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The staff of the Winer Observatory believes that education and research are each meaningless without the other. We must teach the next generation what we know, and do research so we have more to teach. We also believe in giving back to the community in which we operate our observatory, to the community that supports our operations by observing light pollution ordinances and by other actions.
The Winer public outreach program, which was funded by a generous donation by Douglass R. Hayes, Jr. and Rebecca Hayes (seen in the photo at top left) in 1999, currently consists of the following:
 
| Date | Student | Advisor | University | Thesis Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/2007 | Joshua Pepper | Richard Pogge | Ohio State | KELT: The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope |
| 6/2011 | Jason Eastman | Scott Gaudi | Ohio State | DEMONEX: The DEdicated MONitor of EXotransits |
 
| Date | Student | Advisor | University | Thesis Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/2000 | Allen Rogel | Robert Mutel | Univ. of Iowa | A Search for Supernovae in Nearby Late-Type Spiral Galaxies |
| 12/2003 | Michael Wilson | Robert Mutel | Univ. of Iowa | A Photometric Search for Extrasolar Planets Around White Dwarfs |
 
| Date | Student | School | Town | Project Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/2000 | Mario Gonzales | Our Lady of Lourdes H.S. | Nogales, AZ | Stellar Evolution |
 
During the summer of 2011, Winer Director Mark Trueblood and observing colleague Robert Crawford mentored a student as part of NOAO's Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) Program, funded by the National Science Foundation. Our student, Morgan Rehnberg of Beloit College in southern Wisconsin, began with an existing IDL tool, ATV, that displays an image and performs some rudimentary photometry. Morgan developed from ATV a new IDL tool called PhAst (Photometry and Astrometry) that measures both the brightnesses (photometry) and the positions (astrometry) of objects in CCD images. Morgan used existing routines SExtractor, SCAMP, and missFITS to generate his new tool. More information is displayed here.
 
Project ASTRO (Astronomers and Teachers as Partners in the Classroom) is promoted by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific with funding assistance from the National Science Foundation. In Tucson, Project ASTRO is led by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (the US national observatory that operates Kitt Peak National Observatory). Winer's Project ASTRO history is given in the table below. In the Project ASTRO program, the astronomer and teacher attend a one- to two-day training course to become familiar with the goals and techniques of the program. The astronomer then visits the classroom about four to six times a year to explain what astronomers do, and to give lectures and demonstrations that supplement and augment what the teachers can do with their materials. Click on the picture of the "figure-8" (analemma) above to learn more about this "sundial" that was painted on the sidewalk of the Elgin Elementary School by Lori Barille's Fourth Grade class in 1997.
| School | School Year | Teacher | Grade(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elgin ES | 1995 - 1996 | Lori Barille | 4th |
| Elgin ES | 1996 - 1997 | Lori Barille | 4th |
| Elgin ES | 1997 - 1998 | Beth Wilkerson | 4th |
| Elgin ES | 1999 - 2000 | Susan Sacco | 6th, 7th, 8th |
| Elgin ES | 2000 - 2001 | Susan Sacco | 6th, 7th, 8th |
| Patagonia ES | Spring 2005 | Patty Cooper | 3rd |
 
The astronomy club in Sonoita consisted for a few years of about a dozen interested adults. The Winer director assisted the club president in finding speakers, and often gave the monthly talk himself. Lecture topics have included demonstrations of the phases of the moon, building a comet, a slide presentation on the planets of the solar system, the life and death of stars, and the organization of matter and energy in the universe.
Our Director is a member of the Tucson Amateur Astronomy Association. He has lectured at the monthly meeting of this group. He also supports many group activities.
 
The Winer Director, Mark Trueblood, gave the following invited talks, among others:
 
During the Spring of 2000, our Director spent a few weekends instructing
Mario Gonzalez, then a high school student in Nogales, AZ, in astronomy.
Mario was assembling a science fair project on stellar evolution, and
needed help in understanding the processes involved, and data for the
project. Using the University of Iowa IRO telescope, images of M67, an
open star cluster, were obtained in Johnson B, V, R, and I bands and the
software provided with the ocaas telescope control system
from
Clear Sky Institute was used to generate a color-magnitude diagram
for the cluster that clearly showed the giant branch turnoff from the
main sequence. From this, Mario was able to estimate the age of the
cluster and to describe the evolution of the various stars within the
cluster. He obtained an A on his project, and in the Fall of 2000,
entered the University of Arizona declaring a major in Astronomy.
 
Our Director has been a member of the International Dark-sky Association (IDA) since its founding in 1988, and in 2000 received an award from its Executive Director for his efforts to promote good outdoor lighting in Sonoita.
 
Last modified: January 1, 2010.