Sunday, February 28, 2010

earthquake in chile, telescopes seem undamaged

during the wee hours of the morning, a magnitude 8.8 earthquake hit chile southwest of santiago. there are several major observatories in chile which house some of the largest telescopes on earth. the gemini-south telescope lives at the southern-most observatory, which is about a 7 hour drive north of santiago. a friend has reported that he could feel a rumble at the telescope, but no damage occurred as a result of the earthquake and observations will carry on as normal tonight! i havent heard news from the other observatories, but they all live several hours farther north of the earthquake epicenter.

the earthquake generated a tsunami that is currently propogating across the pacific ocean. it is set to hit hawaii at 11 am local time. i have several friends using telescopes on mauna kea right now, and some in airplanes traveling there, so i'm sending positive thoughts their way! i'll keep you posted on any news as i hear it.

the big picture has an early set of photos from chile.

UPDATE: aside from some power outages and lack of communication soon after the earthquake, no major telescope facilities have suffered damage. the ESO facility in santiago reports no damage. the university in concepcion is another story... news from colleagues is that people they know working in concepcion have relocated to stay with friends in other cities (mainly santiago) until the infrastructure is fixed a bit. read more at SarahAskew.

5 comments:

Ed Davies said...

So the title should be "Large earthquake in Chile, not many telescopes damaged"?

Tim said...

Hey Amanda.. (from the SMA control room here). the tsunami in the end was 3 feet.. so nothing to worry about ;-)

luc said...

stupid girl just worried about telescopes while hundred maybe thousands people died.
no feeling no sense im not sure you are human uuaaaaaaghh

Unknown said...

luc - of course i'm worried about the people who have suffered from this tragedy. over 700 people have been reported dead so far and many many more are missing. i am not in a position to give any more information about the victims of this event than the news media, so i've focused on reporting what info i have access to. my thoughts go out to the people of chile...

C W Magee said...

It would be interesting to compare the track of a star in a telescope shaking during an exposure to the seismogram.