| Astronomy Consortium Chooses Haleakala
as Site for Advanced Technology Telescope
January 31, 2005
The world's largest instrument for studying the
sun and its complex magnetic field, the Advanced Technology Solar
Telescope (ATST) is one step closer to reality, and to a location
on Haleakala, Maui. The ATST is an international project led by
the U.S. National Solar Observatory (NSO), which is operated by
the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA),
a consortium of 36 universities. Today, the AURA Board of Directors
endorsed the recommendation of its ATST Science Working Group to
make Haleakala the primary candidate site for the ATST. The announcement
caps a three-year effort that began with 70 potential sites, both
national and international, being considered, and ended with Haleakala
emerging as the one that best fulfills the ATST science requirements.
The $161 million ATST has been described as the world's greatest
advance in ground-based solar telescope capabilities since Galileo.
ATST can also be described as a solar "magnetometer."
Its unique design is optimized to allow precise measurements of
solar magnetic fields, particularly under circumstances where they
have been, thus far, invisible. This new capability should allow
us to understand and predict solar variability.
Few astrophysical research disciplines are directly
relevant to life on Earth, but understanding and predicting the
magnetic fluctuations of the sun is one that is. This variability
touches Earth in several ways, principally through the sun's changing
brightness, which affects the terrestrial climate both on the very
long timescales that correspond to the rise and fall of civilizations
and in periods as short as a few years. Furthermore, much Earth-bound
technology, from electrical power distribution to cell phone communication,
is directly affected by the intense solar magnetic storms that scientists
call flares and coronal mass ejections. Dr. Jeff Kuhn, solar astronomer
and Institute for Astronomy associate director for Haleakala stated,
"With the ATST, we will finally have a tool that can measure
the magnetism that we believe controls solar fluctuations."
Dr. Rolf-Peter Kudritzki, director of the Institute
for Astronomy at the University of Hawaii, expressed his excitement
about the site selection by saying, "The ATST is an outstanding
scientific project. It will provide deep insight into the role that
the sun plays in our lives. I am extremely happy that we are now
able to attract this project to Hawaii." He announced that
"the ATST project is moving to undertake a joint State/Federal
Environmental Impact Statement for a site on Haleakala." He
noted that the ATST project is identified as a potential new facility
in the University of Hawaii, Institute for Astronomy's Haleakala
Observatory Long Range Development Plan.
University of Hawaii President Dr. David McClain
commended the Institute for Astronomy for its successful work and
called the recommendation "a significant step forward in the
advancement of the University's research program. It also shows
the importance of the University for the development of technology
programs with broader educational and economic impact on all Hawaiian
islands."
Dr. Peter Englert, chancellor of the University
of Hawaii at Manoa, was extremely pleased about the site decision.
He said, "This is a beautiful example of the growing success
of UH Manoa as a research campus. We look forward to working together
with the National Solar Observatory for the advancement of science,
the improvement of our academic program and the benefit of the people
of Hawaii."
According to Dr. Stephen Keil, NSO director and
principal investigator for the ATST, "The ATST site selection
and the ATST design represent the work of a large segment of the
U.S. and international solar communities. The major goals of observing
and understanding magnetic fields at their fundamental spatial and
temporal scales at all heights in the solar atmosphere are best
fulfilled on Haleakala. At 4 meters in diameter, the ATST will be
the world's largest and most capable solar telescope." When
asked about the possibility of having the ATST on Haleakala, Kahu
Charles Kauluwehi Maxwell Sr. stated, "In ancient times the
Kahuna po`o (high priests) knew the value of Haleakala as a place
to view the planets and the stars, and as a place for meditation
and receiving spiritual wisdom. Haleakala is a sacred place and
must be treated with respect. It is of utmost importance that this
project, or any project on Haleakala, follow the Hawaiian Cultural
Protocol set forth for Kolekole Pu`u (top of Haleakala) in the IfA's
Long Range Development Plan; the Kanaka Maoli must be consulted
in the earliest phases of any proposed project, those who work at
Kolekole must attend "Sense of Place" training, there
must be Cultural Monitoring during all phases, before, during and
after construction, and every effort must be taken to minimize the
visual impact of anything on Haleakala. Haleakala is a place of
prayer; it is Ala hea ka la — the path to the calling the
sun."
ATST is a project of the solar physics research
community, led by the NSO, AURA (NSO's parent organization), and
supported by the National Science Foundation.
Links to additional information are available
on line at:
http://atst.nso.edu
& http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu
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