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      Contact information 
      website 
      
      
      
      
      http://www.heavensgloryobservatory.com 
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      Locator Map 
      
      
      
      
      http://www.frappr.com/apppublic 
      Level of accuracy: Auburn-Worcester, MA 
      
      
       
      
      Biography 
      
      I am President of PI (Physik 
      Instrumente) USA.  PI is the world's leading manufacture of 
      piezoceramic based micro and nanopositioning equipment used in research 
      and industrial applications including: adaptive optic positioners for 
      astronomical telescopes (UKIRT, Keck, NASA IRTF, ESO, Subaru, SALT, etc.), 
      semiconductor fabricating equipment,  telecomunication fibre optics, mask 
      alignment and autofocusing mechanisms and high resolution microscopy.  Prior to PI, I was a director with Newport 
      Corporation, a manufacturer of optical components, motion systems and 
      motorized micropositioners.  Formerly, I was on the Board of 
      Directors of LEOMA, the Laser and Electro-Optic Manufacturers Association 
      of America.  Currently, I sit on the editorial advisory board of 
      Photonics Spectra (the leading publication of the worldwide photonics 
      industry), am Chairman of the Finance Advisory Committee for the SPIE 
      (International Society of Optical Engineers) and a member of the 
      Corporate Associates Committee of the OSA (Optical Society of America).
      
      
 I was born in 
      Toronto Canada, but now live in 
      Worcester, 
      Massachusetts USA where I 
      serve as a leader in our local Christian church.  
      I am married with 3 daughters and am 
      a member of the Springfield Telescope Makers (home of Stellafane) and the 
      Amateur Telescope Makers of Boston. 
      
      . 
      Astronomy 
      has been a passion of mine since my Dad took me outside one evening in 
      1960 to watch the ECHO 1 satellite glide over our house in Toronto. I was 
      5 at the time and remember going to the library weekly from that point on 
      to read books on astronomy, telescopes, space exploration and machines. We 
      were quite poor therefore getting a telescope was out of the question even 
      though I waited anxiously every Christmas for one. When I was ten I 
      chanced upon a broken and discarded cardboard telescope that someone had 
      thrown in their garbage can. What a treasure! I tinkered around with the 
      objective and a couple of lenses I had removed from "box" cameras that I 
      had bought at a local Salvation Army store. Once I seemed to have a pretty 
      good working combination I turned my first scope on the moon. 
      Unbelievable!!!!!!! To this day few sights have been as awe inspiring. 
      
      The passion 
      continued and through high school every project in my mechanical drafting 
      and machine shop classes involved making some part for my telescopes. In 
      mechanical engineering at university every design and fabrication project 
      conveniently centered around the current telescope project I was working 
      on at that time. Needless to say school was never a drag. I drove my 
      teachers and professors crazy because I was always racing to finish the 
      standard curriculum to get on with my telescope parts.....and save myself 
      considerable money!  I learned to be a master of "scrounge" which 
      makes me look at everything and wonder how to use it for making telescope 
      parts. This desire to save money and build has taught me a lot about the 
      technology of high precision having made just about every mistake one can 
      make in designing and building performance scopes for high resolution 
      imaging.....and there are still areas to work on in my current designs. 
      
      
      In 1985, Sky 
      and Telescope published an article on a 12.5" Cass Newt that I built, but 
      from 1985 through 1993 I was on a telescope making sabbatical, being very 
      busy with family, church, career responsibilities and house moves. However 
      that didn’t stop my interest. Just pumped it up! Over the last 15 years 
      though I have worked on a number of new scopes, facilities and scope 
      accessories and am happy to share the excitement and joy this hobby 
      provides. 
      
      
      Heaven’s 
      Glory Observatories grew out of the practical need to house my telescopes 
      but also to honor and worship God for his Creation and love for us. The 
      writings from Psalm 19:1 on the "Pink" Clubhouse” at Stellafane have real 
      meaning to me.  
      
      
      As most 
      astroimagers are painfully aware, there are a lot of working hours between 
      sundown and sunup. I can’t recount the number of times I saw the sun rise 
      as I built telescope equipment and accessories or finished up an image 
      series. And yes......my wife is an angel and without her patience and 
      understanding this work could never have been accomplished…and imagine 
      that…. one of our daughters is taking biomedical imaging at university! 
      
      
      Astronomy Tale 
      
      I was 11 and 
      my parents took the family to a drive in theatre in northwest Toronto. I 
      was bored with the movie and looked out the back window of the car to 
      count constellations. All of a sudden I saw a streak and then a blinding 
      flash with some trailing “sparks” that lit up the whole sky and ground as 
      if it was the middle of day . People jumped out of their cars, some crying 
      in fear it was a nuclear attack. I was jumping with excitement because I 
      knew it was a meteor but my Dad told me to shut up. Turned out to be a 
      meteor ( the Kincardine high airburst) and an awesome one at that. From 
      that point on “looking up” took on new meaning. 
      
      Areas of interest
       
      
      
      Telescope 
      making from optics, mounts, OTA’s, CCD cameras,  filter wheels, focusers 
      etc. High resolution deep sky CCD imaging with a particular interest in 
      galactic nebula. 
  
      
      
      Astrophotography Publications 
      . 
      
       For 
      details see the following: 
      
      
      http://www.heavensgloryobservatory.com/publications_credits.htm 
       
      Magazines 
      Smithsonian, Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, 
      various international magazines,  
      photonics trade magazines 
      
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      Internet 
      APOD 
      
      . 
      
      
      TV/radio/ Newspapers 
      CBS News, local radio stations & newspapers  
  
      
      Observing sites 
      
      Local site 
      My main imaging site is in central Massachusetts under 4.9 limiting 
      magnitude skies at an elevation of 800 ft. Worcester, a city of 200,000 is 
      approx. 10 miles away, Boston is 50 miles and there are a number of 10,000 
      plus population towns within 8 miles.  
      
      This is the light pollution map for Heaven’s Glory Observatory I:
      
      
      http://www.heavensgloryobservatory.com/webpageMiscellaneous/HGO%20LP%20Map.jpg 
      
       Remote 
      Dark Site 
      A new site called Heaven’s Glory Observatory II is under construction 
      about a ½ mile away from New Mexico Skies under magnitude 7 skies at an 
      elevation of 7300 feet. 
      See this link for more details: 
      
      http://www.heavensgloryobservatory.com/observatory.htm 
  
      
      Astronomical Equipment 
      Telescopes/Mounts 
      
      20” Ritchey-Chrétien telescope 
 homebuilt 12.5” f/4/15 Newtonian/Classical Cassegrain 
      8” TEC Maksutov  
      All on personally built imaging mounts 
      
      . 
      
      
      CCD cameras 
      SBIG STL 6303E, FLI IMG 6303E, FLI IMG1001E 
      
      
      Software 
      Maxim DL/CCD, Photoshop, AIP, Registar 
        
       
        
      
       Brian’s 
      new homebuilt wide field short f/ratio imaging scope with homebuilt mount
       
      set up for first light at the 2005 Winter Star Party.  
      . 
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