March 14, 2015
March 14, 2015
Today is 3-14-15 @9:26.
Hmmm, sounds really familiar??
Ooh, Pi, that ubiquitous number
from my engineering days. It crept into
calculations all the time. Aimee and I
are on the campus of the University of Arizona where they are celebrating this
once a century International Pi Day.
Quite by accident, for it is also the site of the Tucson Book
Festival. This event is very popular
with hundreds of booths set up on the Main Mall. While some of the exhibitors are interesting, I really dragged
Aimee here because two of the University science labs are world famous and are
having a free open house.
Our first stop is the Science City booth where we get the
last of the 10am tour tickets for the Steward Observatory Mirror Lab. A couple years ago we attended a star show
at their observatory atop our local Mt Lemmon.
It was outstanding and I have been wanting to see this sister
facility. This astronomy lab has
pioneered the manufacture of the world’s largest telescope mirrors. The 30-minute tour gives us a peak into the
cutting edge technology necessary to manufacture these enormous mirrors. The
process starts with Pyrex-type glass from Japan that is melted and spun to
approximate a parabolic shape. The glass
is then polished for years to produce the excruciatingly fine level of precision. The mirror has a honeycomb structure to
reduce weight and temperature distortion.
The first mirror took six years to complete.
When finished, seven of these mirrors will be
combined in an array and installed in the Giant Magellan Telescope atop a
mountain in Chile. It will have the
effective resolving power of an 80-foot diameter telescope. This compares to the 200-inch Hale Telescope
that was the largest for most of my lifetime.
That Hale mirror took 13 years to polish!
While we are on the campus, we also took the opportunity to
tour Arizona’s Tree Ring lab. One of
the university astronomers pioneered the science of dendrochronology. This method of dating involves collecting
wood samples from all over the world and counting the number and size of the
tree’s growth rings. By analyzing
thousands of overlapping tree samples, scientists have assembled complete tree
ring histories going back over 10,000 years allowing dating of unknown wood samples
to the EXACT year.
I guess it was appropriate that we toured both of these labs on Pi day, because both involve really big circles, albeit one glass and the other wood.
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