Scientists Mapped the Moon From this Observatory in France
Above the Clouds, Beneath the Stars: Pic du Midi Observatory
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The scene at Pic du Midi is one out of a sci-fi movie: a fortified
concrete-and-stone complex, packed full of metal domes, sprawls across
the top of a precipitous peak above the clouds. At an altitude of 9,349
feet, the sweeping view of the surrounding French Pyrénées is rivaled
only by the site's magnificently dark night sky.
Prime observing conditions are the reason why astronomers have made
the arduous trek up this mountainside for an unobstructed view of the
firmament since 1884. But the history of scientific research on the
fabled French peak goes back all the way to 1774, when chemist Jean
Darcet and physicist Gaspard Monge climbed the Pic to study the pressure
of the atmosphere.
While accessing the summit in those days was a much more trying
experience, it did not stop scientists from constructing a full-fledged
meteorological station and astronomical observatory in the 1870s. Today,
the research facilities are only a 15-minute cable-car ride from the
resort town of La Mongie, and the public is welcome to a view so
treasured that NASA scientists traveled there to map the surface of the
moon in preparation for the Apollo landing.
Visitors can even choose to spend the night at the Pic, where up to
19 people can be accommodated in a package deal that includes tours of
the site's telescopes (including the six-foot-seven Bernard Lyot
telescope, the largest in France), nighttime observing with professional
astronomers, and traditional Pyrénées cuisine at the on-site
restaurant.
The observatory is also home to the highest museum in Europe, one
that will guide you through the history of Pic du Midi and over a
century of scientific research and technological progress. But if, for
some odd reason, learning about a long history of discovery begins to
get tiresome, experienced skiers can plunge 4,600 feet down the
vertiginous mountain slopes at no extra charge.
View Pic du Midi de Bigorre in a larger map
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