Dunsink Observatory


The Dunsink Observatory is an astronomical observatory established in 1785 in the townland of Dunsink near the city of Dublin, Ireland.
Its most famous director was William Rowan Hamilton, who, amongst other things, discovered quaternions, the first non-commutative algebra, while walking from the observatory to the city with his wife. He is also renowned for his Hamiltonian formulation of dynamics. In the late 20th century, the city encroached ever more on the observatory, which compromised the seeing. The telescope, no longer state of the art, was used mainly for public 'open nights'.
Dunsink observatory is currently part of the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. It provides accommodation for visiting scientists and is also used for conferences and public outreach events. Public talks on astronomy and astrophysics are given regularly at the observatory by professional and amateur astronomers. Stargazing events are also held using the Grubb telescope.

History

The observatory was established by an endowment of £3,000 in the will of Francis Andrews, who was Provost of Trinity College Dublin at his death on 18 June 1774. The site was established on the south slope of a low hill in the townland of Dunsink, 84m above sea level. The South Telescope or 12 inch Grubb, is a refracting telescope built by Thomas Grubb of Dublin, completed in 1868. The achromatic lens, with an aperture of 11.75 inches, was donated by Sir James South in 1862, who had purchased the lens from Cauchoix of Paris 30 years earlier. He had intended it for a large but troubled equatorial that came to fruition in the 1830s, but was dismantled around 1838.
The entry for the observatory in Thom's Directory gives the following account of the observatory,
Dublin Mean Time, the official time in Ireland from 1880, was the mean solar time at Dunsink, just as Greenwich Mean Time was the mean solar time at Greenwich Royal Observatory near London. In 1916, Ireland moved to GMT. In 1936, Trinity College stopped maintaining the observatory and rented out the land. Éamon de Valera, who had established the DIAS in 1940, added a School of Cosmic Physics to it in 1947, partly in order to revive the observatory, for which it was given responsibility.

Directors

The Andrews Professorship of Astronomy is a chair in astronomy in the University of Dublin and was associated with the director of Dunsink Observatory while the Observatory was part of Trinity College Dublin. It was founded in 1783 under the same endowment from Francis Andrews as the observatory, and regulated by a new Statute of Trinity College Dublin, which required the professor to "make regular observations of the heavenly bodies... and of the sun, moon and planets". The chair was vacant after 1921, abolished in 1966 when the university's statutes were revised, and revived in 1984 as an honorary chair in the School of Mathematics at Trinity College Dublin; current holder is Luciano Rezzolla. From 1793, under letters patent of King George III, the Andrews Professor held the title Royal Astronomer of Ireland. This title was also extinguished in 1966 and has not been revived.
DatesNameOther titlesNotes
1783–1790Rev. Henry UssherAndrews Professor of AstronomyDied in office
1792–1827Rev. John BrinkleyAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of Ireland Appointed Bishop of Cloyne in 1826
1827–1865Sir William Rowan HamiltonAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandAppointed as a 21-year-old undergraduate. In addition to astronomy he worked on mathematics. He developed what is now known as Hamiltonian mechanics, and the system of quaternions, having discovered them in 1843. He died in office.
1865–1874Franz BrünnowAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of Irelandretired due to failing health and eyesight
1874–1892Sir Robert Stawell BallAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandIn 1892 became Lowndean Professor of Astronomy and Geometry at Cambridge
1892–1897Arthur Alcock RambautAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandIn 1897 became Radcliffe Observer at Oxford
1897–1906Charles Jasper JolyAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandDied in office
1906–1912Sir Edmund Taylor WhittakerAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandIn 1911 became a professor at Edinburgh
1912–1921Henry Crozier Keating PlummerAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Royal Astronomer of IrelandIn 1921 became professor of mathematics at the Artillery College in Woolwich
1921–1936Charles MartinActing Director. Died in office
1936–1947Vacant No astronomical work was done
1947–1957Hermann Alexander BrückDirector of DIAS School of Cosmic PhysicsIn 1957 became Astronomer Royal for Scotland
1958–1963Mervyn Archdall EllisonDirector of DIAS School of Cosmic PhysicsDied in office
1964–1992Patrick Arthur WaymanAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Director of DIAS School of Cosmic PhysicsRetired, with a short gap before the next appointment.
1994–2007Evert MeursSenior Professor DIASRetired
2007–2018Luke DruryAndrews Professor of Astronomy, Director of DIAS School of Cosmic PhysicsRetired
2018–presentPeter GallagherSenior Professor DIAS, Head of Astronomy and Astrophysics

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