Solar Telescopes

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 +Carnarvon’s three solar telescopes were programmed to follow the sun to make daily observations.
 +The '''15cm Razdow optical telescope''' (with a narrow (½-angstrom) band-pass ‘Hydrogen Alpha’ filter) set up in the roof dome recorded photos at 30-second intervals. Each day, 54m of film was produced by the Razdow telescope. This was refrigerated and shipped to NASA for professional processing; however, if the camera was serviced or new film arrived with a different batch number, a 2m-length was processed locally, densitometer readings were made, and the camera settings were standardised as necessary.
 +[[Image:Observer.jpg|right|thumbnail|300px|David Johns, Span Observer at work]]
 +
 +An unfiltered '''standard 20cm scientific reflector telescope''' projected white light sun-spot images onto a clipboard ‘screen’ to allow the SPAN observers to trace sunspots. Later in the life of the station a facsimile machine was supplied to transmit these sketches of sunspot activity to SPAN Control. The transmission were merely adequate but after subtle adjustments to the electronic circuits, Carnarvon achieved a startling improvement. These adjustments were implemented by the rest of the SPAN network. (NAA: PP 538/1, C622, CPR, July/Sept1973)
 +
 +In a spherical radome a little to the north of the Span building sat a 2.55m '''parabolic-dish radio-telescope''' receiving radio emission at 1.420, 2.695 and 4.995 GHz, These were recorded on magnetic tape and a chart recorder. Solar-flare-induced particle showers could then be correlated with the previous several days of surface activity.
 +
 +Two Australian scientific observers from the Ionospheric Prediction Service, Department of the Interior, (supported by AWA technical staff) interpreted the solar observations at CRO and made twice-daily reports to Mission Control, Houston; SPAN Control, Boulder; and to other interested bodies.
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Revision as of 00:57, 3 December 2006


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Carnarvon’s three solar telescopes were programmed to follow the sun to make daily observations.

The 15cm Razdow optical telescope (with a narrow (½-angstrom) band-pass ‘Hydrogen Alpha’ filter) set up in the roof dome recorded photos at 30-second intervals. Each day, 54m of film was produced by the Razdow telescope. This was refrigerated and shipped to NASA for professional processing; however, if the camera was serviced or new film arrived with a different batch number, a 2m-length was processed locally, densitometer readings were made, and the camera settings were standardised as necessary.

David Johns, Span Observer at work
Enlarge
David Johns, Span Observer at work

An unfiltered standard 20cm scientific reflector telescope projected white light sun-spot images onto a clipboard ‘screen’ to allow the SPAN observers to trace sunspots. Later in the life of the station a facsimile machine was supplied to transmit these sketches of sunspot activity to SPAN Control. The transmission were merely adequate but after subtle adjustments to the electronic circuits, Carnarvon achieved a startling improvement. These adjustments were implemented by the rest of the SPAN network. (NAA: PP 538/1, C622, CPR, July/Sept1973)

In a spherical radome a little to the north of the Span building sat a 2.55m parabolic-dish radio-telescope receiving radio emission at 1.420, 2.695 and 4.995 GHz, These were recorded on magnetic tape and a chart recorder. Solar-flare-induced particle showers could then be correlated with the previous several days of surface activity.

Two Australian scientific observers from the Ionospheric Prediction Service, Department of the Interior, (supported by AWA technical staff) interpreted the solar observations at CRO and made twice-daily reports to Mission Control, Houston; SPAN Control, Boulder; and to other interested bodies.

Back to Solar Particle Alert Network

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