Astronomically short-sighted

I was appalled to read this on the BBC News website:
UK astronomers will lose access to two of the world’s finest telescopes in February, as administrators look to plug an £80m hole in their finances.
Observation programmes on the 8.1m telescopes of the Gemini organisation will end abruptly because Britain is cancelling its subscription.
It means UK astronomers can no longer view the Northern Hemisphere sky with the largest class of telescope.
Researchers say they are aghast at the administrators’ decision.
So the bean-counters win out over the scientists. This is how one astronomer reacted:
“To withdraw from the state-of-the-art Gemini facilities leaves the UK ground-based astronomy strategy in disarray - some would say deliberately sabotaged,” said Professor Paul Crowther from Sheffield University.
“This will badly affect the UK astronomical community’s ability to address questions such as how galaxies form, or look for planets around other stars, or be able to adequately exploit space observatories such as the Hubble Space Telescope,” explained the current chair of the UK telescope allocation committee for Gemini.
“The loss of Gemini North is particularly acute, since the majority of the UK past investment has been focused upon the Northern Hemisphere,” he told BBC News.
My daughter and son-in-law are both pursuing astrophysics PhDs and I know how precious telescope time is for both their projects. What’s more Britain has long played a leading role in astronomy, so to cut our astronomers off from this world-class telescope is the height of madness.
Aaaargh!!!
Technorati Tags: astronomy, astrophysics, Gemini North, telescope
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