Asteroid named for San Jose, Tribute to City's Support of Lick Observatory
June 1, 1998
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Jim Burns
UCSC Public Information Office
831-458-1907
jrburns@cats.ucsc.edu
SAN JOSE, CA--Representatives of UCSC and Lick Observatory presented the San Jose City Council on Tuesday, May 19, with a commemorative photograph of an asteroid that has been named in honor of the Silicon Valley city.
The naming designation was done to acknowledge the citys longtime efforts to work cooperatively with Lick staff--a partnership that has helped keep the 110-year-old mountaintop facility one of astronomys most productive observatories.
Observatory staff and the asteroids discoverer, S.J. Bus, had successfully petitioned the International Astronomical Union to name the asteroid after San Jose.
Presenting a framed digital image of Asteroid San Jose--and an accompanying short essay about the celestial body--to the city council were Chancellor Greenwood and Joseph Miller, director of UC Observatories/Lick Observatory.
In her remarks to the council, the chancellor paid particular tribute to the citys efforts to control the type of light its neighborhoods emit--too much of the wrong kind of light can impair Lick Observatorys ability to capture clear and concise images from the night sky. We recognize the century-old spirit of collaboration with you, as well as the citys ongoing efforts to keep ambient light-levels low by installing low-pressure sodium streetlights, Chancellor Greenwood said. Low-light levels have permitted observing from Mount Hamilton to continue at extremely productive levels.
The proclamation she and Miller presented to the council underscored the relationship between the city and observatory: Located 20 miles to the east at the 4200-foot summit of Mount Hamilton, Lick Observatory is easily visible from almost any neighborhood or street in San Jose, the proclamation read. Through the citys understanding and efforts, the whole universe is still visible from Lick Observatory.
San Jose is the 6216th asteroid to be discovered. Traveling in an orbit between Mars and Jupiter, it is estimated to be 10 to 15 miles across--about the same size as the city of San Jose. Discovered by Bus in September 1975, the asteroid was given the temporary designation 1975 SJ when its orbit was first computed. It is coincidental that the original designation, the initials of the discovers name, and the initials of the city of San Jose are all S.J.
A part of the University of California since its inception, Lick Observatory has been affiliated with UC Santa Cruz since 1966. In its glorious history, astronomers at the observatory have made a number of important findings, including the discovery of Jupiters fifth satellite by Edward Emerson Barnard in the observatorys fourth year of operation, in 1892. Lick astronomers also collaborated with astronauts during a 1969 Moon walk to determine the precise distance between the Earth and the Moon and to confirm that the Moon is gradually moving away from the Earth.
Among more current research being conducted at Lick Observatory is the recent effort by astronomers to detect planets outside our solar system. This headline-making work, using the facilitys 120-inch Shane Telescope, is being led by astronomers Geoffrey Marcy and Paul Butler. Marcy, who earned his Ph.D. at UCSC, uses an exquisitely sensitive tool designed by his former adviser, UCSC astronomer Steven Vogt. The instrument, called the Hamilton Spectrograph, unveils tiny wobbles in the motions of stars across the sky--hints of the gravitational tuggings of unseen planets.