Lick Observatory’s damaged telescope dome still open to elements as another rainstorm approaches – The Mercury News Today Us News


After Santa delivered big trouble to Lick Observatory — the iconic astronomy complex atop Mount Hamilton east of San Jose where ferocious winds early Christmas morning blasted open the steel dome sheltering a historic telescope — crews are still scrambling to protect the instrument and sensitive equipment from rain.

The Great Refractor telescope, which was built in the 1880s, helped shape modern astronomy, and still draws thousands of visitors each year. It’s been wrapped in black tarps since gusts of wind blew a giant vertical door off the dome, and rain began pouring inside. The instrument, despite the soaking that occurred before it was covered, is believed undamaged.

The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome's vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory)
The Christmas Day storm that brought winds of 110 mph to the top of Mt Hamilton where the James Lick Observatory sits brought down the 60-foot crescent steel door that once covered half the dome’s vertical opening. The door landed onto an adjoining building where it broke windows and splintered attic beams. (Photo by Jamey Eriksen/UCSC Lick Observatory) 

But officials, observatory staff and contractor crews have been racing to come up with a plan to patch the opening, 4 to 8 feet wide, left by the missing door, to prevent more rain from hitting the telescope, or damaging electrical equipment and the laminated-wood floor inside the dome.

“We finalized our design idea for how to close up the slit this morning,” Lick Observatory site superintendent Jamey Eriksen said Friday afternoon. “It’s some custom woodwork to clamp onto a lip around the slit, and then we’re going to put plywood panels across, and then waterproof those plywood panels.”


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