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United States Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station

United States Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station
Organization United States Naval Observatory
Code 689
Location Coconino County, near Flagstaff, Arizona
Coordinates 35°11′03″N 111°44′25″W / 35.18417°N 111.74028°W / 35.18417; -111.74028
Altitude 2,273 metres (7,457 ft)
Established 1955
Website http://www.nofs.navy.mil/
Telescopes
Kaj Strand Telescope 1.55 m (61 in) reflector
DFM/Kodak/Corning 1.3 m reflector
Unnamed telescope 1.0 m (40 in) Ritchey-Chretien reflector
Flagstaff Astrometric Scanning Transit Telescope 8-inch (20 cm) catadioptric
Navy Precision Optical Interferometer interferometer (Located at Anderson Mesa)
Commons page
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Kaj Strand Telescope 1.55 m (61 in) reflector
DFM/Kodak/Corning 1.3 m reflector
Unnamed telescope 1.0 m (40 in) Ritchey-Chretien reflector
Flagstaff Astrometric Scanning Transit Telescope 8-inch (20 cm) catadioptric
Navy Precision Optical Interferometer interferometer (Located at Anderson Mesa)

The United States Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station (NOFS), is an astronomical observatory near Flagstaff, Arizona, USA. It is the national dark-sky observing facility under the United States Naval Observatory (USNO). NOFS and USNO combine as the Celestial Reference Frame manager for the U.S. Secretary of Defense.

The Flagstaff Station is a command which was established by USNO (due to a century of eventually untenable light encroachment in Washington, D.C.) at a site five miles west of Flagstaff, Arizona in 1955, and has positions for primarily operational scientists (astronomers and astrophysicists), optical and mechanical engineers, and support staff.

NOFS science supports every aspect of positional astronomy to some level, providing national support and beyond. Work at NOFS covers the gamut of astrometry and astrophysics in order to facilitate its production of accurate/precise astronomical catalogs. Also, owing to the celestial dynamics (and relativistic effects) of the huge number of such moving objects across their own treks through space, the time expanse required to pin down each set of celestial locations and motions for a perhaps billion-star catalog, can be quite long. Multiple observations of each object may themselves take weeks, months or years, by themselves. This, multiplied by the large number of cataloged objects that must then be reduced for use, and which must be analyzed after observation for a very careful statistical understanding of all catalog errors, forces the rigorous production of most extremely precise and faint astrometric catalogs to take many years, sometimes decades, to complete.

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The United States Naval Observatory, Flagstaff Station celebrated its 50th anniversary of the move there from Washington, D.C. in late 2005. Dr. John Hall, Director of the Naval Observatory's Equatorial Division from 1947, founded NOFS. Dr. Art Hoag became its first director in 1955 (until 1965); both later were to also become directors of nearby Lowell Observatory.


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Wikipedia

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