Michael C. B. Ashley is an Australian astronomer and professor in the school of physics at the University of New South Wales, in Sydney.[1] He is most famous for his work in Antarctica, with the study of the seeing capability at Dome C.
Antarctica and Dome C
In September 2004, Nature published a report written by Jon Lawrence, Michael Ashley, Andrei Tokovinin, and Tony Travouillon on the seeing abilities of astronomical telescopes in Antarctica. The paper concluded that Dome C would be "the best ground-based site to develop a new astronomical observatory."[2] The data used in this report was collected by a remote control experiment run through the French-Italian Concordia Station near Dome C.[3] However, Ashley and his team have been to Antarctica on four separate trips, in 1995, 1998, 2001, and 2004 for earlier experiments, such as measurements of the near-infrared quality of the brightness of the sky.[4][5] It was found that pictures taken from a telescope at Dome C are, on average, 2.5 times better than those taken at observatories elsewhere.[6] This discovery has been lauded as finding the clearest skies on Earth.[7][8]
Publications
Scopus lists 197 academic papers written by Ashley, and calculates his h-index as 35,[9] while Google Scholar calculates his h-index as 46.[10]