Author: Trevor and Dylan

  • Mars Desert Research Station

    Image of Mars Desert Research Station located in

    Mars Desert Research Station

    A Mars simulation in the southern Utah desert

    Some scientists argue that the fate of the human species hinges upon our ability (or inability) to leave our comfortable home behind and colonize other planets. Tucked away in the San Rafael Swell of southern Utah, members of the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS) are preparing for exactly this type of voyage.
    The MDRS, just under seven miles from Hanksville, Utah, is the second of four such sites planned as part of the Mars Analogue Research Station (MARS) Project operated jointly by the Mars Institute and SETI Institute. With funding from NASA, the project scientists have been preparing for a hypothetical manned mission to Mars in some of our planet’s most alien landscapes.
    At each site the earthbound astronauts are assigned the task of testing field procedures, habitat design features, and new technologies, all with the intent of developing knowledge that will be helpful when humans can actually travel to Mars. The crew, usually consisting of six people, must also don space suit simulators any time they leave the “Hab” or Habitat where they live.
    Outsiders can even catch a glimpse of the Mars simulation, which runs during the winter months, via several web cams set up within the Hab. Two other buildings on the MDRS campus, the “Greenhab” greenhouse and the Musk Observatory, provide additional research opportunities for the science crew.
    Haughton Impact Crater in northern Canada, the most Martian of Earth environments, served as the first MARS Project site and additional stations, EuroMARS and MARS-Oz, are planned for Iceland and Australia respectively.

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    Category: Martian Landscapes
    Location:
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Sphinx Observatory

    Image of Sphinx Observatory located in Jungfraujoch, Switzerland

    Sphinx Observatory

    Historic observatory precariously perched at the “Top of Europe”

    Scientists have long traveled to Earth’s ends to conduct their studies. Mountaintops are a classic example of a harsh environment that serves as an ideal setting for experiments ranging from the physiological to the astronomical.
    When the Jungfraujoch station in the Bernese Alps opened in 1912, it became the highest railway stop in all of Europe. It also opened the door for eager scientists awaiting easy access to a high altitude site to do their work.
    The Sphinx Observatory, completed in 1937, is a result of this influx of research. Perched on a shockingly steep precipice at the so-called “Top of Europe,” the observatory is the highest-altitude construction in the entire continent.
    With multiple laboratories, a weather observation station, astronomical and meteorological domes, and a 76-cm telescope, the Sphinx has served as a headquarters for researchers in fields such as glaciology, medicine, cosmic ray physics, and astronomy. And over the years, the building has adapted to meet scientists’ needs. Today, the observatory is fully outfitted with electricity, water, telephone, internet, and even a machine to produce liquid air.
    In addition to the science, the observatory also provides visitors with vertigo-inducing, panoramic views of the snowy Alps, green valleys, and the Great Aletsch Glacier. From the metal grating terrace that surrounds the building, one can see over 11,000 feet below, with views stretching as far as Germany and Italy.
    Even getting to the observatory is a wondrous journey itself. Riding along the historic Jungfrau railway, passengers have a chance to peer through windows built into the mountainside and browse the peculiar Eispalast (Ice Palace), where ice sculptures depicting everything from people to automobiles are carved within a chilly glacier.

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    Category: Instruments of Science
    Location: Jungfraujoch, Switzerland
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Nicolaus Copernicus House

    Image of Nicolaus Copernicus House located in Torun, Poland

    Nicolaus Copernicus House

    Museum dedicated to “the man who moved the Earth”

