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| subject: | ATM moths in telescopes |
From: Rik Hill To: "peter cmaChen" , Reply-To: Rik Hill We use mothballs in the dome track of the observatory to ward them and ladybugs off. During the recent wildfires here in Az, the fire crews and Steward Obs. firefighters managed to save it from the fires but when we went up to check the telescope and remove the corrector for anti-reflection coating (at a cost of $18,000!) we found that all the moths on the mountain had taken refuge in our telescope. There were literally thousands of them and they had all excreted on the corrector. It was covered with moth guano. When we spooked the moths by opening the dome they all took flight, flying into our faces and covering us with their excretions. Lovely. When we got the corrector downtown we had to spend several hours just washing the glass! It was pretty disgusting. The big problem is that the guano is very corrosive. When a moth walks across a mirror and leaves its trail the coating will quickly be eaten away. You don't want them anywhere near optics. When I worked on Kitt Peak (at the schmidt there) we had a zapper once. It ran for less than one night. Do you have any idea what a toasted Miller moth smells like? Also disgusting. "Trapping of moths is efficiently done by hand." if there are only a few of them. When there's thousands it's not feasable. The mothballs work well for us, are cheap and not offensive, certainly not as offensive as being wet on by hundreds or thousands of moths when they are spooked! -Rik On Wednesday 13 August 2003 18:25, peter cmaChen wrote: > Hi folks: > > I came across this interesting article on the > problem of moths in telescopes and how the people there tried to > deal with it > > http://www.apo.nmsu.edu/Telescopes/SDSS/eng.papers/19970220_Moth/19 >970220.ht ml > > It got me wondering. Surely many ATMs have come across the same > or similar problem in their telescopes and enclosures. Does anyone > know of other environmentally friendly way - high tech, low tech, > or folk remedies - to keep insects away from people and scopes? > > Regards, > P.C. Chen --- BBBS/NT v4.01 Flag-5* Origin: Email Gate (1:379/100) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 379/100 1 106/1 2000 633/267 |
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