The 'Dyer Observatory' is an
astronomical observatory owned and operated by
Vanderbilt University. Built in 1953, it is located in
Brentwood,
Tennessee. The observatory is named after Arthur J. Dyer, who paid for the observatory's 24-foot-wide dome, and houses a 24-inch
reflecting telescope named for astronomer
Carl Seyfert. Today, the observatory primarily serves as a teaching tool; its mission is to interest children in the fields of
science and
engineering.
[1]
History
Vanderbilt's first observatory was housed on the campus itself. It was equipped with a 6-inch
refracting telescope and was the site of
E. E. Barnard's earliest astronomical work. Barnard would eventually discover 16 comets and the fifth moon of
Jupiter, receive the only
honorary degree Vanderbilt has ever awarded, and have the on-campus observatory named in his honor.
[2] However, that on-campus observatory would eventually prove insufficient for the university's needs.
[3]
When Seyfert joined the university's faculty in
1946, he lobbied for increasing the astronomy department's modest course offerings and for a new observatory.
3 He solicited donations from over 80
Nashville businesses to outfit the new observatory and convinced Dyer, owner of Nashville Bridge Company, to donate the funds for and to install the observatory's dome. When the observatory opened in December 1953, Seyfert was named its director, and, after his death, the 24-inch telescope was named in his honor.
[4]
See also
★
List of observatories
References
1. Dyer Observatory Home
2. Astronomer Barnard was among Vanderbilt's first academic superstars Bill Carey
3. Carl Keenan Seyfert (1911-1960)
4. Dyer History
External Links
★
Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory homepage
★
Vanderbilt Dyer Observatory Clear Sky Clock Forecasts of observing conditions.