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All the United States Oregon Millican Pine Mountain Observatory
AO Edited

Pine Mountain Observatory

In the high desert east of Bend, the University of Oregon maintains a research observatory on a remote mountain peak.

Millican, Oregon

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Telescope domes at Pine Mountain Observatory.   Orygun
View south; dome of non-operational 32” telescope to right..   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Boller & Chivens 24”   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Entrance to the observatory compound.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Layout of the telescopes at the site.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Sign at turnoff from US-20, close-up.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Welcome station.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Fecker 15” dome   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Fecker 15” dome   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Boller & Chivens 24”   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Residence quarters.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Fecker 15” dome   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Boller & Chivens 24”   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Boller & Chivens 24” at right; Fecker 15” dome in distance in middle; non-operational 32” telescope dome to left.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Dome of non-operational 32” telescope.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Sign at turnoff from US-20.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
Road to Pine Mountain Observatory, from US-20.   slgwv / Atlas Obscura User
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The eastern Oregon high desert, with its clear air and low population density, has night skies as dark as anywhere in the conterminous 48 states. It's hardly surprising, then, that the University of Oregon has located a research observatory there, on 6,349-foot (1,935-meter) Pine Mountain, just southeast of Bend.

The investigations that led to the establishment of the observatory date from the late 1950s, when astrophysicist E.G. “Eb” Ebbighausen was looking for a dark site for his work on binary stars. He found that sites by the Cascade Range, although closer to the campus in western Oregon, were too often cloudy. Consulting with the Forest Service and local astronomy buffs led him to Pine Mountain.

Besides Ebbighausen's research on binary stars, other research includes studies of dim galaxies in the 2000s. The 24-inch Boller & Chivens telescope (mentioned below) also made the first observations, in 1970, of magnestars, white dwarf stars with extraordinarily strong magnetic fields.

The current facilities include a 15-inch Fecker Cassegrain telescope, which dates back to 1950. In 1961, Ebbighausen used it in his scouting for a dark-sky site, and it was installed at Pine Mountain Observatory in 1968. It was restored and reinstalled in 2015 and is now used for public outreach and student projects. The Boller & Chivens 24-inch telescope was the first constructed at the observatory, in 1967. Currently it is also used for outreach and student projects. (Alas, a 32-inch telescope has been out of commission since 2000 due to a catastrophic mechanical failure in its drive.)

At present, the focus of the observatory is on undergraduate research and public outreach, with public events on most summer weekends. As Ebbighausen was also the author of a standard astronomy text that was revised into the 1970s, undergraduate research fits well with his legacy. In establishing the observatory, Ebbighausen also focused on grassroots public support, so outreach is also part of his legacy.

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Telescopes Universities Research Science Mountains Astronomy Observatories

Know Before You Go

Take US 20 24.5 miles east from Bend, just past the old site of Millican (now marked by an abandoned roadside store). Turn right on Pine Mountain Road and follow it eight miles to the observatory. The road is graded and in dry weather should pose no problems for passenger cars.  However, Pine Mountain Road is not maintained for passenger cars beyond the observatory.

Check the website for public hours, which are typically Friday and Saturday evenings in the warm months. 

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Published

October 7, 2024

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Pine Mountain Observatory
Millican, Oregon, 97701
United States
43.791172, -120.940933
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