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Live From...the Stratosphere
Ben Burress, Tracker Operator

Ben is the one at the top pointing. Jim McClenahan is the seated Mission
Director
Name: Ben Burress
Position: Tracker Operator
My name is Ben Burress. In flight I operate the telescope tracking system
to achieve precision pointing of the telescope at selected IR objects.
I have been interested in astronomy for as long as I can remember; I
have always loved looking at pictures of planets, stars, nebulae, and
the like, even artists renditions of these faraway places. I always loved
to imagine myself walking about on a distant, alien world, and thinking
about what I might find. I read all that I could find, memorizing planet
names, sizes, orbital distances; star sizes, spectral classes/colors;
galaxy distances and sizes-- the whole works. As I was growing up, I was
always very lazy about learning mathematics, and it is very true that
strong math skills are essential to someone working in this field. I had
to force myself to "get interested" in math when I reached college, but
more diligence at mastering math when I was younger would have helped
me out greatly. Not surprisingly, I have veered toward the more artistic
side of astronomy: painting astro-pictures in high school, writing science
fiction stories, etc. To be a modern astronomer, one must master not only
mathematics and astronomy, but physics, electronics, computers, and physical
instrumentation.
My parents always encouraged me to learn, and I can't imagine that theirs
wasn't the strongest influence in directing me toward science. With that
said, I recall one person who really got me going on astronomy. At age
twelve I spent a few weeks at a summer camp in the Sierras, and one of
the counselors, a man from Eastern Europe, directed an astronomy workshop
that I attended. He really didn't teach any astronomy, but the activity
involved selecting an astronomical picture from a set of old calendars,
cutting it out, and framing it with a colored poster board frame. Somehow
this simple workshop sparked me, and I immediately began seeking other
space art and photographs, in calendars, magazines, etc. I convinced my
dad--an oil paint artist by hobby--to paint me a series of pictures of
the planets of our solar system, modeling them after pictures that I selected.
I also started my subscription to Astronomy magazine immediately after
this, and shortly thereafter managed to finagle my parents to buy me a
small telescope. I was hooked, and the theme burned on all the way through
college--and to this day, it seems. That counselor, Leland, didn't start
my interest, but through that simple workshop he did seem to polarize
it, as if firing the gun that started the race which I had been preparing
for long before.
I haven't considered what I am doing now as a career, actually; more
a very interesting job opportunity. My intention has always been to move
on one day to the field that I am most interested in, which is writing
(technical writing, fiction writing). However, my academic career was
somewhat directed toward astronomy. I earned a bachelor's degree in Physics,
with an Astronomy minor, with the vague intentions either to move through
grad school or find a job in the field directly out of undergraduate school.
The latter occurred. In fact, back when I was looking for a job, I was
actually looking about more broadly than astronomy, at other scientific
fields. This job came at me literally out of the blue: I was sitting on
the lawn at the Sonoma State Student Union when suddenly my physics advisor
appeared above me, back dropped by the blue sky, bearing news of an opening
for a tracker operator on the KAO. Two months later I was flying to New
Zealand for training....
I love going to New Zealand--even Hawaii is okay. I have also been fortunate
enough to fly with the KAO to Punta Arenas, Chile; Brasilia, Brasil; and
Easter Island (as a fuel stop). While travel, by far, is the best part
of the job, there is a down side. The hours. Flying from 10:00 pm until
dawn forty or fifty times per year is very tiring.
My primary responsibility is similar to a ground-based observatory's
"Night Assistant", with some exceptions. On the ground I work with the
Investigators to prepare in flight observing plans, obtaining from them
the astronomical positions of the infrared sources they want to observe.
Since most of the infrared objects the astronomers observe are invisible
in the optical portion of the spectrum, I must apply the IR positions
to my charts of visible object positions (mostly stars) so that, in flight,
I may point the telescope at the IR positions using the offset visible
stars.
And although a job working in the field of astronomy is great, the fact
is, my primary interest in life is writing. I've been interested in fiction
writing (mostly science fiction and fantasy) about as long as I've been
actively interested in astronomy, and I can plainly say that it is the
greater of my interests. I don't have anything published yet, but have
made a recent submission, hoping some publisher will like the book as
much as my wife does. Let me put it this way: unlike any of my other interests,
I can put in a great deal of work and effort in my writing and enjoy every
minute as if it were play. That says something, I think. Other hobbies
include hiking, camping, and running.
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