Published:
George P. Mitchell Leads A&M and UT Partnership for Giant Magellan Telescope
HOUSTON, April 16 /PRNewswire/ -- Though known as fierce rivals in the
sporting arena,Texas' flagship universities are uniting in a goal as big as
the Universe thanks to a cosmic initiative byHouston businessman and
philanthropist George P.Mitchell, founder of Mitchell Energy & Development
Corp.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080416/LAW520)
Spurred byMitchell's $3.25 million gift to his alma mater of Texas A&M
University, The University of Texas at Austin has provided matching, thereby
making Aggies and Longhorns partners in the $550 million Giant Magellan
Telescope. The GMT will be the world's largest telescope -- one so powerful
that it is expected to give perhaps the first definitive answer as to whether
or not there is life beyond Earth. Set to begin science operation in northern
Chile in 2017, the GMT will enable such breakthroughs as gaining visual images
of distant planets, detecting the basis of extra-solar life and peering into
the very formation of the Universe.
To help generate statewide support for this effort, presidents from each
university joined George P.Mitchell, a 1940 distinguished petroleum
engineering graduate of Texas A&M, for a presentation marking the two
universities' involvement in the eight-member GMT Consortium and the
unprecedented opportunity it represents, both forTexas and the world.
"This is an extraordinarily exciting project that's going to putTexas on
the map in terms of astronomy," said Dr. Wendy Freedman, director of Carnegie
Observatories for the Carnegie Institution and director of the GMT Consortium.
"It's unusual that these two universities are working together to make this
happen, but this is an unusual project."
Besides Carnegie, Texas A&M and The University of Texas at Austin, the
consortium includes Harvard University, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory,
the University of Arizona, Australian National University and Australia
Astronomy Limited.
More partners are sought, andSouth Korea has indicated it will join. NASA
does not involve itself in ground-based space projects, although the GMT will
produce images up to 10 times sharper than those of the orbiting Hubble Space
Telescope.
Today's largest telescopes, including The University of Texas at Austin's
Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory inWest Texas, have mirrors
with effective diameters of up to 10 meters. Dr. David L. Lambert, director
of the McDonald Observatory and holder of the Isabel McCutcheon Harte
Centennial Chair, says the GMT will collect five times more light than the
Hobby-Eberly telescope and about 70 times as much light as the Hubble Space
Telescope.
"The Hubble has been a very important experiment for NASA, but our
ground-based instruments will be even more important,"Mitchell said. "If we
could show NASA that the GMT could detect asteroids headed toward Earth early
enough to do something about it, maybe NASA might put some money into it,
too."
Freedman also spoke at Friday's luncheon, along with Texas A&M President
Dr. Elsa A. Murano, The University of Texas at Austin's President William
Powers Jr. and directors of their respective astronomy programs.
"We are entering a new era in the history of humanity, where we find
ourselves living in a large but finite Universe," said Dr. Nicholas B.
Suntzeff, director of Texas A&M's astronomy program. "This telescope will
allow us to see to the other side of the Universe, right up to its edge. Its
power will be almost beyond comprehension."
But before that power is unleashed, GMT consortium leaders say it's time
for the project's next phase.
"We would not be where we are without Mr.Mitchell's early help," Freedman
said. "But after working on designs for several years, we now reach the
project's next phase of detailed design and raising funds for construction.
And we hope to galvanizeTexas to become a full participant."
The GMT Consortium's sense of urgency comes from two rival big-telescope
projects, one planned by Cal Tech and the University of California System, the
other by the same 13-nation European consortium which wound up with the first
Superconducting Super Collider, after such a project was derailed inTexas.
All three telescopes are expected to near completion in about 10 years, or
about the same time the orbiting Hubble Telescope is expected to deteriorate
to the point of being out of service, even with one possible shuttle repair
mission envisioned.
"I challenge our top two universities -- and all Texans -- to meet the
tough competitionCalifornia offers in order to be at the center of
high-energy physics,"Mitchell said. "Texas had better wake up.California is
always ahead of us in this. With the GMT, we hope to inspire Texans to come
together in this challenge."
