Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA)
Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 20
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 20, April 23, 1997 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * * * Herausgegeben vom Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte * * in der Astronomischen Gesellschaft * * * * Nr. 20, 27. Maerz 1997 * * * * Redaktion: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. History of Astronomy at the XXIIIrd General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union 2. The 6th SEAC Conference, Gdansk 1997: First Circular 3. Annual Meeting of the North American Sundial Society: Announcement 4. Exhibitions 5. Conferences 1997/98 Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 20, April 23, 1997 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy at the XXIIIrd General Assembly ---------------------------------------------------- of the International Astronomical Union --------------------------------------- Date and place: August 18-30, 1997, Kyoto International Conference Hall (KICH), Takaraga-ike, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606, Japan JD = Joint Discussion JD 8: STELLAR EVOLUTION IN REAL TIME Among Co-Supporting Commissions: 41 (History of Astronomy) Contact Address: Dr. Edward F. Guinan, Dept. of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Villanova University, Villanova, PA 19085, USA, Phone: 1 610 519 4823, Fax: 1 610 519 6132 (University) & 1 610 325 9788 (Home), E-mail: guinan@ucis.vill.edu, and Robert Koch, e-mail: rhkoch@sas.upenn.edu From the preliminary programme: Friday August 22 afternoon Part I - Stellar Evolution - Observation, Theory, and History Stellar Evolution from Historical Data: J. Hearnshaw (New Zealand) The Problem of "Red" Sirius- Evolutionary or Spurious? K. Brecher (USA) and other papers Because of the the severe time limitations of this JD, some important topics could not be included. To help alleviate this problem and to broaden the scope of the JD, there will be a poster session connected with this meeting. Papers are invited on topics that relate to the theme of observational and theoretical aspects of stellar evolution that can be discerned from the scrutiny of historical data as well as telescopic observations made over the last 200 yrs. In particular papers on historic supernovae and novae, the problem of the "Red Sirius", Eta Carinae, P Cygni, and related topics, as well as solar variability will be especially welcome. An appreciation of the poster papers will made during the oral sessions. JD 17: HISTORY OF ORIENTAL ASTRONOMY Supporting Commission: 41 (History of Astronomy): a joint commission of IAU and IUHPS Co-Supporting Commission: 46 (Astronomy Education) SOC: S. M. R. Ansari (Chairperson, India), S. Debarbat (France), S. J. Dick (USA, Co-Chairperson), B. Hidayat (Indonesia), O. Gingerich (USA), Y. Maeyama (Germany), Il-S. Nha (Korea), D. Pingree (USA), Y. Sobouti (Iran) & Xi Zezong (China) Contact addresses: Prof. S. M. R. Ansari, c/o Physics Dept. Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh 202002, India, Phone: 91 571 40 1952 (res.), Fax: 91 571 40 0105, 40 0848 or 40 0466, Telex: 564 230 AMU IN or Dr. S. J. Dick, US Naval Observatory, Washington, DC 20392-5420, USA, Phone: 1 202 762 1438, Fax: 1 202 762 1461, E-mail: dick@ariel.usno.navy.mil Preliminary programme: Monday August 25 morning: Sessions I & II Oriental Astronomy during the Ancient and Medieval Period Development of Astronomy in Ancient China: Y. Maeyama (Germany) Islamic Astronomy in in China: B. van Dahlen (Netherlands/Japan)/ An Arabic commentary on al-Tusi's Tadhkirah and its Sanscrit translation: T. Kusuba (Japan) Assimilation of observational instruments of Islamic Astronomy in Indian Astronomy: V.N. Sharma (USA) Ancient Indian Astronomy in China: J. Xiao-Yuan (China) Korean Star Maps of the 18th Century: Il-S. Nha (Korea) Eclipse records in early Korean History: F.R. Stephenson (UK) The Samguk Sagi and Koryo-sa Knowledge of Starry Sky and agricultural activities in Indonesia: A review: B. Hidayat (Indonesia) The Projection Method of the Star Map in the Song Dinasty: K. Miyajima (Japan) Monday August 25 afternoon: Session III Oriental Astronomy during the Ancient and Medieval Period (Cntd) Astronomical development in the Orient down to the 12th-13th centuries: Kwan-Yu Chen (USA) On the Vedanga Astronomy: Y. Ohashi (Japan) Spherical trigonometry in the Astronomy of Medieval Kerala School: K. Plofker (USA) The solar altitude below horizon at dusk and dawn according to Ancient Chinese astronomical records: W. Shou-Xian (China) Burmese Star maps: M. Nishiyama (Japan) Session IV: Modern Astronomy in the Orient The Drkpaksasarani: A Sanskrit version of de la Hire's Tabulae Astronomicae D. Pingree (USA) Modern Astronomy in Indo-Persian sources: S.M.R. Ansari (India) Takamine and Saha: Contacts with western Astrophysics: D.H. DeVorkin (USA) East Asian historical records and modern Astronomy: Xi Zezong (China) Astronomy education in the East: S. Isobe (Japan) Tuesday, August 26, 9:00-10:30: Session I Keplers's Laws in China: K. Hashimoto (Japan) Possible identification of some periodic comets before AD 1760: Zh. Weifeng (China) Contemporary Astronomy in Iran: A status report: Y. Sobouti (Iran) Changing historical trends in Astronomy education in Australia and New Zealand: W. Orchiston (New Zealand) History of Oriental Astronomy: An overview: S. Nakayama (Japan) JD 20: ENHANCING ASTRONOMICAL RESEARCH AND EDUCATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Among Co-Supporting Commissions: 41 (History of Astronomy) Contact Address: Dr. A. H. Batten, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory, 5071, W. Saanich Rd, Victoria, B.C., Canada V8X 4M6, Phone: 1 250 363 0009, Fax: 1 250 363 0045, E-mail: batten@dao.nrc.ca JD 23: THE LEONID METEOR STORMS: HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND UPCOMING