Warren Skidmore
Papers
2
Total Citations
12
H-Index
2
About
Warren Skidmore is a leading figure in astronomical site characterization, best known for his pivotal role in the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) project. His primary research focuses on developing the instrumentation and robotic systems necessary to identify and validate premier observatory locations. Skidmore’s major contributions include architecting the comprehensive TMT site testing system, a suite of identical, robotically operated instruments—including seeing monitors, weather stations, and turbulence profilers—deployed at candidate sites to measure atmospheric and optical conditions with unprecedented rigor. His work on the robotic computer control system that coordinates these remote instruments has been foundational, enabling continuous, unattended data collection from harsh, high-altitude environments. While his most-cited papers (e.g., the 2004 site testing overview with 9 citations) are highly specialized, their impact is profound, directly guiding the selection of Maunakea as the TMT’s preferred site. Skidmore’s achievements lie not in raw citation counts but in engineering the very infrastructure that makes next-generation, ground-based astronomy possible, ensuring that the world’s largest telescopes are built on the best possible foundations.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1The Thirty Meter Telescope site testing system9 citations · 2004
- 2The Thirty Meter Telescope site testing robotic computer system3 citations · 2006