Science at the Winer Observatory
Science by Winer Observatory Customers
- The University of Iowa uses the Iowa Robotic Observatory for student labs, student research projects, faculty research, and limited research by approved outside users. Areas of investigation are many, including variable stars, minor planet light curves, comets, and upper atmospheric phenomena.
- The Ohio State University uses the KELT telescope to survey the sky photometrically for extrasolar planets. Thus far, two exoplanet discoveries have been reported (e.g., see this New York Times article of June 19, 2012). Ohio State also uses a 20-inch Meade telescope called DEMONEX telescope to verify exoplanet candidates identified by surveys such as KELT. You can read more about KELT discoveries and the list of announced candidates at the KELT-North website.
- December 19, 2013: Ella Kot, an external user of the Rigel telescope, discovered a Type Ia super-nova. The official announcement can be found at www.aavso.org/aavso-special-notice-379
- While they were a customer, Washington University in St. Louis used two Torus Technologies, Inc. (now Optical Mechanics, Inc.) 0.5-m telescopes, one at our facility in Sonoita and one in India, to form an Antipodal Transient Observatory to study Active Galactic Nuclei and Gamma Ray Bursts.
- Between January and July, 1999 Mike Schwartz discovered eight supernovae using a Celestron C-14 optical tube assembly mounted on a Software Bisque Paramount German equatorial mount and an Apogee Instruments AP-7 CCD camera. For more information, visit www.tenagraobservatories.com or to see the invidual discovery images, click here.
- In February and March, 2000 Tom Kaye, an amateur astronomer from Chicago, detected the extra-solar planet around Tau Boötes at our observatory in Sonoita using a Meade 16-inch LX200 and a home-built fiber-fed temperature controlled spectrograph. He confirmed this detection with another run at Winer in April and May 2004. Tom took special care to control the temperature of the spectrograph to within ±1°F each night and ±3°F over the entire three weeks he was here. Most professional spectrographs do not control their temperature that well. As late as 1995, there were only a handful of professional groups that could make this kind of observation. As far as we know, Tom is the first amateur to do this. For more information on this amazing feat, visit www.spectrashift.com or to see the results, click here.
Page last updated on: January 2, 2014