By Larry Klaes

Any good news from Arecibo is welcome, and Larry Klaes here delivers it. The observatory, threatened with closure despite its key role in the hunt for Earth-crossing asteroids, may have found at least temporary deliverance. Politics seems to have played a role, as Larry notes, but for once with results that benefit science rather than compromising it. Meanwhile, a new study of the Chixculub impact 65 million years ago tells us that a hail of carbon cenospheres — tiny carbon beads — may have fallen planet-wide following the strike. The more we learn about past impacts, the more we realize how important a role our planetary radars play in forestalling future catastrophe.

What exists on the island of Puerto Rico that is over 1,000 feet across, could hold ten billion bowls of cereal, pick up a cell phone call from the planet Venus, once sent a message to any potential inhabitants of a distant globular star cluster, discovered the first planets around another star, has been a “star” in several major motion pictures, has spent the last two years under the threat of losing its funding, and now may be saved on several political fronts, including one involving a New York senator who has been rather busy these days running for President?

The answer is the Arecibo Observatory, which has been managed by Cornell University since it began exploring the Universe in 1963. Home to the largest single radio telescope on Earth, Arecibo has made many major discoveries for astronomy. The facility has also been prominent in analyzing planetoids known as Near Earth Objects (NEOs) that could potentially impact our planet and threaten all life upon it.

Despite all these achievements, in 2006 the National Science Foundation (NSF) appointed a senior advisory panel to see where they could get money for new astronomical projects by cutting funds from current projects. Arecibo was one of the larger targets for cuts, with a proposed removal of $2.5 million over the next few years. It became clear that if Arecibo could not find the financial resources from elsewhere, the venerable observatory could close down in 2011. Not only would this be a major loss to astronomy but also a blow to the economy of Puerto Rico and its important contribution to the science education of the population.

Arecibo observatory

On April 14, the governor of Puerto Rico and the director of the National Astronomy and Ionospheric Center (NAIC) signed a $2.3 million agreement between the semi-autonomous United States territory and the agency that Cornell manages Arecibo through for the NSF. The “Inspiration to Science” program will allow tens of thousands of Puerto Rican school children to visit Arecibo annually to see how the observatory scientists work and receive personal instruction from facility staff consonant with their academic curricula. To handle this influx of students, two new teaching scientists and an aide will be hired. The Puerto Rico Department of Education will provide for the resource needs of the students participating in this program.

Image: Arecibo’s observatory appears to have new life ahead, a plus not only for observational science but the search for dangerous near-Earth objects. Credit: Lee Bennett/ATPM.

“For more than forty years, the Arecibo Observatory has been part of Puerto Rico, an icon recognizably identified with the island worldwide,” said NAIC Director Robert Brown at the signing ceremony. “With the agreement signed today, the people of Puerto Rico become fully part of the Arecibo Observatory, cementing a new relationship that will also become a proud heritage of Puerto Rico.”

As the “Inspiration to Science” initiative was inaugurated, another effort to save the Arecibo facility outright was launched thanks to the efforts of New York Democratic senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, who filed a bill to make the NSF reinstate its funding for the observatory.

Some residents noted that though the action by Clinton is welcome, the fact that it is happening less than two months before Puerto Rico’s final Democratic primary elections on June 1 leaves them wondering just how altruistic Clinton’s motivations were.

“Arecibo has been in peril for a while now,” said Andros Lopez to the Orlando Sentinel, an attorney and a co-director of the local campaign to elect rival Democratic candidate Barak Obama. “That she, by chance, finds about it now is an example of the type of old politics that Obama wants to change. The timing is more than suspect.” Lopez did add that he was grateful nevertheless to see that Clinton “finally pays attention to an issue that pertains to us.”

Arecibo Director Robert Kerr was just grateful for the Clinton’s desire to help the observatory, whatever the ultimate motivation.

“I am quite convinced that the excellence of the Arecibo Observatory will prevail,” declared Kerr regarding Clinton’s actions of support.

Senator Clinton’s Senate office published a release about her support for Arecibo, noting that “Cornell University scientists have used the remarkable tools available at Arecibo Observatory to greatly expand our understanding of the Universe. I am proud to support the path-blazing accomplishments of these New Yorkers.”

Regarding the actual stands of the major presidential candidates when it comes to science and space science in particular, Popular Mechanics recently reported on the candidates’ public declarations for national space policy and the reality behind their statements and motivations, which can be read online here.

A recent CNN report quoted experts in the space and military fields expressing the strong hope that the candidates will go beyond their spoken platitudes and address space policy in earnest soon. Not only are there political considerations to contend with in keeping America’s space program at the forefront, but having a robust ability to understand and monitor the Universe with such instruments as the Arecibo radio telescope – one of humanity’s greatest tools for studying and ultimately preventing NEOs that could strike Earth from hitting – is vital both for the United States and the rest of the world.