Although the two rival telescopes will be bigger, Freedman says, "ours
will be more efficient and thus more cost-effective. Also, no other big
telescope will have the imaging capability to allow visually identifying other
planets." The GMT also will be able to make spectrum analyses of such planets,
to detect atmospheric conditions.
"Imagine the excitement if the GMT proves there is life on other planets,"
said Texas A&M's Suntzeff. "It will also give us a better understanding of how
the Universe originated and how it's evolving to this day."
Indeed, Freedman says the telescope will unlock secrets of "the very early
Universe. The first stars, galaxies and black holes that formed we will see
directly, via light that dates back to just a billion years after the 'Big
Bang' created the Universe 13.7 billion years ago. The GMT will have that kind
of sensitivity and resolution. It will be like a time machine."
Mitchell said the telescope "also should help us understand dark energy
and dark matter. That's 96 percent of the Universe, and we don't understand
what it's all about."
He believes it also will keep American scientists from going elsewhere,
such asEurope.
"We've got to step up to this challenge,"Mitchell said. "It's a national
initiative in whichTexas can become a leader. And if anyone can get it done
inTexas, then Texas A&M and The University of Texas at Austin are our best
chance. They can help America to stay in the race and keep our scientists from
going elsewhere."
Mitchell said some scientists already are coming to Texas A&M on the
strength of the prospect of getting time on the GMT when it starts operations.
"If we can raise $55 million between the two universities, they'd share 10
percent of the time on the telescope," he said. "But I think we need 15
percent. And I know The University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M donors
could get it done."
Mitchell credits former Texas A&M President Robert Gates, now Secretary of
Defense, for sharing his vision of greatly expanding the university's
facilities and scientific talent. "Gates' objectives are happening," he said.
To further support the project,Mitchell plans to give Texas A&M another
$1.5 million per year for five years, providing the university matches it.
Yet even with its advantages, the GMT Consortium "needs to get moving,"
Freedman said. "We want to skim the cream of the science that's to be done by
next-generation telescopes. Only one group will get to do the first science
with them. We have the opportunity to be first, and we are ready to go."
GMT spin-offs into industry, she said, could include universities
contracting with industry to build instruments and detectors to take advantage
of the telescope's increased resolution.
Mitchell has been aiming for the stars since his teens, when he even tried
building his own telescope. Channeling his scientific mind into finding oil
where others couldn't, in 1940 he became a distinguished petroleum engineering
graduate of Texas A&M, then began earning a fortune in oil and real estate.
YetMitchell never abandoned his passion for knowledge of the Universe,
which is why he and his wife, Cynthia, have been among the biggest private
financial backers in A&M's history -- and by far the biggest for Texas A&M
Physics.
United by their shared disappointment over failure of the proposed Texas
Superconducting Super Collider,Mitchell, Gates and renowned Cambridge
University theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking spearheaded a campaign to
launch Texas A&M's Department of Physics into high orbit.
Mitchell has provided more than $51 million in support of Texas A&M
Physics. That includes committing $35 million to help fund buildings for both
the George P. and Cynthia Woods Mitchell Institute for Fundamental Physics and
Astronomy named inMitchell's honor at Hawking's suggestion -- and the George
P.Mitchell '40 Physics Building, and still more funds to create 10 academic
chairs -- including the Stephen Hawking Chair in Fundamental Physics -- and
two professorships.
The Mitchells also have made many gifts to The University of Texas at
Austin, including support for its Elementary Charter School and unrestricted
funds and faculty support for the School of Architecture and the College of
Engineering.
Now the GMT is his focus, with both universities in mind.
"If we're losing this country's intellectual knowledge, then this
telescope could help turn that tide," he said.
"Texans, wake up. If you think the Hubble has been very important to
cosmology, as I do, then you know we need this new telescope. And if you want
to be competitive withCalifornia andEurope, then let's get going. Now is the
time. The future is here."
SOURCE George P.Mitchell
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