性吧导航

Hidden Treasures: The Drexel Home of Philadelphia鈥檚 Largest Telescope

An edited photo of the Joseph R. Lynch observatory.
An edited photo of the Joseph R. Lynch observatory.

If you enter 性吧导航鈥檚 Main Building, take the stairs in the Great Court to the third floor, walk towards Curtis Hall (go past the A.J. Drexel Picture Gallery on your right), follow a long hallway, go through a set of double doors, continue past the bathrooms and vending machines and a study room, go through another set of double doors, immediately take a left into the stairwell and climb up seven flights of stairs 鈥 you鈥檒l end up at one of Drexel鈥檚 true 鈥渉idden treasures.鈥

It鈥檚 the . And it鈥檚 on the roof of Curtis Hall.

Mostly concealed to all but those flying over the University City Campus in the sky, the 15-foot-tall white dome of an observatory holds the biggest telescope in the city. It鈥檚 a 16-inch Meade Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope, and the size of its mirror makes it the largest in Philadelphia; for comparison, the Franklin Institute鈥檚 has an 8鈥 Schmidt-Cassegrain.

A 2014 aerial photograph of Drexel's University City Campus, with the observatory circled in red.

The University鈥檚 observatory is used as a learning and training tool for Drexel students and a way to connect the public with astronomy through monthly 鈥渙pen house鈥 nights.

鈥淲e like to describe astronomy as the 鈥榞ateway science,鈥欌 said Gordon Richards, PhD, a professor in the Department of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences who has been the director of the observatory since 2007. 鈥淪o anything that we can do to sort of encourage that is good. And the observatory gives us an opportunity to do that in a different way than some other fields might.鈥

Two physics classes are taught using the observatory, which can only fit a handful of students or visitors at a time (there is plenty of patio space outside of it for people to observe the night sky with their eyes and portable telescopes). There鈥檚 鈥淧hysics 131: Survey of the Universe,鈥 which provides an overview of modern astronomy and is open to non-science majors; Richards is teaching it this term. And students in the major can take 鈥淧hysics 232: Observational Astrophysics,鈥 which teaches physics majors how to use telescopes because 鈥渁nybody that wants to do research in astronomy is going to benefit from taking that class,鈥 according to Richards. It used to be taught once every other year but became an annual class due to high demand.

The dome of the Joseph R. Lynch observatory.

Plus, the observatory is open to the public through an 鈥渙pen house鈥 night on the first Wednesday of every month except in the summer, and with weather and atmosphere permitting. And to accommodate more sky-watchers than the observatory can hold, the graduate students in the department also created a monthly astronomy night at Drexel鈥檚 Dornsife Center for Neighborhood Partnerships for neighbors and community members to watch the night sky from portable telescopes.

Unfortunately, even the biggest telescope in a huge city like Philadelphia gets affected by the light pollution. Stars can be hard to see, but Saturn, Jupiter, the moon and Mars, to a lesser extent, can be identified. Neighboring buildings can cause problems, though 鈥 like the FMC Tower, which blocks the southeastern part of the sky that Jupiter passes through, and the 鈥溞园傻己解 sign on University Crossings that Richards says is brighter than the full moon. He has asked nearby light polluters to turn off their lights for the open houses, just once a month, but hasn鈥檛 had any success.

Of course, when the observatory was built several decades ago, the FMC Tower and Drexel sign and other skyscrapers weren鈥檛 around to create difficulties. But that doesn鈥檛 mean that past Dragons had an easy time observing the sky 鈥 or getting to the observatory.

A portrait of Leonard D. Cohen, PhD, in 1964, when he started working at the then-Drexel Institute of Technology. Photo courtesy 性吧导航 Archives.

Since the 鈥60s, the physics department had been offering stargazing opportunities on the roofs of Drexel buildings, first with a 12-inch telescope on the top of the Basic Science Building (which ) in that decade, and then the telescopes and some form of an observatory that has been on the top of Curtis Hall since the 鈥70s. And it was all thanks to the passion of a physics professor whose area of expertise had nothing to do with astronomy.  

