February 28, 2013

Three-story artifact

old spectroheliograph at the Manila Observatory 
The cylindrical building of the Manila Observatory was constructed to house one instrument, a spectroheliograph. Developed by George Hale in 1890 for his senior thesis in MIT, the spectroheliograph is an instrument used in astronomy and astrophysics to take photographic images of the sun.
  old spectroheliograph at the Manila Observatory
This 1960s spectroheliograph is three stories high. Modern ones no longer need an entire building to house them.
  old spectroheliograph at the Manila Observatory
The Manila Observatory no longer uses this spectroheliograph, but ideas to convert or repurpose it all proved to be too expensive.
  old spectroheliograph at the Manila Observatory 
A museum offered to buy it from the observatory, but the board of directors decided to say no. It is an important part of the history of the Manila Observatory and the Jesuits in the Philippines, after all.

4 comments:

Richard Lawry said...

Very cool looking machinery
An Arkies Musings

Cezar and Léia said...

Great article about the observatory and these interesting machines!
Léia

Mo said...

I love observatories and we are lucky here to have one of the most important in the world at Greenwich

Dina said...

Wow, dramatic pictures!
I'm glad it is staying.