    Nicolaus Copernicus was the first astronomer to develop a complete theory of the universe with the sun at the center. With his “heliocentric model” published in 1543, Copernicus showed that the motions of celestial bodies could be explained without placing Earth at the center.
    At that time in Europe, the prevailing theory of the heavens was the Ptolemaic system, in which all celestial objects were thought to revolve around our planet. By removing Earth from this special position in the universe, Copernicus helped set in motion the Scientific Revolution of the 1500s and 1600s.
    In the Nicolaus Copernicus House Museum, where the astronomer and cleric was purportedly born in 1473, exhibits tell the story of Copernicus’ life and work, life in medieval Poland, and even the art of gingerbread making.
    The museum is contained within two adjacent Gothic burgher homes that belonged to Copernicus’ father. Complete with period furniture and reconstructed interiors, the buildings illustrate the merchant culture of the 15th and 16th centuries.
    One curious exhibit that further demonstrates medieval life is a 1973 scale model of Toruń as it was in 1500. Through light and sound, the computer-controlled model simulates wars and other events that took place in the Polish city.
    The astronomy-related exhibits feature replicas of Copernicus’ instruments (astrolabe, triquetrum, and quadrant), a recreation of his study, and a facsimile of the first edition of his seminal work “De revolutionibus orbium coelestium” (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres). Also reconstructed at the museum is the oldest collection of Copernicus memorabilia, originally displayed at the National Polish Museum of Rappersville, Switzerland in 1870.
    In what is surely a unique departure from the average science museum, the Copernicus House also features an exhibit on the history of the Toruń gingerbread craft. Here, visitors have the chance to learn about a tradition dating back to the 14th century as well as bake gingerbread of their own.

    Read more about Nicolaus Copernicus House on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Strange Science, Unique Collections
    Location: Torun, Poland
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Echigo-Matsunoyama Museum of Natural Science

    Image of Echigo-Matsunoyama Museum of Natural Science located in Urataguchi, Japan

    Echigo-Matsunoyama Museum of Natural Science

    Modern Japanese museum is buried by snow annually

    Perched in the hills of Niigata prefecture, the Echigo-Matsunoyama Museum of Natural Science is known for its unusual architecture, impressive butterfly collection, and the heavy snows that annually engulf it.
    With an exterior of pre-rusted steel the museum looks more like an industrial relic than a space for science exhibits. Explaining his inspiration for the building, architect Takaharu Tezuka said, “I wanted to make a building that looks like a ruin.”
    And with the extreme environment and weather of Japan’s snow country, the building resembles some abstract ruin more each year. During the winter, the snow can reach a depth of 23 feet, burying everything but the building’s lookout tower.
    Inside the museum, large pane-less windows allow visitors to see the snow piled up outside and occasionally the life forms that are suspended within it. To withstand the enormous pressure of the snow, the windows are made of three-inch thick composite acrylic, the same material used in aquariums. Nevertheless, the stress put on the structure is so great that the building can be heard ‘groaning’ in the winter.
    While the tower serves as the only prominent landmark in winter’s snow-filled landscape, it also offers sweeping views of the surrounding mountains and meadows. Climbing up its dimly lit staircase to the top, visitors are also immersed in a solar-powered light-and-sound art installation.
    The tower is one example of the husband-and-wife architects Takaharu and Yui Tezuka’s attempt to imbue the building with the theme of experiencing cosmic rays, water, sounds and nature through collaboration with five artists.
    In addition to the large butterfly collection, a must-see exhibit is “The Amusing Boxes.” Contained in around 200 drawers, this display is a collection of “oddments from the nature and culture of Matsunoyama.” Among the items found in the exhibit are snakeskins, cicada shells, and objects made at the museum’s workshops.

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    Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science, Architectural Oddities, Repositories of Knowledge
    Location: Urataguchi, Japan
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Tunguska Event Epicenter

    Image of Tunguska Event Epicenter located in Khushma, Russia | Some rare remains of the trees affected by the Tunguska Event