Leonard D. Cohen, PhD, was hired as an assistant professor in physics in the then-Drexel Institute of Technology鈥檚 then- in 1964. He had been employed by General Electric Co. for five years as an experimental reactor physicist, theoretical reactor physicist and space radiation physicist, and came to Drexel to teach atomic physics and nuclear physics and develop the Institute鈥檚 nuclear engineering program. But he was an amateur astronomer, and described his plans in a of The Triangle, Drexel鈥檚 independent student newspaper, to start an astronomy club and introduce an astronomy course to the department鈥檚 curriculum 鈥 both of which would live on at Drexel during the 35 years he taught here and in the 22 years after he retired in 1997.

By 1969, there was a Drexel Astronomy Club (with Cohen as the faculty advisor) that was up and running and using a new Celestron 10-inch telescope. Press releases housed in Drexel鈥檚 note that they had attempted to photograph in May 1969 and, two months later, .

The Astronomy Club featured in Drexel's 1968 yearbook. Photo courtesy 性吧导航 Archives.

By 1979, 15 years after Cohen started at Drexel, two astronomy courses had been offered every year for many years. According to a , an observatory had been built on the top of Curtis Hall by then, and it consisted of 鈥渁 shack and a dome with a rotating roof鈥 that was used by the Drexel Astronomy Society (of which Cohen was still the faculty advisor) as well as physics classes and interested faculty. The story also noted that the observatory used several telescopes built by Drexel faculty and students, the largest of which was a 鈥淐elestron 10, a reflector with a ten-inch [sic] mirror that a student constructed during the summer.鈥 

That article noted the same difficulties that Drexel Dragons would still be experiencing 40 years later. The city light made viewing nebulae and galaxies difficult, and planets, the moon, star clusters and double stars could be mostly observed; once a month, the Astronomy Society ventured into 鈥渢he country鈥 to observe the skies. A noted an open house would be held by the Astronomy Society 鈥 a tradition that is still kept in 2019.

By 1992, the observatory had been raised on a platform when construction was done on the roof of Curtis Hall, though because the platform and stairs hadn鈥檛 been secured and it hadn鈥檛 yet been wired for electricity, it wasn鈥檛 functional when a Triangle article was printed about 鈥,鈥 as it was titled. Cohen, identified as 鈥渢he man in the know about the observatory,鈥 discussed the 10-inch diameter Celestron telescope and the ambient lights making it difficult for deep space work, and was listed as the main contact for Dragons interested in what was identified as the 鈥淎stronomy Club,鈥 an astronomy class or the observatory in general.

A contact sheet of photos from a 1985 photo shoot featuring Leonard R. Cohen, PhD, and a student in front of the observatory with a telescope. Photo courtesy 性吧导航 Archives.

After 35 years at Drexel, Cohen retired in the 1996鈥1997 academic year. In his absence, student interest and use of the observatory waned for several years, and a Drexel astronomy club or society disappeared from view.

But then, the heavens aligned and certain plans were set in motion to bring back learners to the observatory and make it better than before.

In 1999, Joseph R. Lynch, who had graduated from Drexel鈥檚 thenpCollege of Engineering (which housed the physics department then) in 1958 with a master鈥檚 of science degree in physics, had taken out a gift annuity with Drexel to benefit the University鈥檚 Department of Physics. According to , Lynch was a World War II veteran and had 鈥渨orked on the space probes to Jupiter and Venus, as well as the first rocket to the moon.鈥 He had retired as an aerospace engineer from General Electric, which donated a $50,000 matching gift in 2001. The Physics Department used the matching gift to renovate the observatory, which was renamed in Lynch鈥檚 honor.

In 2001, David Goldberg, PhD, associate department head for undergraduate studies and a professor in the Department of Physics in the College of Arts and Sciences, started teaching at Drexel and became the director of the observatory. At that same time, some of the students were interested in bringing back a Drexel astronomy club, though the observatory dome was still in disuse, hadn鈥檛 been renovated and contained only a few small telescopes with 8-inch mirrors.

