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From the American Astronomical Society

182st AAS Meeting, Berkeley, California

from http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-iarticle_query?bibcode=1993AAS...182.2701W&db_key=AST&page_ind=0&data_type=GIF&type=SCREEN_VIEW&classic=YES

Session 27: Hat Creek

Oral Session, 8:30 am-12:30 pm

Harold Weaver (Radio Astronomy Laboratory/Department of Astronomy, UCBerkeley)

The first course in radio astronomy at Berkeley was given by Ron Bracewell a visiting Professor of Astronomy in 1954/55. Convinced that radio astronomy had to be part of the curriculum, a faculty committee recommended in 1955 that a solar radio observatory be built and operated by the Department.

This original plan was modified, and I took on the task of building and operating a radio astronomy observatory for galactic studies. It was to have as its major telescope an 85-foot dish - a large instrument for that time. The first two years were spent in writing reports, searching for funds, and investigating existing radio observatories.

The Radio Astronomy Laboratory was officially established by the Regents in July, 1958. Costs of the project were shared by ONR and the University. The Hat Creek site was located ini January, 1960. The first telescope, a thirty-three foot dish built in-house as a learning experience, was used for its initial observations in July, 1960.

The 85-foot telescope was accepted and first used in June, 1962. Construction the 85-foot was not without mishap. In October, 1960 the airhouse under which the dish was being constructed, was destroyed in a storm. It was necessary to build a new airhouse and completely resurface the dish, causing a long delay in delivery.

The 85-foot telescope was born in a storm; it died in a storm in January, 1993, in its thirty-first year.