DAVID DUNLAP OBSERVATORY
The 'David Dunlap Observatory' ('DDO') is a large astronomical observatory site for the University of Toronto, located just north of the city in Richmond Hill, Ontario. Its primary instrument is a 74 inch (1.88 m) reflector telescope, at one time the second largest telescope in the world, and still the largest in Canada. Several other telescopes are co-located at the site, which formerly included a small radio telescope as well. Located fairly close to sea level the site was never ideal for research purposes, and the encroachment of well-lit subdivisions have dramatically limited its capabilities. Nevertheless the DDO was used in a number of important studies, including pioneering measurements of the distance to globular clusters, providing the first direct evidence that Cygnus X-1 was a black hole, and the discovery that Polaris was stabilizing and appeared to be "falling out" of the Cepheid variable category.
| Contents |
| History |
| References |
| Further reading |
| External links |
History
The DDO owes its existence almost entirely to the efforts of one man, Clarence Augustus Chant. Chant had not shown an early interest in astronomy, but while attending University College, University of Toronto he became interested in math and physics, eventually joining the University as a lecturer in physics in 1892. He joined the Astronomical and Physical Society of Toronto in December that year; it was eventually renamed the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada in 1902. Chant became president of the Society, serving between 1904 and 1907. Throughout the 1890s, Chant was concerned about how little the University did for astronomy, and in 1904 he proposed adding several undergraduate courses for fourth-year students, and six such courses were added to the 1905 calendar.
With courses now officially on the books, Chant started looking for a real telescope. Previously the University had hosted the Toronto Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory, which had been run by the Meteorological Office of the Ministry of Marine and Fisheries. The Observatory had contained the high-quality 6-Inch Cooke Refractor, but the Observatory building itself was now surrounded by new University buildings, rendering it useless for astronomy. The Meteorological Office had already decided to abandon the site and turn the building over to the University, but they were taking the telescope with them to their new location on Bloor Street. Even had the University been able to secure time on the instrument, which was highly likely, it was at this time quite a small instrument in comparison to those being built around the world.
The same problem of encroachment that had led to the Observatory falling into disuse led Chant to conclude that there was not suitable location on the University grounds for a new Observatory, and he started looking for off-campus sites. While looking, he started getting quotes for a new instrument from Warner & Swasey in Cleveland, Ohio, who had provided the mount for the recently opened Dominion Observatory in Ottawa. In 1910 Chant finally found the perfect location, a ten-acre plot of land located near what is today Bathurst Street and St. Clair Avenue. The land had originally been set aside by the city for the Isolation Hospital, but this was never constructed and it now lay empty. Chant convinced the City to become involved in the 'Royal Astronomical Observatory', but the start of World War I put the project on hold, and in 1919 it was cancelled outright.
Chant then turned to the local business community in hopes of finding funding. Similar collaborations had been very successful in the United States, but Chant found an entirely different reception in Canada and nothing seemed forthcoming. His fortunes changed in 1921 when Chant delivered a public lecture on Wennecke's Comet, which had recently been visible in Canada. One of the attendees was local businessman David Dunlap, who was bitten by the astronomy bug as a result of the lecture, and expressed an interest in Chant's efforts to build a large observatory. Before making any firm financial commitment, however, Dunlap died in October 1924 at age sixty-one. Chant approached his widow, Jessie Dunlap, in late 1926 with the idea of erecting an observatory as a monument to her husband. Mrs. Dunlap promised to "keep it in [her] heart for consideration, for it appeals to me tremendously."
By this point the original site was well within the rapidly growing city's lit areas, and no longer suitable for astronomy. A site much further from the city was needed, to ensure it too would not be crowded out. The first site studied was outside Aurora, Ontario, but they decided that it was too far from the university for casual travel. Another site near Hogg's Hollow was also studied, but was not easily accessible. The eventual site was selected while Chant was studying topographical maps with fellow astronomer Reynold Young, finding a suitable spot north of the city. When Chant took Dunlap to see the site for the first time, she stated "this is the place!" and authorized its purchase for C$28,000.
Chant immediately started ordering a telescope, selecting a 74-inch instrument from Grubb, Parsons and Company in England. This would make it the second largest telescope in the world, second only to the 100 inch instrument at Mount Wilson Observatory. It was, however, only slightly larger than the one that had recently gone into service for the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in British Columbia, at 72 inches. The observatory building itself started construction, and the eighty-ton sixty-one foot copper dome arrived in 1933. The administration building, a few hundred feet from the main observatory, also started construction. The telescope was installed while work on the mirror continued, and was completed in time for the mirror to arrive in May 1935.
The official opening was on 31 May 1935, Chant's 70th birthday. The opening ceremony was attended notables such as Sir Frank Dyson, former Astronomer Royal, and former Prime Minister Mackenzie King, who praised the Observatory as "a gift to science all over the world." Chant retired the same day and moved into Observatory House, the original pre-Confederation farmhouse just to the south of the administration buildings, where he spent his remaining years.
The three smaller domes on the top of the administration building were also filled with smaller instruments. Soon after the observatory opened in 1935, a 50 cm Cassegrain reflector telescope was installed in the southern dome. The 6-inch Cooke Refractor had been out of use since the Met Office had given it to Hart House, but it was little used and was moved into the north dome in 1951 to be used by undergraduates. Much later, in 1965, another similar 60 cm Cassegrain was added to the central dome. With the opening of the McLennan Labs in 1967, which featured similar instruments but was located on the main university Campus, the Cooke Refractor went almost unused, and was later donated to the National Science Museum in 1984.
The Administration Building headquartered the Astronomy Department until the 1960s. With the rapid growth of university funding in the 1960s more offices were being built in the downtown campus, and with the opening of the McLennan Labs more and more of the department moved into the new facilities. The weekly department meetings continued to be held there until 1978, and the main library was shifted downtown in 1983.
The DDO remained a major instrument into the 1960s, but in the end even the "remote" location Chant had selected was being encroached on by urban sprawl. Today, light pollution from the huge tracts of subdivisions around the site have rendered it largely ineffective as a scientific instrument. Although some consideration was given to moving the telescope to a new site, in the end it was decided the funds would be better spent on a smaller instrument in a much better location. This led to the building of a 60 cm instrument at Las Campanas in Chile in 1971, creating the University of Toronto Southern Observatory. It was at this location that UofT astronomer Ian Shelton spotted SN 1987A. The site was later closed in 1997 in favor of moving those funds to a share of the Gemini Observatory, and the 60 cm telescope was moved to El Leoncito in Argentina, where the University has a 25% share in observation time.
The DDO also built an 18 m radio telescope in Algonquin Park in northern Ontario, co-locating it at the site of the larger Algonquin Radio Observatory. This instrument was actively used until 1991, when budget cuts led to it being abandoned. It was later used by a private group as part of a SETI project, and has recently been moved to a site outside Shelburne, Ontario.
References
★ The Legacy Continues:C. A. Chant and the David Dunlap Observatory, C. H. Russell, ''Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada'', vol.93, no.1, February 1999
★ Astronomy and Astrophysics; A Short History of the Department and Observatory
★ The First Black Hole
★ Polaris - The Story Continues
Further reading
★ ''The Cold Light of Dawn: A History of Canadian Astronomy'', Richard A. Jarrell, University of Toronto Press, 1988, ISBN 978-0802026538
External links
★ David Dunlap Observatory
★ David Dunlap Observatory Clear Sky Clock forecasts of observing conditions.
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español