Joseph R. Lynch was unable to attend the 2003 ceremony, but his daughters Carol Chaney and Susan Wright did. They are pictured, center, with College of Arts and Sciences Dean Donna Murasko, PhD, (left) and then-Department of Physics head Michel Vallières, PhD. Photo courtesy Kenneth H. Goldman.

With the funding from Lynch鈥檚 gift, the department purchased the 16-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope still used today, as well as a small digital camera used to take photos through the telescope. The donation also paid for the construction of a fenced-in deck (which was later rebuilt following more repairs on the roof) outside of the observatory so people could stand there to stargaze with or without the help of portable telescopes. A pier was also constructed to securely hold the telescope so it wouldn鈥檛 be connected to the floor of the observatory and thus wouldn鈥檛 be moved around when people walked around.

There was no elevator to the observatory (then as now) so everything had to be carried down all those hallways and up all those stairs.  

Wolfgang Nadler, who had been working as a systems engineer in the College of Arts and Sciences, revitalized the observatory. He removed and refurbished the drive motor and rollers on the dome (used to turn it to see the parts of the night sky), designed the deck and helped install  internet on the roof, among other renovations.  

鈥淲e really wanted to make it functional and safe,鈥 said Nadler, who has worked for Drexel for 39 years, even staying on as an occasional worker after retiring in 2016, and just last fall replaced the screws that hold the walls of the observatory鈥檚 dome.

Senior Associate Vice President of Presidential Initiatives Kenneth H. Goldman (left) with College of Arts and Sciences Dean Donna Murasko, PhD, (center) and Dave Goldberg, PhD (right) at the observatory's dedication ceremony in 2003. Photo credit: Maryann Fitzpatrick. Photo courtesy Wolfgang Nadler.

A dedication ceremony was held in October 2003 to officially commemorate the opening of the improved observatory. Lynch鈥檚 daughters Carol Chaney and Susan Wright came to Drexel to celebrate the opening in their father鈥檚 absence. Over 80 people attended the event, and Mars and a binary star system were able to be seen through the new telescope.

With that, the observatory was up and running again. Goldberg started holding the monthly observatory nights that Richards now organizes. Michael S. Vogley, PhD, associate department head for graduate studies and a professor in the Department of Physics, developed the Physics 232 class still taught today. An was added to the physics offerings. And the observatory started being used for important celestial events, like the 2004 when the planet passed in front of the sun for the first time in over 120 years.

鈥淰ery quickly, the observatory became a central part of the department,鈥 said Goldberg.

Gordon Richards, PhD, (in a black coat) at the observatory in 2009 with graduate students Alf Whitehead (in the white jacket) and Coleman Krawczyk (in blue with hat). Photo credit: Vishal Kasliwal. Photo courtesy Gordon Richards.

Now, many of the traditions established with the 2003 reopening of the observatory 鈥 and the groundwork laid down by Cohen 鈥 have continued to this day. For the solar eclipse in 2017, members of department set up solar telescopes to be used at a special viewing party on Perelman Plaza. And for years, graduate and undergraduate students in the department have helped run the public house nights and set up telescopes in the Korman Quad to encourage interest.

鈥淭he observatory fits really well with our experiential learning,鈥 said Richards. 鈥淓ven though Philadelphia is not the best place to use a telescope, I think there鈥檚 still a lot of benefit to having the observatory. And like I said, astronomy is the 鈥榞ateway science鈥 鈥 it鈥檚 how we get people hooked. Getting people up to the observatory is part of that.鈥

Interested in visiting an open house? The next one (weather permitting) is scheduled for April 17 at the Dornsife Center 鈥 check the for day-of updates. Public open house nights are usually held the first Wednesday of every month during the academic year. The observatory鈥檚 website will also show the most recent dates and times for all open house nights.

This story was published in the spring 2019 issue of Drexel Quarterly.