OPPORTUNITIES Among Co-Supporting Commissions: 41 (History of Astronomy) Contact address: Prof I.P.Williams, Astronomy Unit, Queen Mary & Westfield College, Mile End Rd, London E1 4NS, UK, Phone: 44 171 975 5452, Fax: 44 181 981 9587, E-mail: I.P.Williams@qmw.ac.uk From the preliminary programme: Wednesday August 27 morning History of the Leonid Meteor Storms Early observations of the Leonids and other storms in east Asia: I. Hasegawa (Japan) Observations of the Leonids over the last millennium: S. Dick (USA) Comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle: its orbit and history: D.K. Yeomans (USA) The Leonids and the comet history and theory: I.P. Williams (USA) For inquiries concerning the XXIIIrd General Assembly in general and the Scientific Programme, please contact: Prof. Immo Appenzeller, General Secretary, International Astronomical Union (IAU), 98 bis, bd Arago, F 75014 Paris, France, Phone: 33 1 43 25 8358, Fax: 33 1 43 25 2616, E-mail: iau@iap.fr For all inquiries concerning registration and local arrangements in Kyoto except hotel/tour reservations, please contact: Prof. T. Fukushima, Chair, Local Organizing Committee, the XXIIIrd General Assembly of the IAU, National Astronomical Observatory, 2-21-1, Ohsawa, Mitaka, Tokyo 181, Japan, Phone: 81 422 34 3027, Fax: 81 422 34 3027, E-mail: iau97@tenmon.or.jp The URL of the LOC WWW page is: http://www.tenmon.or.jp/iau97/ For all inquiries concerning hotel/tour reservations in Kyoto, please contact: Japan Travel Bureau, Inc., International Travel Division, Convention Center (CD100993-543), 5-5-2, Kiba, Koto-ku, Tokyo135, Japan, Phone: 81 3 5620 9429, Fax: 81 3 5620 9499, E-mail: jtbiau@mxd.meshnet.or.jp Source (and more information): IAU Information Bulletins No. 78 and 79 URLs: http://www.lsw.uni-heidelberg.de/iau/IB78.html http://www.lsw.uni-heidelberg.de/iau/IB79.html ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 20, April 23, 1997 ........................................................................... The 6th SEAC Conference, Gdansk 1997: First Circular ---------------------------------------------------- Societe Europeenne pour l'Astronomie dans la Culture European Society for Astronomy in Culture THE 6TH SEAC CONFERENCE, GDANSK 1997 (Tuesday the 2nd to Saturday the 6th of September, 1997) First Circular The Organizing Committee: Honorary President: M. Andrzej Zbierski, Director of the Central Maritime Museum, Gdansk President: Dr. Mariusz Ziolkowski, Warsaw University Secretaries: Mgr. Marek Wysoczynski, Central Maritime Museum, Gdansk Dr. Arnold Lebeuf, Jagiellonian University, Krakow Arkadiusz Soltysiak, Warsaw University Members of the Organizing Committee: Dr. Elzbieta Siarkiewicz, Warsaw University Dr. Stanislaw Iwaniszewski, State Museum of Archaeology, Warsaw Mgr Robert M. Sadowski Contacts: * Dr. Arnold Lebeuf, SEAC Conference, Department of the Historical Anthropology, Warsaw University, Krakowskie Przedmiescie 26/28, Warsaw, Poland Fax: (48-22) 826-90-30, (48-22) 826-75-20 E-mail: * Dr. Marek Wysoczynski, SEAC Conference, Central Maritime Museum, ul. Szeroka 67/68, 80-835 Gdansk, Poland Fax: (48-58) 31-84-53 * Dr. Mariusz Ziolkowski, phone (48-22) 620-03-81 ext. 129 E-mail * Arkadiusz Soltysiak E-mail Dear Colleagues, Over the past two decades we, the Europeans, as well as their guests from other continents had had many opportunities, apart from the Oxford International Conferences, to meet together to present results of their work and discuss them in numerous cities and countries, originally solely on the private and independent initiatives of various organizers. Let us recall here at least a few of those events: * 1988: The First National Symposium on Archaeoastronomy, Academy of Sciences, Tolbukhin, Bulgaria * 1989: Archeologia e Astronomia, Institute of Archaeology and Oriental Studies, University of Venice and Astronomical Observatory in Padova, Italy * 1990: Current Problems and Future of Archaeoastronomy, State Archaeological Museum and Department of the Historical Anthropology, Warsaw, Poland * 1991: Archaeoastronomy, Lorand Eotvos Astronomical Observatory, Budapest and King Stephan Museum, Szekesfehervar, Hungary * 1992: Time and Astronomy at the Meeting of Two Worlds (conference on the 500th anniversary of the "discovery" of America), Warsaw University and Town of Frombork, Poland * 1994: The Inspiration of Astronomical Phaenomena, The Vatican Astronomical Observatory, Castel Gandolfo, Italy * 1994: Archeologia e Astronomia, Academia dei Lincei, Rome, Italy * 1996: Problems of Archaeoastronomy, Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia However, Prof. Carlos Jaschek who, having already since 1986 established succesfully the regular conferences being held at Strasbourg Observatory under name of Astronomie et Sciences Humaines, had put forward many years ago the idea to bring into life an association which would be able to unite all the hitherto dispersed efforts in order to preserve records of our past achievements as well as to facilitate current exchange of thoughts and regular publication of the works of all our colleagues. For this purpous, he called at Strasbourg for an enlarged meeting in 1992 where were established the basis of SEAC. That is why, although it was not until during the next meeting in Bulgaria in 1993 when the said association became officially constituted under the french name of Societe Europeenne pour l'Astronomie dans la Culture (SEAC) with the votes of its founding members, we shall justly consider Prof. C. Jaschek as the founder of our society and the meeting of 1992 at Strasbourg as the 1st SEAC Conference. It was our intention to hold conferences each year in different country, alternatively in the West or in the East, to facilitate contacts between scholars of the both parts of the continent, so long separated. * 1992: Astronomie et Sciences Humaine, the 1st founder's SEAC conference, Strasbourg Observatory and the European