Organization | University of Canterbury | ||||||||||
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Observatory code | 474 | ||||||||||
Location | Mackenzie District, South Island, New Zealand | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 43°59.2′S 170°27.9′E / 43.9867°S 170.4650°E | ||||||||||
Altitude | 1,029 metres (3,376 ft) | ||||||||||
Weather | 20% of nights photometric | ||||||||||
Established | 1965 | ||||||||||
Website | UC Mt John Observatory | ||||||||||
Telescopes | |||||||||||
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University of Canterbury Mount John Observatory (UCMJO), previously known as Mt John University Observatory (MJUO), is New Zealand's premier astronomical research observatory.[1][2] It is situated at 1,029 metres (3,376 ft) ASL atop Mount John at the northern end of the Mackenzie Basin in the South Island, and was established in 1965.[2] There are many telescopes on site including: one 0.4 metre, two 0.6 metre, one 1.0 metre, and a 1.8 metre MOA telescope. The nearest population centre is the resort town of Lake Tekapo (pop. >500). Approximately 20% of nights at UCMJO are photometric, with a larger number available for spectroscopic work and direct imaging photometry.
UCMJO is operated by the University of Canterbury, and is the home of HERCULES (High Efficiency and Resolution Canterbury University Large Echelle Spectrograph), and the observational wing of the Japanese/New Zealand MOA collaboration (Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics) led by Yasushi Muraki of Nagoya University. A Japanese funded, 1.8 metre telescope was used initially by the MOA Project, before handover to the University of Canterbury at the conclusion of the MOA Project in 2012.
In June 2012 an area of 430,000 hectares (1,700 sq mi) around the observatory was declared as the Aoraki Mackenzie International Dark Sky Reserve by the International Dark-Sky Association, one of only four such reserves around the world at that time.[3] The area has a Bortle Scale of 2.[4]
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