Tenagra Observatories Explained

Tenagra Observatory
Code:848
Location:Lane County, Oregon near Cottage Grove
Altitude:207 m
Telescope1 Name:Tenagra I
Tenagra II Observatory
Code:926
Location:Santa Cruz County, Arizona near Patagonia, Arizona
Altitude:4003feet
Telescope1 Name:Tenagra II
Telescope1 Type:32inch Ritchey-Chretien
Telescope2 Name:Pearl
Telescope2 Type:16inch f/3.75 Newtonian
Telescope3 Name:Tenagra IV
Telescope3 Type:14inch SCT

Tenagra Observatory and Tenagra Observatory II are astronomical observatories in Cottage Grove, Oregon and Arizona. The observatories house heavily automated robotic telescopes.

Circa 2016, the observatory was utilized with the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope a member of the Lick Observatory and Tenagra Observatory Supernova Searches (LOTOSS).[1]

Beginning in 2018, after a NASA grant to owner Michael Schwartz expired, control of the Arizona observatory was turned over to Gianluca Masis Virtual Telescope project.

Instruments

The observatory near Cottage Grove, Oregon was constructed 1998, and had a 14inch Celestron Schmidt-Cassegrain with a SBIG CCD imager, probably upgraded to Apogee Instruments later.

The Arizona observatory at Patagonia, 20 miles from Nogales, began operations in 2000. Tenagra II is a custom-made 32inch Ritchey-Chretien telescope manufactured by SciTech Astronomical Research, in operation since 2001. "Pearl" is a 16inch f/3.75 corrected Newtonian. There is also a 24inch SciTech Ritchey-Chretien, and another 14-inch Celestron.

The Oregon site was in use as of 2004 as a backup site, during the Southwest monsoon season.

Observations and public outreach

The robotic telescopes can image 1,000 galaxies in an evening for supernova discovery. Using the Oregon Tenagra I telescope, its maker became "the first amateur to achieve consistent supernova discoveries" by using a robotic telescope "to patrol hundreds of galaxies each night".

The Oregon observatory reported 77 Minor Planet Electronic Circulars between 1999 and 2002.

The Oregon observatory discovered supernova .

Paulo R. Holvorcem (Porto Seguro, Bahia, Brazil) and Michael Schwartz (Patagonia, Arizona) discovered comet in May 2011.

Comet is named for the observatory and Clyde Tombaugh. Tombaugh initially discovered it in January 1931, but was not recovered until 2012. It was provisionally named Comet P/2012 WX_32 (Tenagra) when recovered by Michael Schwartz and Paulo R. Holvorcem using Tenagra II.

The observatory's Tenagra IV instrument, along with Palomar Observatory's Samuel Oschin telescope, was the second to image dwarf planet Sedna, providing confirmation of its discovery and refining its orbital parameters.

In 2018, Pearl imaged the Tesla Roadster in space, when it had a magnitude of 15.5, comparable to Pluto's moon Charon.

In 2018, imagery from the Arizona observatory was livestreamed by Gianluca Masi during the close approach to Earth as a Virtual Telescope project outreach event. Images of the Tiangong-1 space station in its decaying orbit were livestreamed in 2018, a few days before reentry.

Awards

2013 Edgar Wilson Award

See also

References

Sources

. The New Amateur Astronomer. Martin Mobberley. 1852336633. 2004. Springer London. [S]upernova patroller Michael Schwartz, director of his private "Tenagra" Observatory in Oregon, showed the way by acquiring one of the first Paramount GT1100 [computer controlled telescope mounts] and coupling it to a Celestron 14 Optical Tube Assembly ... Michael was really the first amateur to achieve consistent supernova discoveries by using the Paramount to patrol hundreds of galaxies each night..

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope. November 8, 2016. Department of Astronomy, University of California, Berkeley.