Science Foundation, Strasbourg, France * 1993: Astronomical Traditions in Past Cultures, the 2nd SEAC conference, Smolyan Astronomical Observatory, Smolyan, Bulgaria * 1994: SEAC `94, Astronomy and Culture, the 3rd SEAC conference, Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany * 1995: SEAC `95, the 4th SEAC conference, Sibiu University, Sibiu, Romania * 1996: SEAC `96, the 5th SEAC conference, Salamanca University, Salamanca, Spain * 1997: SEAC `97, the 6th SEAC conference is to be held in Gdansk, Poland on initiative of Dr. Mariusz Ziolkowski of the Department of Historical Anthropology, Warsaw University and the Central Maritime Museum in Gdansk We invite you to take part in that meeting and present the most recent results of your work in that area. Due to the location and time of our conference (Gdadsk, the great harbour on the Baltic Sea, will celebrate in 1997 a millenium anniversary of its foundation and of the martyrdom of St. Adalbertus, the baptist of that land), we believe it only right to focus its scope on the three principal subjects: * the stars and the sea * the celestial maps from antiquity to Johan Hevelius * medieval astronomy Of course, the papers on other subjects referring to the astronomy in culture will also be accepted and located separately in the special session. As in all previous cases, the conference proceedings will be published. The conference will be held in english and french. * the deadline for applications is March 31, 1997 * the confirmations will be mailed back together with a provisional invitation, necessary for the candidates in their applying for grants or other sources of financing * the final approval will be decided upon by the Organizing Committee and communicated to all the concerned before April 15 * the approval shall not come into effect until reception of the inscription fee (25 Ecus or equivalent) which should reach us before May 15, the final date to confirm the hotel reservations. The 6th SEAC Conference, Gdansk, Poland Application Form Full name: Professional affiliation: Exact current address, phone, fax, email: Tentative title (together with a short abstract on the separate sheet, if necessary) Taking into account the expected high level of activities in Gdadsk in the year of its celebration we have managed to book only 50 places in the hotel, so please let us know your choice as soon as possible. Accommodations will be provided by MIRAMAR, a three stars class hotel. * Single room: 22 Ecus * Double room: 26 Ecus * Double with bathroom: 34 Ecus ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 20, April 23, 1997 ........................................................................... Annual Meeting of the North American Sundial Society: Announcement ------------------------------------------------------------------ Call for Papers The North American Sundial Society will hold its annual meeting on 11-14 September 1997 in Chicago. Highlights will include visits to the Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum (Chicago) and the Time Museum (Rockford) in order to inspect their early time-finding instruments. A tour of modern sundials in the Chicagoland area is also planned. The program committee invites papers on all aspects of dialling, including the history, culture, design, fabrication, and science of sundials. Exhibits and short show-and-tell demonstrations are also welcome. Abstracts (up to 500 words) must be submitted by June 1st. For details, please contact: Sara Schechner Genuth, National Museum of American History, Room 1040, MRC 605, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560; fax (202) 786-2851; internet sgenuth@sil.si.edu. The North American Sundial Society was established in 1994 and publishes a quarterly journal, "The Compendium," in both print and digital formats. The first two annual meetings were held in Washington, D.C. and Toronto. Membership is international and currently stands at close to 400. For more information about NASS and membership, please contact: George McDowell, 24 Indian Lane, One West, Baltimore, MD 21210; telephone (410) 528-1282 and (410) 435-8306; internet 104076.1373@compuserve.com. ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 20, April 23, 1997 ........................................................................... Exhibitions ----------- Till 26 March 1997 the Museum of the History of Science at Oxford, UK, displayed the exhibition "The Noble Dane: Images of Tycho Brahe". It was centred on an historical genre painting from the mid-nineteenth century, recently restored, but moved on to consider the image of Tycho in a variety of forms and senses. An on-line Web version is still availabe at http://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/tycho/ The celebration of the Three Galileos will continue through June 15, 1997, with an exhibition, "Voyage to the Cosmos", in Padua, Italy. The exhibition is housed in the 13th century Palazzo del Raggion, a medieval hall with walls covered by an astrological cycle painted in the 15th century. The show covers our astronomical conquests from the first telescopic observations by Galileo Galilei, to the technological wonders of the TNG and other modern telescopes, up to the last astounding feats of space exploration with spacecraft and probes. Informatics and virtual reality also have a major role in the exhibition, as well as real-time connections with astronomical sites for remote conferences. Highlights of the exhibition include a replica of Galileo's telescope, a 1/10th scale model of the Galileo spacecraft and a book of Galileo's results, printed in 1630. Additional information in Italian about the exhibition is available at http://tregalilei.interbusiness.it/. An exhibition based on the pioneering voyage of Captain Cook in the Endeavour opens at the Queen's House in the grounds of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich (London, UK) at Easter 1997. The