Nice Observatory
The Nice Observatory is an astronomical observatory located in Nice, France, on the summit of Mount Gros. The observatory was founded in 1879, by the banker Raphaël Bischoffsheim. The architect was Charles Garnier, and Gustave Eiffel designed the main dome.
In 1886 the largest refracting telescope in the World made its debut at Nice Observatory, the ''Grand Lunette.''
Description
The refractor telescope made by Henry and Gautier became operational around 1886–1887,was the largest in a privately funded observatory, and the first at such high altitude. It was slightly bigger in aperture, several metres longer, and located at a higher altitude than the new at Pulkovo observatory in the Russian Empire, and the at Vienna Observatory.
In the records for the largest refracting telescopes, all three were outperformed by the refractor installed at the Lick Observatory at 1,283 m altitude in 1889.
History
The first studies for the construction of the observatory began in 1878. Raphaël Bischoffsheim, a banker passionate about science and astronomy, purchased the summit of Mont-Gros to establish an observatory. He enlisted his friend Charles Garnier to lead the architectural project. Garnier, drawing on his background in botany, designed a beautiful landscaped environment. The site consists of 18 pavilions, 13 of which were designed by Charles Garnier. Among the buildings are the large equatorial, the small equatorial housing a 50 cm diameter equatorial instrument that enabled astronomer Auguste Charlois to discover 140 minor planets, the bent equatorial, the large meridian with its two sloped, zenith-opening roofs, and the central pavilion housing a library and researchers' offices. All of these buildings are nestled among the botanical paths of the garden and an olive grove with 250 trees purchased by Garnier.In 1986, the Nice Observatory merged with the Center for Research in Geodynamics and Astrometry to form the Observatory of the Alpes-Maritimes, which became the Observatory of the Côte d'Azur in 1988.
Since 1988, the observatory site has been listed in the ZNIEFF inventory of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region. The entire site is part of the ZNIEFF titled "Mont-Gros - Eze - Tête de Chien," which spans ten municipalities and covers an area of 2,907 hectares. On July 6, 1992, the site was partially classified as a historic monument, and on October 24, 1994, the buildings were fully classified, including the various telescopes. On March 1, 2001, the observatory received the "20th Century Heritage" label.
Directors and Associated Personalities
The observatory has had the following directors:- Henri Perrotin
- General J. A. L. Bassot
- Gaston Fayet
- Jean-Claude Pecker
- Philippe Delache
- Jean-Paul Zahn
- Philippe Delache
- Jean-Paul Zahn
- Raymond Michard
- Philippe Delache
- José Pacheco
- Jacques Colin
- Farrokh Vakili
- Thierry Lanz
- Stéphane Mazevet
- Auguste Charlois
- Paul Couteau
- Jean-Louis Heudier
- Joanny-Philippe Lagrula
- Marguerite Laugier
- Guy Reiss
- Alexandre Schaumasse
- Henri Chrétien
- Michel Hénon
- François Mignard
- Alessandro Morbidelli
- Patrick Michel.
The Great Refracting Telescope called ''the Grande Lunette''
In popular culture
The Nice Observatory was featured in the 1999 film Simon Sez. It was also the setting for the title scene in the 2014 Woody Allen flick Magic in the Moonlight.On May 7, 2021, French artist French79 recorded a concert there, which was broadcast on Arte Concert.
In 2018, the exteriors in front of the Great Dome and the Grand Meridian served as the backdrop for Angèle's music video "La Thune".
In 2022, the band Hyphen Hyphen, originally from Nice, filmed the music video for "Too Young" at the observatory.