    Tunguska Event Epicenter

    Site of the largest impact event to occur over land in Earth’s recorded history

    On June 30, 1908 at 7:17 in the morning, a catastrophic event wreaked havoc on the Podkamennaya Tunguska River basin. Eyewitness accounts from Siberian villagers described a bright blue light that streaked across the sky, followed by a violent flash and a barrage of noise much like the sound of artillery fire.
    Tremors shook the ground, while a powerful shockwave shattered windows and knocked people off their feet. Effects of the blast were felt thousands of miles away. Fluctuations in atmospheric transparency were recorded across North America, and throughout Europe and Asia the night sky was so bright that a newspaper could be read in its light for weeks afterwards.
    Immediately following the so-called “Tunguska Event,” there were few scientific attempts to explain the mysterious occurrence. In fact, more than ten years passed before the first scientific expedition, led by the Russian mineralogist Leonid Kulik, attempted to visit the event’s epicenter.
    When Kulik and his team finally arrived in 1927, what they discovered shocked them. At that time, it was assumed that the Tunguska Event was actually a meteorite impact. However, at ground zero there was no crater to be found.
    Instead, trees at the epicenter stood vertically, scorched and stripped of their bark. Farther out, trees were toppled over on their sides and pointing away from the center.
    In fact, the explosion leveled 80 million trees over 830 square miles of forest. But what could cause such a violent event without leaving so much as a dent in the ground? This question has perplexed scientists for over a century, and the Tunguska Event debate remains a heated one.
    Today, the most favored explanation involves the mid-air explosion of a large meteoroid or comet. At about 28,000 feet above the Earth’s surface, many scientists believe, a chunk of rock or ice measuring tens of meters across broke apart from the heat and pressure of the atmosphere.
    Traveling at a speed of over 33,000 mph, this explosion would have created a shock wave about 1000 times more powerful than the bomb dropped at Hiroshima. Directly below the blast, the trees were stripped but remained standing because the shockwave would have been traveling vertically downward. Farther out, however the shockwave would have been traveling in a more horizontal direction, explaining the vast area of flattened forest.
    This scenario would also account for the lack of a crater. It is thought that the “impacting” body would have been torn apart into small enough pieces that no large chunks reached the surface. Furthermore, those in favor of the comet hypothesis believe the brightened night sky was a result of noctilucent clouds: high-altitude clouds made of highly reflective ice that would have formed from the water vapor injected into the atmosphere by the exploding comet.
    Though the scientific explanation might sound quite complicated, even wilder Tunguska theories have proliferated over the years. Among the more far-fetched culprits of the blast are a tiny black hole passing through the Earth, a UFO crash, and even Nikola Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Tower.

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    Category: Disaster Areas
    Location: Khushma, Russia
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Laboratory

    Image of Tesla's Wardenclyffe Laboratory located in Shoreham, New York, US

    Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Laboratory

    An unrealized dream to wirelessly electrify the entire Earth

    Wardenclyffe Laboratory is the last remaining research facility of Nikola Tesla, the famed Serb/Croat (he is claimed by both) physicist whose bold ideas about electricity led to the development of alternating current motors and radio communications. Originally built with the goal of transmitting electrical signals across the Atlantic Ocean, the laboratory also had a secret purpose unbeknownst to its primary investor J.P. Morgan.
    Construction began on the brick laboratory and 187-foot transmitting tower in 1901 under the supervision of famous architect (and later, famous murder victim) Stanford White. However, with Guglielmo Marconi’s success in signaling the letter “S” from England to Newfoundland in December of that year, the project lost momentum. In need of funds, Tesla was forced to disclose the laboratory’s true objective: to electrify the Earth by wirelessly transferring power to the entire globe.
    Like many of Tesla’s scientific contemporaries, Morgan was skeptical of the project’s practicality and withdrew his support in 1903. The frustrated Tesla retreated to his laboratory, and flipped the switch for the first time on the massive transmitting tower. Stories of the lightning-like flashes that penetrated the night sky circulated amongst the townspeople, but the scientist gave no explanation for the experiments the following day.
    Eventually, Tesla was forced to sell Wardenclyffe to settle outstanding hotel bills at the Waldorf-Astoria. By 1917, the tower had been demolished and sold for scrap. What was once a bustling laboratory full of glass blowing equipment, a complete machine shop, X-Ray devices, Tesla coils, a radio controlled boat, generators, and transformers became a vacant monument to Tesla’s “forfeited dream.”
    Today, the site’s remaining buildings are at risk of being destroyed as well. The Belgium-based imaging corporation Agfa, which currently owns the land, is looking to sell the lot for $1.6 million. Having already sunk millions into a Superfund cleanup of the heavy photographic metals that contaminated the grounds, Agfa is unwilling to donate the property outright to a group hoping to transform the buildings into a Tesla museum and science education center.
    With access to the laboratory, these historical preservationists might even reveal still unknown goals of Tesla’s most audacious project. Wardenclyffe is also likely to provide an explanation for the often-rumored network of underground passages that are said to extend from deep below the laboratory all the way to the beachfront.

