The Indiana Asteroid Program was a program of photographic asteroid observations made with a 10-inch f/6.5 Cooke triplet astrographic camera [1] at Goethe Link Observatory [2] near Brooklyn, Indiana. The program was initiated by Frank K. Edmondson of Indiana University in 1949 and continued until 1967. [3] It had four objectives:
External images | |
---|---|
http://newsinfo.iu.edu/pub/libs/images/usr/4718.jpg Professor Frank Edmondson manipulates the 10-inch lens telescope at the Goethe Link Observatory in Brooklyn, Indiana, in the 1950s. Source: Indiana University News Bureau. | |
http://newsinfo.iu.edu/pub/libs/images/usr/4719.jpg Professor Frank Edmondson looks on as Esther Barnhart -- wife of Philip Barnhart (M.A. Astronomy 1955) -- takes precise measurements of an asteroid's location. By comparing locations of an asteroid on different plates taken an hour apart, its orbit could be calculated. Source: Indiana University News Bureau. | |
http://www.iasindy.org/goethe/photos1/link13.jpg Recent image of building housing the 10-inch lens telescope at Goethe Link Observatory. Source: Indiana Astronomical Society. |
When the observatory's 36-inch (0.91-meter) reflecting telescope proved unsuitable for searching for asteroids, postdoctoral fellow James Cuffey arranged the permanent loan of a 10-inch (0.254-meter) lens from the University of Cincinnati.[5] Mounted in a shed near the main observatory, the instrument using the borrowed lens was responsible for all of the program's discoveries.[6]
By 1958, the program had produced 3,500 photographic plates showing 12,000 asteroid images and had published about 2,000 accurate positions in the Minor Planet Circular.[4] When the program ended, it had discovered a total of 119 asteroids.[7] The program's last unnamed discovery, 30718 Records, made in 1955, was not named until 2008, when its orbit was finally calculated and confirmed.[8]
The program ended when the lights of the nearby city of Indianapolis became too bright to permit the long exposures required for the photographic plates. [9]
The program's nearly 7,000 photographic plates are now archived at Lowell Observatory. [10]
Source: IAU Minor Planet Center: Discovery Circumstances of Numbered Minor Planets [11]