SETI public: Fw: Lowell Observatory and Discovery Communications Announce Partnership To Buil

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Tue Oct 21 2003 - 14:12:56 PDT

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Ron Baalke - Near Earth Object Program
    Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2003 8:03 AM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: Lowell Observatory and Discovery Communications Announce Partnership To Build Innovative Telescope Technology

    http://www.lowell.edu/press_room/releases/recent_releases/dct_rls.html

    For Immediate Release

    October 15, 2003

    contact:
    Rebecca Stenholm
    CKPR
    (602) 417-0684
    rstenhol_at_ckpr.biz

    Angela Rocha
    CKPR
    (602) 417-0687
    arocha_at_ckpr.biz

    LOWELL OBSERVATORY AND DISCOVERY COMMUNICATIONS, INC., ANNOUNCE
    PARTNERSHIP TO BUILD INNOVATIVE TELESCOPE TECHNOLOGY

    October 15, 2003

    Flagstaff, Ariz. - Today, Lowell Observatory and Discovery Communications,
    Inc., announced their collaboration to build a $30 million telescope that
    will significantly impact the exploration of our solar system and the
    universe beyond.

    The Discovery Channel Telescope (DCT) - designed exclusively for Lowell
    Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. - will be among the most sophisticated
    ground-based telescopes of its size. The four-meter telescope will have a
    significantly wider field of view than any currently existing telescope of
    its size, giving it the unprecedented ability to survey the sky at nearly
    eight times the capacity of the largest existing survey telescope. In this
    wide-field mode, the DCT's ability to perform deep imaging surveys of the
    night sky will be unmatched. This versatile telescope can be quickly
    converted to its alternative optical configuration, allowing it, unlike
    other pure survey telescopes, to be highly effective during bright phases of
    the moon. Once operational, the DCT also will have real-time capability,
    allowing the images acquired by the telescope to be simultaneously broadcast
    to people around the world.

    "Since its founding more than a century ago, Lowell Observatory has been
    dedicated to astronomical research, particularly the study of our solar
    system and its evolution, and to sharing that knowledge with the public,"
    said Robert L. Millis, director of the observatory. "The Discovery Channel
    Telescope will have a considerable impact on the exploration of our solar
    system and the deep reaches of space, and we are very excited to be working
    in partnership with Discovery Communications to develop this innovative
    technology."

    Millis also noted that the partnership with Discovery Communications, Inc.,
    which also includes educational programming and Lowell Observatory's
    involvement in Discovery's annual Young Scientists Challenge, was a natural
    fit given the Lowell's research and educational mission and the founding
    principles of the education and discovery-oriented company.

    "Discovery Communications was founded to provide the highest-quality
    television in the world enabling people to explore their world and satisfy
    their natural curiosity," said John S. Hendricks, founder, chairman and CEO
    of Discovery Communications, Inc. "Together, Discovery and Lowell
    Observatory will literally explore our world and bring the most exciting new
    discoveries found in our universe to millions of people around the globe."
    Among the DCT's numerous scientific objectives, the search for near-Earth
    asteroids, Kuiper Belt Objects and planets orbiting other stars, will be
    substantially advanced.

    Approximately 2,300 near-Earth asteroids have been discovered in the last
    decade. Once complete, the DCT will make it possible to identify the same
    number of potentially life-threatening near-Earth asteroids in just 30 days.
    The DCT also will make it possible to identify smaller near-Earth asteroids
    capable of causing regional devastation. Currently, the federally mandated
    search for near-Earth asteroids focuses on objects that are larger than a
    kilometer in diameter and capable of creating global devastation.

    Similar results are expected in the search for Kuiper Belt Objects, of which
    only 863 have been identified and can range in size from that of large
    asteroids to objects comparable in size to the planet Pluto. The Kuiper
    Belt, the first objects of which were discovered in 1992, is a sun-centered
    swarm of orbiting icy bodies extending from Neptune to as yet unknown
    distances.

    Construction is expected to begin on the DCT in fall 2004, with completion
    in 2008. The telescope's innovative components are already in design and
    production. The DCT's mirror blanks are being developed by Corning
    Incorporated in Canton, N.Y. Design currently continues on the following
    telescope components: optical system by Goodrich Corporation in Danbury,
    Conn.; facility and site design by M3 Engineering in Tucson, Ariz.; and the
    telescope mount by Vertex RSI in Richardson, Texas. The camera that Lowell
    will design and build for the four-meter telescope will have 36 2K by 4K
    charge-coupled devices capable of acquiring enormous amounts of data from
    each exposure and has a two degree field of view.

    The DCT is being jointly funded by Discovery Communications, Inc., and
    Lowell Observatory. Collaborations with additional institutional partners
    and private support also are being sought to help fund the venture.

    Lowell Observatory was founded in 1894 by Percival Lowell, who was
    determined to prove the existence of life on Mars. Lowell Observatory is
    among the oldest observatories in the nation, and the observatory's original
    24-inch Alvan Clark Refractor telescope, a national historic landmark, is
    still in use today for public education. For more than a century, Lowell
    Observatory has been considered among the major astronomical research
    observatories in the world. Significant achievements made at Lowell include
    the discovery of Pluto and the first evidence of the expansion of the
    universe.

    Discovery Communications, Inc., (DCI) is the leading global real-world media
    and entertainment company. DCI has grown from its core property, the
    Discovery Channel, first launched in the United States in 1985, to current
    global operations in more than 155 countries and territories with over 950
    million cumulative subscribers. DCI's 33 networks of distinctive programming
    represent 14 entertainment brands including TLC, Animal Planet, Travel
    Channel, Discovery Health Channel, Discovery Kids, Discovery Times Channel,
    The Science Channel, Discovery Wings Channel, Discovery Home & Leisure
    Channel, Discovery en Espa-ol, HD Theater and The Health Network. DCI's
    other properties consist of Discovery.com and 138 Discovery Channel retail
    stores. DCI also distributes BBC America in the United States. DCI's
    ownership consists of four shareholders: Liberty Media Corporation (NYSE:
    L), Cox Communications, Inc. (NYSE: COX), Advance/Newhouse Communications
    and John S. Hendricks, the Company's Founder, Chairman and CEO.

    ###


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