Projects: Shoemaker NEO Grants
The 2005 Gene Shoemaker NEO Grant Recipients
The 2005 Gene Shoemaker Near Earth
Object (NEO) Grants, totaling $32,500 (US), were awarded to an international
collection of amateur astronomers and researchers:
James W. Ashley, Minor Planet Research, Inc.,
Fountain Hills, Arizona, USA;
Peter Birtwhistle, Great Shefford Observatory,
Berkshire, England;
David J. Higgins, Hunters Hill Observatory, Ngunnawal,
Canberra, Australia;
Gianluca Masi, Campo Catino, Italy;
Erich Meyer, Davidschalg, Austria.
The observers and their projects were selected from a group of 24 proposals
that The Planetary Society received from 12 different countries.
James
W. Ashley of the Minor Planet Research, Inc. (MPR) will
receive funding for data storage equipment and an Internet server to be
used as a integral part of MPR’s Asteroid Discovery Station (ADS)
education project. The ADS system uses both un-reviewed and archival images
from the Lowell Observatory Near-Earth Object Search program (LONEOS) to
provide students with the unique opportunity to discover both main-belt
and near-Earth asteroids.
Photo: Minor Planet Research, Inc. From left to right: Bliss (observer),
James Ashley (Associate Director), Paul Johnson (Executive Director), and
Robert Cash (observer). Taken in the warm room of the Lowell Observatory Near
Earth Object Search (LONEOS) 0.59-m Schmidt telescope at Anderson Mesa near
Flagstaff Arizona
» Read updates from Ashley: July 13, 2006
Peter
Birtwhistle will receive funding to enhance the ongoing NEO astrometric
follow-up program at the Great Shefford Observatory by upgrading an existing
CCD camera. The upgrade will enable images from the camera to be transferred
to its controlling PC at a rate about 20 times faster than currently possible.
As a result, longer exposures will be possible in a given elapsed time,
permitting the detection of fainter NEOs.
» Read updates from Birtwhistle: June
18, 2006 - March 7, 2007
David
Higgins will receive funding to purchase an SBIG CCD camera and
filter wheel, allowing him to utilize the full automation tools already
emplaced at his observatory and thus increasing the number of effectively
utilized observing hours by a factor of 2. Higgins is a talented amateur
observer with a good observing site north of Canberra where he will concentrate
on astrometric follow-up and lightcurve studies of NEOs.
» Read updates from Higgins: June
15, 2006 - March 3, 2007
Gianluca
Masi will receive funding to repair and upgrade a 0.8-meter telescope
that he uses for photometric observations of NEOs. Masi is a graduate student
at the University of Rome, working full time on NEO observations.
» Read updates from Masi: July
18, 2006
Photo: Masi beside the 0.8-meter telescope at Campo Catino Observatory, Italy.
Photo by Alan Harris.
Erich
Meyer will receive funding to purchase a new Santa Barbara Instruments
Group (SBIG) CCD camera with a large pixel array and extremely short readout
time. Meyer is a very experienced and productive NEO observer, who routinely
works with his 0.6-meter telescope at very faint visual magnitudes comparable
to professional surveys. The primary thrust of Meyer’s observing program
is to extend the observed orbital arcs of very faint newly-discovered NEOs.
The purchase of a new, modern CCD camera will enable him to make even greater
contributions.
» Read updates from Meyer: July
2, 2006
Photo: Meyer beside his 0.6-meter telescope.
The Planetary Society thanks all the Shoemaker NEO Grant applicants.
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