exhibition - "Captain Cook and the Endeavour" (24 March to 21 September 1997) - is a blend of original artefacts used by Cook on his first voyage of discovery and stunning paintings of newly discovered lands by British artist and draughtsman, William Hodges. - In July 1768, Cook set sail in Endeavour to observe the Transit of Venus on Tahiti, but also with secret instructions to investigate the existence of the Great South Land. By 1769, Cook had reached New Zealand, where he charted the north and south islands before continuing west. In April 1770, he sighted the east coast of what we now know as Australia, anchoring in Botany Bay. Cook was the first European to accurately chart the Pacific and to open up Australia and New Zealand to later settlement. His navigational skills were exceptional, even before the invention of Harrison's chronometer. His concern for the health of his crew ensured no one died of scurvy and in choosing to convert a Whitby collier he made a sound decision - Endeavour proved an excellent vessel for exploration. - Among the exhibits in Cook and the Endeavour are Cook's personal journal of the voyage; charts so accurate that they can still be used today; an intricate scale model of Endeavour featuring each crew member and the stores taken on board. Additional navigational instruments will be on display at the Old Royal Observatory. - The exhibition coincides with the arrival at Greenwich of the full-size working replica of HM Bark Endeavour. The ship will be on display and open for visitors at Greenwich Pier from 28 March to 13 April 1997, before beginning a 14-port tour of the UK. Endeavour is currently bound for Britain, sailing from Australia via South Africa. To mark the opening of Cook and the Endeavour, a statue of Captain Cook by sculptor Anthony Stones will be unveiled by a special guest in the Museum grounds. Opening hours: Daily 10:00-17:00 Sourcea: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/ee/exhib/index.html http://www.nmm.ac.uk/wn/pr/endexhib.html Until May 11, 1997, the Mainfraenkisches Museum at Wuerzburg, Germany, shows the special exhibition "Time and space: Sundials and scientific instruments", which includes also astronomical instruments. Catalogue: DM 25 + DM 7 postage (to be paid by cheque) Address: Mainfraenkisches Museum, Festung Marienberg, D-97082 Wuerzburg, Geermany, Tel. 0931-43016 Opening hours: Tu - So 10 am - 5 pm ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 20, April 23, 1997 ........................................................................... Conferences 1997/98 ------------------- Further conferences in the year 1997 and 1998 have already been described in past issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced up to now, please see the following WWW address: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 21 March 1997, London, UK Symposium on the Foundations of Newtonian Scholarship, including history of astronomy Place: Royal Society Information: Prof. M. Nauenberg, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA, e-mail: michael@mike.ucsc.edu URL: http://physics.ucsc.edu/people/personal/nauenberg.html 4-5 April 1997, Berlin, Germany Interdisciplinary Scientific Meeting on Karl Friedrich Zoellner, the first German astrophysicist Place: Archenhold-Sternwarte Berlin-Treptow Information: Klaus Staubermann, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, Free School Lane, Cambridge CB2 3RH, England, Fax +44-1223-334554, e-mail kbs20@cus.cam.ac.uk 11-12 April 1997, London, UK Conference "The Centenary of the Electron", sponsored by the British Society for the History of Science, the Royal Society and the Science Museum. Information: Wing Commander Geoffrey Bennett, 31 High St, Stanford in the Vale, Faringdon, Oxon SN7 8LH, UK, tel: 01367 710223, fax: 01367 718963, email: G.Bennett@hidex.demon.co.uk 25-27 April 1997, Pulsnitz und Radeberg, Germany Regional Meeting of the Vereinigung der Sternfreunde e.V. (VdS) Prom the programme: J. Hamel "Old cometary prints", K.-G.Steinert "Johannes Classen and the Pulsnitz Observatory"; Opening of the museum of meteorits at Pulsnitz (Collection Classen) Registration: Astroclub Radebeul e.V., Auf den Ebenbergen 10a, D-01445 Radebeul, Germany, Tel./Fax 0351/8381907 28 April - 4 May 1997, Aussois, France New Perspectives On Solar prominences, A Memorial Colloquium to Lucien d'Azambuja Contact address: D.M. Rust, The Johns Hopkins University, Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins Road, Laurel, MD 20723, USA, Phone: 1 301 953 5414, Fax: 1 301 953 6670, E-mail: david.rust@jhuapl.edu 30-31 May 1997, Bremerhaven, Germany Seminar "The development of navigation, coastal und see surveying in the history of technology" Fee: DM 120.00 Informationen: VDV-Bildungswerk, FG Geschichte des Vermessungswesens, Heinz Juergen Lagoda, Westfaelische Str. 30, D-47169 Duisburg, Germany, Tel. 0203/59 82 47 9-12 September, Mykolayiv, Ukraine International Conference "The Role of Ground-Based Astrometry in the Post-HIPPARCOS Period", to be held in honour of the 175th anniversary of the Mykolayiv [Nikolaev] Astronomical Observatory. The history of the observatory is one of the programme topics. Organizing Committee: Ukraine, 327030, Mykolayiv, Observatorna 1, Mykolayiv Astronomical Observatory, fax: (380512) 35 25 56, e-mail: mao175@mao.nikolaev.ua URL: http://aries.usno.navy.mil/ad/iau/nikol.html 26-28 September 1997, Regensburg, Germany 80th Annual Meeting of the German Society for the History of Medicine, Science and Technology (Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Geschichte der Medizin, Naturwissenschaft und Technik) on the theme "Experiment - Instrument" Informationen: Prof. Dr. Christoph Meinel, Lehrstuhl fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Universitaet Regensburg, D-93040 Regensburg, Germany, Tel. +49-941-943-3661/59, Fax +49-941-943-4992, E-mail: Christoph.Meinel@psk.uni-regensburg.de 26-28 September 1997, Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany Conference: "Astronomy, Astrology und History" This interdisciplinary conference will discuss how seriously "astrology" has to be taken today and which importance it has had from the point of view of Philipp Melanchthon. Informationen: Evangelische Akademie Sachsen-Anhalt, Schlossstr. 