Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Flagstaff stargazers find superb dark-sky viewing

Artificial light curbed in astronomer’s haven

-

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — A decadeslon­g commitment to preserving a dark sky for stargazers and wildlife is paying off for a small Arizona city, with images showing far less excess artificial light than cities of comparable size, the National Park Service said.

The state, with mountain peaks and stretches of desert sky that are a haven for astronomer­s, is a leader in efforts to protect the dark, including using fewer lights or dimmed LED lights, the Internatio­nal Dark-Sky Associatio­n said. Arizona is home to three of the nation’s largest telescopes.

Darkness preserves people’s ability to see stars and spot the Milky Way, an ever-dwindling phenomenon, and is critical to bird migration and survival of insects that larger animals eat, the park service said.

“This issue goes beyond astronomy. It has impacts on wildlife ecology, public safety, potentiall­y public health,” said John Barentine, program manager for the Tucson-based dark sky group.

Flagstaff, home to Lowell Observator­y, embraced dark-sky efforts nearly 60 years ago, and the images from July show those efforts are making a difference, Christian Luginbuhl, a retired U.S. Naval Observator­y astronomer who helped collect data for the analysis, told The Arizona Daily Sun newspaper.

The images taken by a panoramic camera developed by the park service show nighttime light emissions in Flagstaff are nearly 14 times fainter than those of Cheyenne, Wyoming, the newspaper reported.

In the images, light represente­d by a rainbow of colors blooms from Phoenix, Cheyenne and Fort Collins, Colorado, but only a faint halo of yellow and green can be seen around Flagstaff.

Critics say efforts to protect the night sky from street lights, electronic signs and other sources of excess artificial light, known as light pollution, raise concerns about public safety and crime. Many cities are weary of going dark.

And businesses have fought back against regulation­s. The billboard industry, which has increasing­ly gone by way of electronic signs on freeways, has opposed strict regulation­s in Arizona such as a state-mandated buffer around main observator­ies and a 2012 agreement that banned electronic signs in two counties.

Legislatio­n introduced last year would have allowed electronic signs to be posted in those western Arizona counties but ultimately failed.

 ?? FELICIA FONSECA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
FELICIA FONSECA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States