Stardate 2004: "Simply the Best"
But the observing was just a part of Stardate's success. "This year," Hall says, "Stardate achieved a balance, providing a little bit of enjoyment for everyone from kids to adults, from telescope makers to binocular observers, and from astrophotographers to armchair learners."
Malcolm MacDonald displayed a novel telescope platform for disabled observers confined to a wheelchair. MacDonald removed the chair's armrests and replaced them with hollow-tube scaffolding, which was used to support a Newtonian reflector on a wooden Lazy Susan platform. This platform did not lay flat but was locked into place on its side atop the scaffolding. A hole cut through the center of the Lazy Susan allowed the telescope's rack-and-pinion focuser (which was at the center of the tube) to poke through the hole. This way MacDonald could raise and lower the telescope in altitude but keep the eyepiece at eye level. MacDonald then placed a Frisbee under the left wheel of the chair and locked the brake. Next he turned the chair's right wheel with his hands and began turning in azimuth; the Frisbee marked the chair's axis of rotation.
Families also had a choice of observing or watching a late-night science-fiction movie. In one popular lecture, Kay Leather, public programs officer at Carter Observatory, discussed the upcoming transit of Venus.
Ian Cooper of Palmerston North, one of the country's best visual observers, got everyone excited about the possibility that two naked-eye comets NEAT (C/2001 Q4) and LINEAR (C/2002 T7) could brighten to magnitude 2.5 or 1 and be visible simultaneously in the southern skies this May. If these comets live up to expectation (and they may not), it will be a sight that hasn't happened in such splendor since 1881.
One thing is for sure. Richard Hall, president of the Phoenix Astronomical Society and one of New Zealand's most dynamic lecturers, says that "Comets or not, this year's Stardate did live up to expectation. The immediate feedback from the participants was overwhelmingly good; most said it was the best Stardate ever. And that's satisfying. It makes all our efforts worthwhile, doesn't it?"