    Read more about Tesla’s Wardenclyffe Laboratory on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Instruments of Science, Electrical Oddities, Retro-Tech, Incredible Ruins, Subterranean Sites
    Location: Shoreham, New York, US
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Michael Faraday Memorial

    Image of Michael Faraday Memorial located in Elephant & Castle, United Kingdom

    Michael Faraday Memorial

    Shiny Brutalist box commemorates a pioneer of electricity and houses a railway transformer

    At the center of a busy traffic interchange of Elephant and Castle sits a gleaming stainless steel box that has perplexed south Londoners for decades. Depending on which urban legend is favored at the time, one might be led to believe the unusual building is some kind of nuclear facility or that it is home to the electronic musician Aphex Twin.
    The truth, however, is that it is a memorial to the Victorian physicist Michael Faraday. A local boy from Newington Butts, Faraday is most famous for his discovery of electromagnetic induction in 1831. He found that by passing a magnet through a loop of wire, an electrical current flowed through the wire. This work provided a basis on which Scotland’s James Clerk Maxwell later developed the first comprehensive theory of electricity and magnetism.
    The building was designed by Brutalist architect Rodney Gordon in 1959 to house, quite fittingly, a London Underground electrical substation. Originally, Gordon had planned the structure in glass so that the transformer inside could be seen at work. However, the potential for vandalism made steel the favored material.
    This design change is at least part of the reason why the building has a decidedly modern appearance that belies its true age. To this day, many Londoners are confused by the memorial, and as recently as 1995 the London Evening Standard ran a story about the structure with the headline: “But what on Earth is it?” In 1996, however, the building received a different sort of publicity as a local schoolgirl won a BBC competition to devise a new lighting scheme for the site.
    Although a thorough redevelopment of the Elephant and Castle area is in the works, the Faraday Memorial’s status as a grade II listed building ensures that it will not be demolished and will instead be moved to a new site if necessary.

    Read more about Michael Faraday Memorial on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Unusual Monuments, Electrical Oddities, Architectural Oddities
    Location: Elephant & Castle, United Kingdom
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Ramanujan Museum

    Image of Ramanujan Museum located in Chennai, India

    Ramanujan Museum

    One-room museum dedicated to India’s most enigmatic mathematician

    Srinivasa Ramanujan was a mathematician of unusual talent. Born in 1887 and raised in the modest town of Kumbakonam in Tamil Nadu, Ramanujan was largely self-taught. Working alone, the Indian mathematician arrived at nearly 3,900 results, and in the process rederived a century’s worth of Western mathematics.
    It was not until 1912, when Ramanujan sent his theorems to academics at the University of Cambridge, that the Western world gained knowledge of his genius. G.H. Hardy took particular interest in Ramanujan’s work, immediately recognizing his brilliance. In 1914, the atheist and academically rigorous Hardy arranged for the shy, religious, and highly intuitive Ramanujan to travel to England. There, Ramanujan spent the remainder of his career developing his ideas with his English colleagues before falling ill and returning to India five years later.
    Tragically, Ramanujan died at the early age of 32, having spent a majority of his life rediscovering established proofs and formulae. Though a small fraction of his results also turned out to be wrong, a considerable amount of Ramanujan’s work proved to be new. Today, his ideas (which are some of the most strange and obscure in all of mathematics) continue to inspire mathematical discoveries as well as find real-world applications.
    While Ramanujan’s birthday is an official holiday in his home state of Tamil Nadu, there is a little-known museum in Chennai that celebrates his life year-round. Often overlooked by adults and tourists, the one-room museum is visited primarily by schoolchildren.
    The collection is the result of decades of effort by math educator P.K. Srinivasan. Noting children’s disdain for the subject, Srinivasan hoped to establish a Ramanujan Memorial Foundation that would house a planetarium, library, auditorium, and exhibitions meant to excite visitors about mathematics. However, it took years of hard work asking relatives, associates, and institutions that had contact with Ramanujan to acquire the pictures, letters, and other documents necessary for a museum.
    In 1993, after digging through unopened chests in Ramanujan’s old attic, Srinivasan finally had the means and space to open up a small museum in Chennai. Today, visitors to the exhibit can view a myriad of Ramanujan memorabilia, including photographs of the mathematician’s home and family, his correspondence with friends, relatives, and colleagues, as well as his original passport.

