An educational asset has reopened to the public, thanks, in part, to the passion and dedication of one ÑÇÖÞÓ°Ôº S&T student.
Ken Goss hosted the Observatory’s first Visitors’ Night in over two years on Aug. 20, 2015, giving over 100 community members, faculty, staff and students the chance to get an up-close look at Saturn and its rings through the university’s 16-inch diameter telescope.
Goss says the event went smoothly. “I have enjoyed providing this service for the public, and it seems the public has responded well, so far.”
A senior in computer science and computer engineering, Goss plans to host public viewings at least a few times a semester until he graduates in May 2017. The next viewing will be of the Pleiades star cluster at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 9. The observatory is located at 1550 N. Bishop Ave. (Highway 63 North), adjacent to the university’s Stonehenge.
Goss and Russ Summers, a research electronics technician in the physics department, spent the summer cleaning up the observatory and getting the telescope operational again. But, it was a chance encounter that even got them to that point.
The physics department, which owns the observatory and its telescope, had been looking for someone to take over Visitors’ Nights since John Schmitt, associate professor emeritus of physics, retired in 2013. Schmitt taught astronomy and ran the observatory for decades.
Not long ago, Paul Parris, a professor of physics, discovered his neighbor who often stargazed in his front yard using a personal telescope, was an S&T student. One night when Parris took his trash bin out to the curb, he approached his neighbor about the observatory.
“This bell went off,” Parris says now. “I said, ‘If you’re interested, I might be able to get you involved with the observatory.’”
Parris’ neighbor, Goss, says he was very interested.
Parris talked to Dan Waddill, chair of physics, and within weeks it “was a done deal,” says Goss.
A native of Lebanon, ÑÇÖÞÓ°Ôº, Goss says he grew up with a “nascent interest” in astronomy.
“I’d go out and look for different things at different times of the year.” But, he says his interest has grown in the last two or three years, since he bought a telescope – the same one Parris saw him using. He now considers himself an amateur astronomer.
A Messianic Jew with a deep interest in religion, Goss says he is most interested in the historical connections between astronomy, astrology and agriculture.
“A few years ago I noticed there were writings in the Bible about particular constellations, and I’m thinking, ‘OK, what’s up?’ Judaism hasn’t been, at least in recent times, as obsessed with astrology as other traditions. So there must be something else to it,” he says. “That’s when I started recognizing the agricultural cycles.
“And so, in particular regard to the Bible and the Torah, in Israel, back in those times, the rising and setting of those constellations would mark when the rainy season was going to begin,” he adds.
Goss is what you would call a “non-traditional” student. He and his wife, Heather, both majored in music education at Truman State University. He earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees there, and student-taught music in ÑÇÖÞÓ°Ôº’s Kirkwood School District. Then the economic recession came, and the job market crashed.
Goss decided to go back to school at S&T to become a computer engineer. “I was afforded the opportunity to retool my skill set,” as he says.
He never thought he would be running a university observatory.
“Few with my neophyte status have the privilege of handling a telescope this big, so I’m happy to serve the public,” he says. “I’m going to hopefully be able to do this as long as I’m here.”
Reviewed 2015-11-12