Royal Greenwich 1897 Observations Made in Astronomy Magnetism and Meteorolgy H M Stationery Office a b The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west Telescope The Lassell 2 foot Reflector 1847 www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 28 November 2019 The Royal Observatory Greenwich where east meets west The Altazimuth Pavilion www royalobservatorygreenwich org Retrieved 8 November 2019 The Christie Enclosure The Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 6 April 2021 Matusitz Jonathan Andre 16 September 2014 Symbolism in terrorism motivation communication and behavior Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442235793 OCLC 891148726 Propaganda by Deed the Greenwich Observatory Bomb of 1894 20 August 2015 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Bennett Keith 2004 Bucher Jay L ed The Metrology Handbook Milwaukee WI American Society for Quality Measurement p 8 ISBN 978 0 87389 620 7 Walford Edward 1878 Old and New London vol VI Abinger Magnetic Observatory 1923 1957 The Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 3 May 2017 Bristol amp Bradford on Avon 1939 1948 The Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 3 May 2017 Bath 1939 1949 The Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 3 May 2017 The Royal Observatory Greenwich The Shepherd Gate Clock Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 3 May 2017 A very detailed history of the Shepherd Gate Clock The Herstmonceux years 1948 1990 The Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 3 May 2017 a b McKechnie T Stewart 5 August 2015 General Theory of Light Propagation and Imaging Through the Atmosphere Springer ISBN 9783319182094 a b The 36 inch Yapp Reflector Smith F Graham Dudley J 1982 The Isaac Newton Telescope Journal for the History of Astronomy 12 1 1 18 Bibcode 1982JHA 13 1S doi 10 1177 002182868201300101 S2CID 116989341 Retrieved 31 January 2020 Information Reed Business 4 August 1983 New Scientist Reed Business Information A Personal History Of The Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux Castle 1948 1990 by G A Wilkins the observatory org a b c The Observatory Science Centre on eHive eHive Retrieved 9 November 2019 Observatory Science Centre Brighton amp Hove days out Brighton and Hove 3 December 2015 Retrieved 9 November 2019 a b Charles Arthur A closed subject The Independent 10 June 1997 accessed 12 November 2019 Motluk Alison 12 July 1997 Time s up for the Greenwich observatory www newscientist com Retrieved 15 November 2019 Ian Sample 25 June 2018 Star attraction Royal Observatory seeks volunteers to use new telescope The Guardian Altazimuth Pavilion Royal Observatory Greenwich 5 August 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Kate Wilkinson 25 June 2018 First Light a new era for the Royal Observatory Royal Observatory Greenwich Retrieved 27 June 2018 a b New telescope for Royal Observatory Greenwich skyatnightmagazine Retrieved 15 November 2019 a b c Malin S R C 1996 1996QJRAS 37 65M Page 65 Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society 37 65 Bibcode 1996QJRAS 37 65M a b c d Observations Made at the Royal Observatory Greenwich in the Year in Astronomy Magnetism and Meteorology H M Stationery Office 1921 a b Howard Duff I 1986 1986JBAA 97 26H Page 26 Journal of the British Astronomical Association 97 26 Bibcode 1986JBAA 97 26H Royal Museums Greenwich Sea Ships Time and the Stars RMG 25 August 2015 Masood Ehsan 1 August 1997 Royal observatory could return to Greenwich site Nature 388 6644 705 Bibcode 1997Natur 388R 705 doi 10 1038 41849 ISSN 1476 4687 Press Release Reopening of the new Royal Observatory Greenwich Royal Museums Greenwich 27 June 2007 National Maritime Museum Annual Report and Accounts 2016 2017 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 25 July 2019 Further reading EditGreenwich Observatory the Royal Observatory at Greenwich and Herstmonceux 1675 1975 London Taylor amp Francis 1975 3v Vol 1 Origins and early history 1675 1835 by Eric G Forbes ISBN 0 85066 093 9 Vol 2 Recent history 1836 1975 by A J Meadows ISBN 0 85066 094 7 Vol 3 The buildings and instruments by Derek Howse ISBN 0 85066 095 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Royal Observatory Greenwich Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article Greenwich Observatory Royal Museums Greenwich RMG Web site includes section on Royal Observatory Greenwich ROG ROG on RMG Web site Online catalogue of the Royal Greenwich Observatory Archives held at Cambridge University Library Where the Earth s surface begins and ends Popular Mechanics December 1930 HM Nautical Almanac Office Aerial View of The Royal Observatory Greenwich at Google Maps Castle in the sky The story of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux Map of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux A Personal History of the Royal Greenwich Observatory at Herstmonceux Castle 1948 1990 by George Wilkins a former staff member The Observatory Science Centre Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes A pictorial catalogue of meridian markers Portals London Astronomy Stars Outer space Solar System Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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