[ut.stardate] StarDate: August 5 The Amateur Space Telescope

dipper@utastro.UUCP (Debbie Byrd) (08/12/84)

Amateur astronomers are planning to launch their own space telescope.
We'll talk more about plans to place telescopes above the Earth's
atmosphere -- after this.

August 5  The Amateur Space Telescope

Two years from now NASA plans to place a large Space Telescope in orbit
above our atmosphere -- giving professional astronomers a chance to see
the universe better than ever before.

Even with full-time use, though, there's just too little time and too
few telescopes -- both in space and on Earth -- to make all the
observations astronomers would like to have of various celestial
objects.  Amateur astronomers provide valuable services in filling this
observational gap -- and in a few years the amateurs may have access to
their own space telescope.

The Amateur Space Telescope -- sponsored by the Independent Space
Research Group of Troy, New York or I.S.R.G. -- is being built by
university students and faculty and other volunteer labor.  With the
right equipment anyone on Earth will be able to receive pictures and
data from the Amateur Space Telescope.  I.S.R.G. is already accepting
proposals for project time on the orbiting observatory.

The builders hope to piggyback the satellite onto an already scheduled
NASA launch to get it into space.  That situation is not new -- over
twenty years ago ham radio operators built their own communications
satellite and had it launched by a similar method -- and at least a
dozen other such communication satellites have been constructed over
the years.  Meanwhile, an eighteen inch mirror has been already been
donated -- and the Amateur Space Telescope is hoped to be off the
ground and functioning in space by 1986.


Script by Diana Hadley.

Amateur Space Telescope Nears Completion, Ray Grasshoff, Astronomy,
March 1984.  Telephone conversation with Jesse Eichenlaub, President,
I.S.R.G., P.O. Box 1246, Troy, New York (6-14-84)

(c) Copyright 1983, 1984 McDonald Observatory, University of Texas at Austin