Millikin University to host
viewing of Total Lunar Eclipse January 20th
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[January 18, 2019]
The Millikin University community and the public are invited to a
special Public Observation Night (PON) at Requarth Observatory on
Sunday, Jan. 20 for an opportunity to witness a rare total lunar
eclipse which will be visible from 10:41 to 11:43 p.m. CST. The
Requarth Observatory will be open from 8:30 p.m. to 12 midnight on
Jan. 20. The event is free and open to the public, and attendees are
encouraged to dress warmly.
A total lunar eclipse occurs when the full moon moves behind and
into the shadow of the Earth. Because the light from the sun passes
through the Earth's atmosphere, the moon appears red during a total
lunar eclipse, leading to the name "Blood Moon."
For observers in the United States, the eclipse will take place
between the evening of Sunday, Jan. 20 and the early morning hours
of Monday, Jan. 21. The eclipse will occur during a supermoon and it
will also be the last total lunar eclipse until May 2021.
The Requarth Observatory is located on the roof of the Leighty-Tabor
Science Center located just off Fairview Ave. on Millikin
University's campus in Decatur, Ill. Guests can use the parking lot
located in front of Kirkland Fine Arts Center.
For more information, email Justin Craig, Requarth Observatory
assistant, at jncraig@millikin.edu or contact Dr. Casey Watson,
chair of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Millikin, at
217.424.6271 or email
crwatson @millikin.edu.
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Spring Observation Nights
Millikin University will host Public Observation Nights each Thursday evening
throughout the spring 2019 semester from 7:30 – 9:30 p.m. (weather permitting).
Public Observation Nights are free and open to the public.
Stargazing will take place on the roof of the Leighty-Tabor Science Center on
Millikin's campus under the direction of student and faculty astronomers. PONs
serve as a great way for Millikin physics and astronomy students to showcase
some of their work and the facilities that they use and maintain for their
research.
Housed on the fifth floor of the Leighty-Tabor Science Center, the Requarth
Observatory was built along with the rest of the Leighty-Tabor Science Center in
2000. All three 300 lb. support sections that hold the 20" (.5 meter) telescope
were carried up five flights of stairs by hand. Faculty and students are
continually updating the observatory to meet their scientific needs and there
are currently many plans to enhance the stargazing experience for faculty,
students and visitors.
In addition to the main telescope, the Leighty-Tabor Science Center also
features an observation deck on the fifth floor that surrounds the base of the
dome. This observation deck provides a platform to set up the smaller 8"
telescopes that are commonly used in introductory astronomy courses.
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