After Mysterious Closure, Solar Observatory In New Mexico Reopens : NPR



Laurel Wamsley



A solar observatory in New Mexico reopened Monday after being closed by 
authorities for 10 days — which spawned national interest and speculation into 
the cause of its evacuation.



Let's get this out of the way: Scientists say that aliens were not involved.



On Sept. 6, the Sunspot Solar Observatory was suddenly closed by the 
Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, the consortium that 
operates it, without public explanation.



People who work at the observatory, and those who live on the site, were asked 
to evacuate. The site's post office was also closed.



The Otero County sheriff told the local newspaper that his office was alerted 
but not given any information.



"The FBI is refusing to tell us what's going on," Sheriff Benny House told the 
Alamogordo Daily News shortly after the closure. "We've got people up there (at 
Sunspot) that requested us to standby while they evacuate it. Nobody would 
really elaborate on any of the circumstances as to why. The FBI were up there. 
What their purpose was nobody will say."



"But for the FBI to get involved that quick and be so secretive about it, there 
was a lot of stuff going on up there," he added. "There was a Blackhawk 
helicopter, a bunch of people around antennas and work crews on towers but 
nobody would tell us anything."



From there, it was off to the races. Combine the FBI, a powerful telescope and 
a location in rural Sunspot, N.M., and you've got all the ingredients for some 
rampant speculation — government surveillance, aliens, etc.



"Why the FBI close the observatory?? People have the right to know!!" one 
person demanded on the observatory's Google page.



The observatory, in Lincoln National Forest, about 170 miles south of 
Albuquerque, is home to the Dunn Solar Telescope. When it opened in 1969, it 
was the world's premier high spatial resolution optical solar telescope, the 
National Solar Observatory says. Though it's now considered a "legacy 
telescope," the Dunn "continues to be one of the most versatile, user-friendly 
setups in the world," the observatory says.



New Mexico is already associated in some people's minds with unexplained 
phenomena. The observatory is about 85 miles southwest of Roswell, N.M., a town 
long at the center of UFO lore.



So what did happen at Sunspot?



A security threat, though the specific nature of that threat remains unclear. 
According to a statement from AURA, the consortium and the National Science 
Foundation decided to vacate the site temporarily because of a security issue:



    "AURA has been cooperating with an on-going law enforcement investigation 
of criminal activity that occurred at Sacramento Peak. During this time, we 
became concerned that a suspect in the investigation potentially posed a threat 
to the safety of local staff and residents. For this reason, AURA temporarily 
vacated the facility and ceased science activities at this location.



    "The decision to vacate was based on the logistical challenges associated 
with protecting personnel at such a remote location, and the need for 
expeditious response to the potential threat. AURA determined that moving the 
small number of on-site staff and residents off the mountain was the most 
prudent and effective action to ensure their safety."



The consortium said that it recognizes that the lack of communication while the 
facility was being evacuated was "concerning and frustrating for some."



"However, our desire to provide additional information had to be balanced 
against the risk that, if spread at the time, the news would alert the suspect 
and impede the law enforcement investigation. That was a risk we could not 
take," the statement says.



And the helicopter? House, the sheriff, told The Washington Post that Black 
Hawk helicopters aren't uncommon in the area.



A call to an FBI spokesperson was not immediately returned. A person at the 
bureau's Albuquerque office said he had no information and could not comment.



The consortium said the site will have extra security for now, because of 
people showing up at the facility since its closure: "Given the significant 
amount of publicity the temporary closure has generated, and the consequent 
expectation of an unusual number of visitors to the site, we are temporarily 
engaging a security service while the facility returns to a normal working 
environment."



James McAteer, the New Mexico State University professor who leads operations 
of the telescope at the site, said he was impressed by the theories that people 
had come up with for the closure.



"It was the first time I've had to deny contact with Aliens and 
Death-by-solar-storm and underground tunnels and New communications via X-rays 
all at one time," he wrote in an email to NPR.



The observatory's reopening means that researchers can get to back to doing 
what they do: staring at the sun.



"We cannot wait to get back to work to show everyone the world class research 
we do every day at the telescope," McAteer said.



NPR's Emily Sullivan contributed to this report.



https://www.npr.org/2018/09/17/648804508/after-mysterious-closure-solar-observatory-in-new-mexico-reopens

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