    Read more about Ramanujan Museum on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Museums and Collections, Unique Collections
    Location: Chennai, India
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • James Clerk Maxwell Foundation

    Image of James Clerk Maxwell Foundation located in Edinburgh, United Kingdom

    James Clerk Maxwell Foundation

    Small museum dedicated to the founder of electromagnetic theory

    There are few figures of the 19th century who have had a greater impact on the course of civilization than the Scottish physicist and mathematician James Clerk Maxwell. His discovery of a unified theory of electricity and magnetism directly led to the development of radio communications, television, mobile telephones, and many other technologies. Maxwell’s findings have even been called “the most significant event of the 19th century” by the physicist Richard Feynman, and the astronomer Carl Sagan claimed that “Maxwell’s equations have had a greater impact on human history than any ten presidents.”
    The James Clerk Maxwell Foundation in Edinburgh is dedicated to preserving the memory of Maxwell through science education and a small museum about his life. Formed in 1977, the foundation is housed in Maxwell’s birthplace and former home, and retains much of the building’s original character. The Georgian style townhouse was built in 1820 for Maxwell’s father, eleven years before the physicist’s birth.
    The foundation serves as home to the International Centre for Mathematical Sciences as well as a collection of manuscripts, books, artwork, and furniture associated with Maxwell, his family, and colleagues. An item of particular interest in the museum is a chair that the young James used to study in, and that his aunt later embroidered to illustrate the wave theory of light. This gesture was a fitting tribute to Maxwell’s work, as he was first to discover that light is essentially electromagnetic waves.
    Another highlight of the museum is the Stairway Gallery of Illustrissimi, a chronological series of engraved portraits of famous physicists and mathematicians, many of which are from the personal collection of Sir John Herschel. Occasionally, some of Maxwell’s original experimental apparatus (on loan from Cavendish Laboratory) are also included in the foundation’s exhibits.

    Read more about James Clerk Maxwell Foundation on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Museums and Collections, Strange Science, Unique Collections
    Location: Edinburgh, United Kingdom
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • LIGO Livingston Observatory

    Image of LIGO Livingston Observatory located in Livingston, Louisiana, US

    LIGO Livingston Observatory

    World’s largest precision optical instrument used to detect Einstein’s elusive gravity waves

    In 1916, Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity was published. Included in the bizarre picture that the famed physicist painted of the universe were the notions that energy and mass were equivalent, and that gravity was simply a warp in the “fabric” of space-time. Since then, there have been many successful experiments carried out to prove Einstein’s theory. Nearly a century later, however, scientists at the LIGO Livingston Observatory in Louisiana still aim to confirm General Relativity’s most elusive prediction: gravity waves.
    LIGO stands for Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. The first part of the name refers to the instrument employed at the site, while the second part describes the phenomenon which scientists are eager to detect. Gravity waves are analogous to the more familiar waves that surround us in daily life, such as water waves or electromagnetic waves (more commonly referred to as “light”). Their source, however, is the disturbance of a gravitational field.
    Space-time is often likened to a fabric that sags in the presence of mass, such as galaxies, stars, or planets. When a massive object moves around, the gravitational field around it changes accordingly. As a result, curves in space-time propagate outward from the object, forming “gravity waves” similar to the ripples left by a bug darting across a still pond.
    Most of the time, these waves are too weak to be detected with current technological means. For this reason gravity waves have never been directly detected. On occasion, however, violent celestial events like the collisions of stars or black holes produce disturbances so large that scientists on Earth just might be able to detect them.
    To measure effects as subtle as gravitational disturbances from distant sources, the LIGO observatory is equipped with an instrument of extraordinary size, precision, and stability: the mother of all interferometers. In the case of LIGO, the interferometer is a tool used to precisely measure the time it takes light to traverse each arm of the L-shaped structure. Each arm is an astonishing 2.5 miles (4 km) long, with mirrors suspended at the ends. Laser light enters the instrument from the corner of the L and is split into two beams, each of which is then allowed to bounce back and forth repeatedly in its respective arm.
    If the length of one arm of the interferometer differs even slightly relative to the other, a telltale “interference pattern” will result at the junction where the beams ultimately return. Now, according to Einstein’s theory, one of the two perpendicular arms will contract in length while the other expands if a gravity wave passes through the interferometer. Consequently, LIGO scientists use a detector at the corner of the ‘L’ to record the interference created by the two beams and simply wait for a gravity wave to pass by.
    Perhaps it sounds simple enough, but the effects that LIGO hopes to measure are so slight that extreme engineering measures must be taken. In the presence of a gravity wave, the length of an interferometer arm will change only by one hundred-millionth the diameter of a hydrogen atom. That means it is necessary to shield the instrument from any other sources of disturbance such as seismic vibrations and even the gas molecules in the air. Since the laser beam is needed to travel in the straightest possible line, one of the world’s largest vacuum systems is employed to bring the air pressure down to one-trillionth of the value on Earth and minimize the amount of scattered light due to stray molecules. The resulting system is so sensitive that it can even detect the random motion of the atoms inside the mirrors themselves.
    Even with such stringent precautionary measures, the risk of a false signal is high. In order to rule out erroneous measurements, an identical LIGO detector was built near Richland, Washington. This second location, known as the LIGO Hanford Observatory, operates in unison with the instrument at Livingston. Only when both observatories record the same signal at the same time will scientists know with certainty they have directly detected a gravity wave passing through the Earth.
    While Joseph Taylor and Russell Hulse became the first to indirectly detect gravity waves in 1974, the scientists at LIGO have yet to receive a verifiable signal. Nevertheless, the payoffs for physics and astronomy are several should they succeed. LIGO researchers hope to not only test the predictions of General Relativity (such as the idea that gravity waves travel at light-speed) but also reveal a variety of exotic astronomical events.

