- Source: Eric J. Christensen
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- Eric J. Christensen
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Eric James Christensen (born in 1977) is an American astronomer and a discoverer of comets. Since 2023, he works as an Observing Specialist Manager at the Vera C. Rubin Observatory. Before this, he was a staff scientist with the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS), where he was responsible for the survey's near-Earth object operation.
Career
Christensen holds a BFA from the University of Arizona, with a concentration in ceramic sculpture.
In 2003, Christensen joined the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) near Tucson, Arizona as an observer. He was involved in software development during a major equipment upgrade at the observatory. Around 2007, Christensen left CSS to work at the Gemini South telescope in Chile as part of the science operations team, including hunting for meteorites in the Atacama Desert.
In 2012, Christensen returned to CSS as a Survey Operations Manager. For ten years, he was the director of the survey's near-Earth object (NEO) operations, including observing, software development, cadence optimization, telescope and instrument maintenance and collimation, survey modeling and optimization, and project management.
In August 2023, Christensen returned to Chile with his family to join the Vera C. Rubin Observatory as an Observing Specialist Manager. The telescope is expected to see first light in January 2025, and start survey operations in August 2025.
= Discoveries
=Numbered comets
Unnumbered comets
= Awards and honors
=Asteroid 13858 Ericchristensen, discovered by the Catalina Sky Survey in 1999, was named in his honor. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 22 July 2013 (M.P.C. 84377).
References
External links
Eric Christensen Archived 3 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine, University of Arizona
Four Comets in Two Days – Comet Christensen (210P/Christensen = P/2003 K2), Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, 26 January 2018
Comets discovered in 2007, BAA Comet Section