Starry Night of Palomar
Description
The summer Milky Way in the northern hemisphere, from constellations Scorpius to Cygnus appears above Palomar Observatory in the Southern California. The Observatory is located in north San Diego County, California. Founded in 1930s it is still a world-class research center. The observatory is home to five telescopes including the 200-inch (5 meters) Hale telescope and its giant dome which is photographed above. The 200-inch telescope is named after astronomer George Ellery Hale who led the making of the world’s largest telescopes in the first half of 20th century. Hale telescope saw first light in 1949 and astronomer Edwin Hubble was the first astronomer to use it. The 200-inch telescope was the world’s largest for nearly 3 decades and updated with adaptive optics and high technology detectors it is still considered a frontier observing instrument. With a short distance of large cities San Diego and Los Angeles, astronomy community is struggling to preserve the starry sky of Palomar. © Wally Pacholka
comments (2)
I have been to Palomar – but during the day. And I always wondered what it looked like at night. Thank you for taking this amazing photo. This is my favorite observatory of them all !
November 4, 2010 at 3:16 pm