15, D-06886 Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany 25-27 September 1998, Wolfenbuettel, Germany 80th Annual Meeting of the German Society for the History of Medicine, Science and Technology (Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Geschichte der Medizin, Naturwissenschaft und Technik) on the theme "The reception of antiquity in medicine, science and technology" Informationen: Herzog August Bibliothek, PF 1364, D-38299 Wolfenbuettel, Germany, Tel.: 05331/808-0, Fax: 808-266 ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) A translation of "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick Translated and Co-Edited by: Mr. Donald Bellunduno <76450.1741@compuserve.com> All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. The electronic newsletters are complement the printed "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" (in German) which currently appear semi-annually: Price: DM 1.50 / issue plus postage and packing costs outside Germany: free Subscription: Send in DM 2.50 (one issue) or DM 5.00 (Nos. 10-11) in stamps to the editor Editor: Dr. W. R. Dick, Otterkiez 14, D-14478 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 863199 Please ask for a free trial issue. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (+6592) 2150, Fax: (+6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Institut fuer Angewandte Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 21
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 21, April 28, 1997 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * * * Herausgegeben vom Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte * * in der Astronomischen Gesellschaft * * * * Nr. 21, 25. April 1997 * * * * Redaktion: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Lectures with relation to history of astronomy at Hamburg, Germany 2. Conference Announcement: Natural Catastrophes during Bronze Age Civilisations: Archaeological, Geological, Astronomical and Cultural Perspectives 3. Conference Announcement: The Science and Technology of Rudolfinian Time 4. Conference Announcement: Philosophy and Imagination 5. Conference Announcement: Guiseppe Toaldo and his Time Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 21, April 28, 1997 ........................................................................... Lectures with relation to history of astronomy at Hamburg, Germany ------------------------------------------------------------------ Lectures in the framework of the seminars "Recent research on history of science, mathematics, and techology" of the Institute for History of Science, Mathematics, and Techology (Institut fuer Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Mathematik und Technik) of Hamburg University (Selection) The lectures are held on Mondays at 6 pm in Hoersaal 6 of the Geomatikum (Bundesstrasse 55). 05.05.97 Dipl.-Phys. Juergen Koch (Hamburg): Johann Georg Repsold (1770-1830), a mechanic at Hamburg 12.05.97 Dipl.-Phys. Karsten Baumann (Mainz): The history of the Schott company 02.06.97 Dr. Peter Schiller (Siegen): "History of Sky Lore": A computer program for the calculating historian The responsibility for the programme belongs to Christian Huenemoerder and Jost Weyer. Gerhard Wiesenfeldt Institut fuer Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Mathematik und Technik Bundesstrasse 55, D-20146 Hamburg Tel.: (-49/0)-40-4123-2094/-5263 wiesenfeldt@math.uni-hamburg.de ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 21, April 28, 1997 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: ------------------------ NATURAL CATASTROPHES DURING BRONZE AGE CIVILISATIONS: ARCHAEOLOGICAL, GEOLOGICAL, ASTRONOMICAL AND CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES Fitzwilliam College. Cambridge University. 11th-13th July 1997 The SIS Cambridge conference will bring together historians, archaeologists, climatologists and astronomers in order to discuss whether the 'giant comet' hyopothesis brought forward by neo-catastrophist astronomers such as Victor Clube, Bill Napier, Sir Fred Hoyle, David Asher, Mark Bailey, Duncan Steel et al. can be substantiated by the archaeological, climatological and historical record. Archaeology and Geology Ever since Claude Schaeffer published his book "Stratigraphie Comparee et Chronologie L'Asie Occidentale" in 1948, there has been continuous scientific debate about the nature and extent of the destructions of Bronze Age civilisations. Schaeffer claimed that the repeated collapses of Bronze Age cultures were not caused by the action of man but instead by seismic activity. During the last decade, eminent archaeologists have substantiated his claim and have linked destruction layers in Aegean and Near Eastern sites with natural disasters rather than with military conquests. The interpretation, however, which maintains that destruction layers are caused by seismic catastrophes, has been disputed due to the ambiguity of the stratigraphical record. The need for an accurate methodology of verifying the actual cause, extent and synchronicity of Bronze Age destructions is therefore essential. Astronomy Scholars such as Victor Clube, Bill Napier, Mark Bailey, Sir Fred Hoyle, David Asher and Duncan Steel claim that a more 'active' and threatening sky might have caused major cultural changes of Bronze Age civilisations, belief systems and religious rituals. Can the astronomical evidence brought forward by these astronomers be substantiated by historical, archaeological and climatological evidence? Culture In light of new astronomical and archaeological theories and the emergence of scientific neo-catastrophism, it seems necessary to re-assess the origins and cultural implications of apocalyptic religions and catastrophe traditions in ancient mythologies and rituals. In particular, the significant cultural and religious changes at the beginning of the Bronze Age and those which occurred after its final collapse will be re-evaluated. