Photograph Ross Camera and Fauth finderscope
astronomy, telescope, camera, photography
Photograph of the 4-inch Ross-Fecker camera with the 4-inch Fauth refractor as the finderscope.
The instrument was a refractor of 4-inch aperture and 28-inch focal length (f/7) with a scale of 290”/mm. It held 8x10 inch glass plates covering 20 by 16 degrees. Mounted on former 30-inch reflector mount. Originally located at the Florida Avenue Observatory until 1966, moved to Prairie Observatory in 1968. First plate taken October 10, 1939, last recorded plate October 8, 1980.
In 1953, Fecker estimated the value at $18,000 and noted it was in good condition with the exception of outside surface paint scaling. Many of the plates are now at Yerkes Observatory where they will be digitized and preserved. Baker and his students, which included Elaine Nantkes, Lois Keifer, David Heeschen and Alan Sandage, published 7 papers in the Astrophysical Journal on the analysis of the Milky Way in Cassiopeia, Ophiuchus, Sagittarius, Auriga, Aquila, Cepheus and Perseus. This was the principal research in astronomy done at the University of Illinois from 1939 until 1951. Approximately 4000 photographs were taken with the camera.
The finderscope was a 4-inch Fauth refractor purchased in 1896. The receipt identifies it as an “Outfit” equatorial consistent with the 1893 Saegmuller catalog. "The smaller equatorial has an aperture of 4 inches and a focal length of 6 feet. It is provided with graduated circles of 6 inches diameter in both right ascension and declination, the former reading by two verniers to single minutes and the latter, also by two verniers to five minutes of arc. It is further supplied with a driving clock and finder and is mounted by means of a circular cast iron column 6 feet high which rests on a masonry pier, the whole being covered by a shed carried on rollers which may be easily and quickly pushed entirely away from the instrument."
J.W. Fecker
Description and price-list of first-class engineering and astronomical instruments manufactures by Geo. N Saegmuller successor to Fauth & Co. (1892). Gibson Bros Printers: Washington DC. Available as Google eBook at http://books.google.com/books?id=H314b5ZbfWUC .
Myers, G.W. (1898) The Astronomical Observatory. The Technograph. No. 11, pp. 104-111
Astronomy Department, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois
circa 1940
Still image
English
University of Illinois Observatory, Urbana, Illinois
Plate camera
Astronomy
Photography
Camera
Optical instrument
Wood, brass
Wooden box (9 ½ x 9 ½ x 9) with hinge lid, two film holders, several 3-inch x 3-inch glass filters. The plate camera is an original piece of equipment made by Warner and Swasey. It takes 2 ¼-inch by 3 ¼-inch glass plates or sheets of film. There is an off axis guider that accepts 0.69” eyepieces and the plate carrier can be rotated by 180 degrees. There are two lateral screws (90 degrees apart) that can be used for tracking by moving the film instead of the telescope. The instrument is still located in the Observatory and is usable.
In the 1950s and 1960s it was used for instruction. There are approximately 270 plates from this time period in the Astronomy Department.
Images include the envelope, calibration plate, and image of the Moon taken on February 21, 1975 by Jim Wehmer. The glass plates were Kodak 103a-E film. The original plates are in the possession of Jim Wehmer and are shared here with his permission.
Warner & Swasey Company
Astronomy Department, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois
1896
Michael Svec
Copyright by Michael Svec
image/jpg
English
physical object
University of Illinois Observatory Collection A106
University of Illinois Observatory, Urbana, Illinois