    Read more about LIGO Livingston Observatory on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Inspired Inventions, Instruments of Science
    Location: Livingston, Louisiana, US
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan

  • Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory

    Image of Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory located in Gaithersburg, Maryland, US | Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory.

    Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory

    Tiny observatory made big contributions to the study of the Earth’s motion

    The Earth wobbles slightly in its orbit, like a spinning top that draws ever-larger circles with its handle before it topples over. However, for our planet this process is extremely slow: the rotation axis completes one revolution (draws out one circle) every 26,000 years. The reason for this “precessional motion” can be traced back to the Earth’s shape.
    It is not a perfect sphere, but rather something called an “oblate spheroid.” That means the Earth has a potbelly, a bulge wrapping around the equator, almost like a slightly flattened ball. This effect is itself a result of the Earth’s rotation, as the centrifugal force that pushes outward from the center is greatest in the equatorial region. The gravitational attractions from the sun and moon then push and pull on the bulge, causing the Earth to gradually tip over.
    The end result is the positions of the stars in the sky change over very long periods of time. For instance, while Polaris is the current North Star (the star directly overhead when standing at the North Pole), Vega in the constellation Lyra will assume this position in 13,000 years.
    The Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory is one of six International Latitude Observatories that were built around the turn of the twentieth century to study the exact degree of the Earth’s wobble.
    rom 1899 to 1982 (with a gap between 1915 and 1932) nightly observations were recorded at the GLO in concert with those at the companion observatories in Ohio, California, Japan, Italy, and the Soviet Union (all of which occupy the same latitude of 39° 8’ N).
    By making precise, long-term measurements of the locations of certain stars in the sky, scientists were able to ascertain the rate of Earth’s precessional motion. Though the observations made in the 13 square foot room were relatively simple ones, the research that took place at GLO and the other observatories was paramount to establishing a deeper understanding of the Earth’s rotation, size, and shape.
    For instance, knowing the rate of precession is key to astronomers, who frequently need to adjust coordinates obtained by prior observers in order to account for the Earth’s positional shift. And many more fields of science, from seismology and geodesy to climatology and space exploration, are also indebted to the observatory for its success in determining basic Earth properties. Perhaps most importantly, the Gaithersburg observatory is a symbol of cooperation in the international scientific community through periods of political differences, trying economies, and changing social climates.
    The observatory itself is a National Historic Landmark, but there are several other points of interest on the property. These include the Meridian Mark Pier (a stone used to align the telescope), the brick caretaker’s house from 1947, as well as five Coast and Geodetic Survey monuments that establish the exact coordinates, elevation, and magnetic field direction at the site.

    Read more about Gaithersburg Latitude Observatory on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Instruments of Science, Retro-Tech
    Location: Gaithersburg, Maryland, US
    Edited by: Trevor, Dylan