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Organising Committee * Prof Mark Bailey (Armagh Observatory) * Prof Trevor Palmer (Nottingham Trent University) * Dr Benny J Peiser (Liverpool John Moores University) --------------------------------------------------------------------------- PRESENTATIONS at the Cambridge Conference Prof Mark E Bailey (Armagh Observatory) Sources and Populations of Near-Earth Objects: Recent Findings and Historical Implications Prof Mike Baillie (Queen's University Belfast) Tree-Ring Evidence for Environmental Disasters during the Bronze Age: Causes and Effects Dr Victor Clube (University of Oxford) Predestination and the Problem of Historical Catastrophism Dr Marie-Agnes Courty (Institut National Agronomique Paris-Grignon) Abrupt Climate Change around 2200 BC: Stratigraphical and Geochemical Evidence from the Middle East Dr Euan MacKie (Glasgow Museum) The Destruction of Scottish Vitrified Forts ca. 800/700 BC Dr Karen Polinger Foster (Yale University) Volcanic Observations in the Bronze Age Dr Bas van Geel (University of Amsterdam) and Dr Hans Renssen (University of Utrecht) The Impact of Abrupt Climate Change around 2650 BP in North-West Europe: Evidence for Climatic Teleconnections and a Tentative Explanation Prof Gunnar Heinsohn (University of Bremen) The Catastrophic Emergence of Civilisation: The Coming of the Bronze Age Cultures Dr Bruce Masse (University of Hawaii) Earth, Air, Fire, and Water: The Archaeology of Bronze Age Cosmic Catastrophes Prof William Mullen (Bard College) The Agenda of the Milesian School: The Post-Catastrophic Paradigm Shift in Ancient Greece Dr Bill Napier (Armagh Observatory) Cometary Catastrophes, Cosmic Dust and Ecological Disasters in Historical Times Prof Amos Nur (Stanford University) The Collapse of Ancient Societies by Great Earthquakes Prof David Pankenier (Lehigh University) Heaven-sent: Understsanding Disaster in Chinese Mythology and Tradition Dr Benny J Peiser (Liverpool John Moores University) Comparative Stratigraphy of Bronze Age Destruction Layers around the World: Archaeological Evidence and Methodological Problems Prof Gerrit Verschuur (University of Memphis): Our Place in Space: The Implications of Cosmic Catastrophes on Human Thought and Behaviour Prof Irving Wolfe (University of Montreal) The 'Kultursturz' at the Bronze Age-Iron Age Boundary -------------------------------- For further details, contact Dr Benny J Peiser Liverpool John Moores University School of Human Sciences Byrom Street Liverpool L3 3AF United Kingdom Tel +44 151 231 2490 Fax +44 151 298 1261 Email: B.J.Peiser@livjm.ac.uk -------------------------------------------------------------------------- BOOKING/REGISTRATION FORM can be obtained from: The The SIS Secretary, Innisfree, Highsted Valley, Sittingbourne, Kent ME9 0AD, United Kingdom -------------------------------------------------------------------------- CAMBRIDGE-CONFERENCE -------------------- The CAMBRIDGE-CONFERENCE is an e-mail network put together by B.J.Peiser@livjm.ac.uk in the run-up of the 2nd SIS Cambridge Conference on "Natural Catastrophes during Bronze Age Civilisations: Archaeological, Geological, Astronomical and Cultural Perspectives". Members of this list include astronomers, archaeologists, climatologists, historians, geologists, sociologists and other people from around the world who will participate or have shown interest in the SIS Cambridge Conference. It is the aim of the CAMBRIDGE-CONFERENCE network to disseminate the latest information related to the multidisciplinary research areas of the forthcoming conference and to keep scholars up to date about related findings, new scientific information and further announcements. In addition, news items, reviews of new publications and media programmes, short articles and related announcements are exchanged among the members of this list. Should you wish to subscribe to this list, please contact B.J.Peiser@livjm.ac.uk ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 21, April 28, 1997 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: The Science and Technology of Rudolfinian Time ----------------------------------------------------------------------- INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM The Science and Technology of Rudolfinian Time PRAGUE, AUGUST 24-28, 1997 Announcement - February 1997 The exhibition R u d o l f I I a n d P r a g u e will take place starting at the end of May and continue until the beginning of September 1997. The exhibition is organized to have sites all over the beautiful city of Prague with its main site at the Prague Castle. The Society for the History of Science and Technology in the Czech Republic together with The National Technical Museum in Prague, with support from the International Union of History and Philosophy of Science / Division History of Science and the Czech Committee of ICOM, have organized the International Symposium intended to cover the problems of scientific and technological development in Europe during the late Rennaissance. Special guided excursion will be organized for participants of the symposium. Date and Place: August 24 - 28, 1977 National Technical Museum, Prague (Czech Republic) Kostelni 42, 170 78 Praha 7 Languages: English and German Deadline for Application and Contribution Abstract: A p r i l 20, 1997 All speakers and contributors are asked to submit an abstract (about 100 - 120 words) in either camera ready form or on floppy discs in ASCII or WORD format. A booklet of abstracts will be distributed during the symposium .Organizers would