An equatorial room, in astronomical observatories, is the room which contains an equatorial mounted telescope. It is usually referred to in observatory buildings that contain more than one type of instrument: for example buildings with an "equatorial room" containing an equatorial telescope and a "transit room" containing a transit telescope.[1] Equatorial rooms tend to be large circular rooms to accommodate all the range of motion of a long telescope on an equatorial mount and are usually topped with a dome to keep out the weather.
In some cases an observatory would move to a new location, or the equatorial telescope itself would be removed. The space would then be converted, for example, into use as a classroom or library. These peculiar rooms can sometimes be found in buildings at old colleges and towns, with their former use long forgotten.
References
editFurther reading
edit- George Frederick Chambers (1890), A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy: Instruments and practical astronomy, Clarendon Press, p. 198
- Sir Norman Lockyer (1886), "Detail of the Structure of the Observatory", Nature, XXXIII, Macmillan Journals Limited: 57