Mount Kent Observatory Explained
Mount Kent Observatory |
Organization: | University of Southern Queensland |
Code: | E22 |
Location: | Mount Kent, near Nobby, Queensland, Australia |
Coords: | -27.7977°N 151.8554°W |
Altitude: | 682m (2,238feet) |
Telescope1 Name: | MINERVA-Australis |
Telescope1 Type: | 4x 0.7m (02.3feet) equatorial mount |
Telescope2 Name: | Stellar Oscillations Network Group (SONG) |
Telescope2 Type: | 2x 0.7m (02.3feet) |
Telescope3 Name: | Webb Telescope |
Telescope3 Type: | 40cm (20inches) Meade LX200 |
Telescope4 Name: | O'Mara Telescope |
Telescope5 Name: | Louisville Telescope |
Telescope5 Type: | 0.5m (01.6feet) Planewave Instruments CDK-20 |
Telescope6 Name: | FUT (SONG) outreach Telescope |
Telescope6 Type: | 0.6m (02feet) Planewave Instruments CDK-600 |
Telescope7 Name: | USQ-Louisville Telescope |
Telescope7 Type: | 0.3m (01feet) Planewave Instruments RC-12.5 |
Mount Kent Observatory near Toowoomba, in the Darling Downs region of Queensland, Australia, is an observatory owned and operated by the University of Southern Queensland (USQ). It is the only professional astronomical research observatory in the state of Queensland. Mount Kent hosts the four MINERVA-Australis exoplanet-finding telescopes, three SONG telescopes for asteroseismology and stellar astrophysics, two 'Shared Skies' telescopes, and a USQ-Louisville telescope.
It is also used for teaching USQ students, and is part of a 'Shared Skies Partnership' with the University of Louisville's Moore Observatory, Kentucky.
History
In the 1980s a dark sky site was established at Mount Kent and used for teaching purposes by USQ.[1] By 2009 the facilities had grown to include three telescopes: the Webb, O'Mara, and Louisville telescopes.
The observatory was significantly expanded beginning in 2016 with the establishment of MINERVA-Australis, funded by USQ, the Federal Government, the Australian Research Council, the University of New South Wales and the University of Sydney.[2] It was opened by Minister for Industry, Science and Technology Karen Andrews and USQ Vice-Chancellor Professor Geraldine Mackenzie in March 2019.[3]
The asteroid 11927 Mount Kent, which was discovered in 1993, is named after the observatory.
Telescopes
- MINERVA-Australis is an array of four 0.7m (02.3feet) telescopes and a radial-velocity spectrograph for exoplanet science, established beginning in 2018.[2] It is primarily used for ground-based observational follow-up for the NASA Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). The telescope is operated by USQ and funded by the Australian Research Council and a consortium of research-intensive universities in Australia and overseas.
- SONG - the Stellar Oscillations Network Group - has a high resolution spectrograph fed by two 0.7m (02.3feet) telescopes, used primarily for asteroseismology and stellar physics. It is part of a network with telescopes in Tenerife and China.
- The Webb Telescope is a 40cm (20inches) Meade LX200 telescope in a 6.5m (21.3feet) fibreglass dome. It is used for student field nights.
- The O’Mara Telescope is named after the late Mt Kent Observatory pioneer Dr Jim O’Mara (of the University of Queensland). It is a robotic telescope with 30cm (10inches) Meade optics and a CCD camera, and is housed in an octagonal enclosure designed by Jim O’Mara. It automatically serves remote imaging requests from USQ students.
- The Louisville Telescope has 0.5m (01.6feet) Planewave Instruments CDK-20 optics as part of the Shared Skies Partnership with the University of Louisville. It is set up for live remote observing.
- The FUT (SONG) Telescope has 0.6m (02feet) Planewave Instruments CDK-600 optics used as a research and outreach telescope by the Aarhus University and the SONG team.
- The USQ-Louisville Telescope has 0.3m (01feet) Planewave Instruments RC-12.5 optics as a teaching and research robotic photometry telescope.
Discoveries
MINERVA-Australis was used in the discovery of TOI-257b, a rare 'sub-Saturn' planet lying between super-Earths and giant planets.[4] [5]
See also
Notes and References
- Carter . Brad . Duncan . Roy . Hart . Rhodes . Kielkopf . John . Sinclair . Scott . Waite . Ian . Mt Kent Observatory: A Queensland Facility for Astronomy Distance Education . Australian Physics . January 2009 . 46 . 1 . 16 . 28 February 2020.
- News: Bradfield . Elly . Queensland astronomers join search for Earth-like planets . ABC News . 17 August 2016 . en-AU.
- Web site: USQ at forefront of planet discoveries with Mount Kent Observatory expansion - University of Southern Queensland . www.usq.edu.au.
- News: Layt . Stuart . New exoplanet of unusual size discovered by Queensland astronomers . Brisbane Times . 22 January 2020 . en.
- Addison . Brett C. . Wright . Duncan J. . Nicholson . Belinda A. . Cale . Bryson . Mocnik . Teo . Huber . Daniel . Plavchan . Peter . Wittenmyer . Robert A. . Vanderburg . Andrew . Chaplin . William J. . Chontos . Ashley . Clark . Jake T. . Eastman . Jason D. . Ziegler . Carl . Brahm . Rafael . Carter . Bradley D. . Clerte . Mathieu . Espinoza . Néstor . Horner . Jonathan . Bentley . John . Kane . Stephen R. . Kielkopf . John F. . Laychock . Emilie . Mengel . Matthew W. . Okumura . Jack . Stassun . Keivan G. . Bedding . Timothy R. . Bowler . Brendan P. . Burnelis . Andrius . Collins . Michaela . Crossfield . Ian . Davis . Allen B. . Evensberget . Dag . Heitzmann . Alexis . Howell . Steve B. . Law . Nicholas . Mann . Andrew W. . Marsden . Stephen . O'Connor . James . Shporer . Avi . Stevens . Catherine . Tinney . C. G. . Tylor . Christopher . Wang . Songhu . Zhang . Hui . Henning . Thomas . Kossakowski . Diana . Ricker . George . Sarkis . Paula . Vanderspek . Roland . Latham . David W. . Seager . Sara . Winn . Joshua N. . Jenkins . Jon M. . Mireles . Ismael . Rowden . Pam . Pepper . Joshua . Daylan . Tansu . Schlieder . Joshua E. . Collins . Karen A. . Collins . Kevin I. . Tan . Thiam-Guan . Ball . Warrick H. . Basu . Sarbani . Buzasi . Derek L. . Campante . Tiago L. . Corsaro . Enrico . González-Cuesta . Lucía . Davies . Guy R. . a . Rafael ~A ~Garcí . Guo . Zhao . Handberg . Rasmus . Hekker . Saskia . Hey . Daniel R. . Kallinger . Thomas . Kawaler . Steven D. . Kayhan . Cenk . Kuszlewicz . James S. . Lund . Mikkel N. . Lyttle . Alexander . Mathur . Savita . Miglio . Andrea . Mosser . Benoit . Nielsen . Martin B. . Serenelli . Aldo M. . Aguirre . Victor Silva . Themessl . Nathalie . TOI-257b (HD 19916b): A warm sub-saturn orbiting an evolved F-type star . Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society . 2021 . 502 . 3 . 3704–3722 . 10.1093/mnras/staa3960 . 2001.07345.