like to publish submited papers up to the end of 1997. Deadline for their contribution (in form similar to abstracts) is August 28. Registration Fee (Deadline May 30) : The registration fee is 2500 CK (includes lunches on August 25th-28th, excursion and symposium parties). Fee for accompanying persons is 1800 CK. For late payment the fee is 3000 CK, and 2200 CK for accompanying persons. The exchange rate of the Czech Krown is stable against the German Mark (approximately 1 DEM to 17 CK) and the USD (approximately 1USD to 28 CK). We apologize in advance for not accepting credit cards. Please send your check or money order in CK to: Ceska sporitelna a.s., Jugoslavska 19, 120 00 Praha 2 c/o Spolecnost pro dejiny ved a techniky account #: 391359-028/0800 (R II) Registration of participants begins on August 24th from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. and on August 25th from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the National Technical Museum in Prague. Location and Accommodation: The symposium will be hosted by the National Technical Museum (NTM) in Prague. The sessions will take place in the Auditorium of the main NTM building at Kostelni 42, Prague 7. The NTM is located in the central part of Prague and can be reached by public transportation at the tram station Letenske namesti. From the Main (Wilson) Railway Station or Masaryk Station you can take the number 26 tram which goes directly to Letenske namesti; or take Metro C to station Vltavska and then numbers 1, 8, 25 trams. From Holesovice-Railway-Station take Metro C to Vltavska as well. From Airportbus-stop Dejvicka with number 26 tram. If you choose to take privat transportation, there are several attended parking lots near the NTM. A list of hotels near the NTM (5-10 min walk) and their prices are listed below. These hotels accept VISA, American Express and other major international credit cards. Please, make your own reservation by letter or fax. Note please, that August is very busy for hotels in Prague, so we advise you to book your reservations early in the Spring ! For participants who wish to be accomodated in well equiped student hostels we shall prepare also some rooms which are relative cheap but are placed about 20-30 min. to NTM with tram. Hotels Phone & Fax Single/Night Double/Night SPLENDID,Ovenecka 33 ++422 373351(ph) 1500 CK 2100 CK 170 00 Praha 7 382312(f) ($ 55) ($ 77) BELVEDERE,M.Horakove 19 ++422 374741(ph) 2350 CK 3150 CK 170 00 Praha 7 370355(f) ($ 86) ($ 115) 379447(f) PARKHOTEL,Veletrzni 20 ++422 24312376(ph) 3061 CK 3760 CK 170 00 Praha 7 20132862(ph) ($ 112) ($ 138) 24316180(f) ALBATROS - botel ++422 24810936(ph) 1500 CK 2200 CK Nabrezi L.Svobody 24811214(f) ($ 55) ($ 88) Praha 2 The second symposium announcement with the preliminary symposium programme will be sent in June The Science and Technology of Rudolfinian Time Application form (Deadline: April 20, 1997) Name:........................................................... Address to which the second announcement should be sent: ................................................................ Phone:..................... Fax: ............................. E - mail: ...................... I will attend the symposium with / without submitting a paper: ................................................................ I will use: slides, overhead projector, video.................... Accompanying persons:............................................ ................................................................ I have included the registration fee.........(for.....persons) through the bank ................................................ with money order / check Nr: .................................... on ..../...../1997 to Ceska Sporitelna. Abstract of my paper: Contact address: Jaroslav Folta, "R-II" fax: ++ (42 2) 379151 National Technical Museum E-mail:iso@ntm.anet.cz Kostelni 42, Cz-170 78 Praha 7 med@ntm.anet.cz Czech Republic ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 21, April 28, 1997 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: Philosophy and Imagination --------------------------------------------------- Call for papers: PHILOSOPHY AND THE IMAGINATION Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York October 24 - 26, 1997 The ALEXANDRIA journal is organizing a panel of papers on "Philosophy and the Imagination" at the sixteenth annual conference on Ancient and Medieval Philosophy and Social Thought, which will be held at the State University of New York, Binghamton, October 24 - 26, 1997. Potential topics for papers include but are not limited to the following: * Allegory, myth, and symbolism in ancient or medieval philosophy * Imagination as a unifying dimension of human experience * Imagination, myth, and epistemology * Iconography, philosophy, and the liberal arts Proposals for the panel should be sent before May 25, 1997 to: David Fideler, ALEXANDRIA, PO Box 6114, Grand Rapids, MI 49516 Email: phanes@cris.com Updates and abstracts will appear on our web page at: http://www.cosmopolis.com/files/imagination.html Please forward this call for papers to any relevant discussion groups or interested parties. ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 21, April 28, 1997 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: Guiseppe Toaldo and his Time ----------------------------------------------------- First announcement February 1997 GIUSEPPE TOALDO AND HIS TIME (1719-1797) In the death bicentenary November 10-14, 1997 Padova, Italy SCIENCE AND ENLIGHTNMENT BETWEEN VENETO AND EUROPE PROMOTERS: Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova Dipartimento di Astronomia dell'Universita' di Padova Centro per la Storia dell'UniversitA' di Padova Accademia Patavina di scienze, lettere ed arti C.N.R., I.C.T.M.A. Settore climatologia e microclimatologia (PD) Seminario Vescovile di Padova SCIENTIFIC-ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: ENRICO BELLONE, Universita' di Padova DARIO CAMUFFO, C.N.R., I.C.T.M.A. Settore climatologia e microclimatologia (PD) PAOLO CASINI, Universita' "La Sapienza" di Roma TREVOR DAVIES, University of East Anglia, Norwich PIERO DEL NEGRO, Universita' di Padova GASTON DEMAREE, Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium, Brussels DIETRICH von ENGELHARDT, Universita' di Lubecca ANTONIO LEPSCHY, Universita' di Padova GIUSEPPE ONGARO, Accademia Patavina di scienze, lettere ed arti LUISA PIGATTO, Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova MARIA LAURA SOPPELSA, Centro per la Storia dell'Universita' di Padova GIUSEPPE ZANON, Seminario Vescovile di Padova *************************************************************************** PURPOSE OF THE CONFERENCE The objective of the Conference is to celebrate the Bicentenary of the death of Giuseppe Toaldo. Toaldo was born at Pianezze, near Marostica(Vicenza), in 1719, and completed his education in the famous episcopal Seminary of Padua. At the age of 25 he was responsible for printing the works of Galileo in the "Tipografia del Seminario", adding many notes in the Dialogo from Galileo's original handwritten copy in the Seminary Library. He was appointed Rural dean of Montegalda near Vicenza from 1752 until 1764, when he was made Professor of Astronomy, Geography and Meteorology at the University of Padua. He was charged by the Senate of the Republic of Venice with the task of designing and overseeing the building of the astronomical Specola of the University. The works started in 1767, and finished ten years later. Toaldo became the first director of the Astronomical Observatory where, besides starting astronomical observations, he continued the daily meteorological observations he had begun in 1766, extending those initiated by Giovanni Poleni in 1725. These observations continued as an official activity of the Observatory until the 1940s. Toaldo was one of the few Italian scientists known throughout Europe. His "Saggio Meteorologico" of 1770 - in which he evaluated meteorology as a science - and his essay "La meteorologia applicata all'agricoltura" in 1774 (which won the Prize of the Royal Society of Montpellier) brought him much approbation. Enthused by the discoveries of Franklin, in 1773 Toaldo installed a lightning-conductor on the Observatory Tower, the first such installation on a public building in the Venetian Republic. In 1776, he installed another on the bell-tower of "San Marco" in Venice, followed by another on the old University Tower in 1777, until in 1778, the Venetian Senate decreed similar installations on all Warehouses in the Republic Domain. Amongst Toaldo's scientific legacies is the "Astro-meteorological Journal", which he started in 1773, and which was continued to 1848 by his successors as Director of the Astronomical Observatory, Chiminello and Santini. SCIENTIFIC ORGANISATION The subject of "Toaldo and His Time" embraces the history of the eighteenth-century cultural institutions of which he was a member, or with which he came into contact in Italy and Europe; and those branches of science to which he contributed or in which he corresponded, in the Age of Enlightenment. The Man and the Scientist will be appreciated by considering his relationships with friends, teachers, correspondents and pupils. Toaldo was in contact with some of the most influential figures in the Republic of Venice, evidenced by him completing and equipping the Astronomical Observatory. Consequently, the timing of the Conference - coinciding with the Veneto-wide celebrations of the Bicentenary of the Fall of the Republic of Venice, just months before the death of Toaldo - is most apposite. The Conference will be arranged into sessions, with oral contributions lasting for 15-20 minutes. The Conference languages will be Italian and English. *************************************************************************** REGISTRATION Please compile the Registration form herewith included with the title for your oral contribution. Send please your form via fax or by E-mail within May 31, 1997 to the Conference Office. The Registration will be closed July 31, 1997. Please include a short abstract of your contribution. PROCEEDINGS You will be able to book the Proceedings during the Conference by payment of a fair account to be arranged. Only the contributions presented during the Conference in a 3.5 inch floppy (Word 6.0 version or compatible) will be published. ACCOMODATION Information will be sent later. CONFERENCE OFFICE Luisa Pigatto - CONVEGNO TOALDO - c/o Osservatorio Astronomico Vicolo dell'Osservatorio, 5 - 35122 PADOVA - ITALY Tel. / Phone (49) 8293469//Fax (49) 8759840 // E-Mail Toaldo@astrpd.pd.astro.it THE INFORMATION OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE WWW URL: http://www.pd.astro.it/toaldo *************************************************************************** Official languages: English and Italian with simultaneous translation in English PRELIMINARY PROGRAMME (i.e. before the appearance of the first announcement; this is the first call for contributions) Introductory Session Giuseppe Toaldo: a biographic profil(LEONIDA ROSINO) Toaldo e le scienze venete (Toaldo and venetian Sciences) (M. LAURA SOPPELSA) Giuseppe Toaldo tra Galileo e l'eta' newtoniana (Giuseppe Toaldo between Galileo and the newtonian age) (PAOLO CASINI) La politica scientifico-culturale della Repubblica di Venezia nella 2a meta del Settecento (Scientific-cultural politic of the Republic of Venice in the 2nd half of 18th century) (PIERO DEL NEGRO) Session 1 TEACHERS, FRIENDS, CORRESPONDENTS AND PUPILS OF TOALDO La formazione scientifica del giovane Toaldo: i maestri (The scientific formation of young Toaldo: the teachers) (UGO BALDINI) Il carteggio di Giuseppe Toaldo alla Biblioteca comunale di Siena (Correspondence of Giuseppe Toaldo at the Municipal Library of Siena) (MARIO DI GREGORIO) Vincenzo Chiminello allievo dello zio Toaldo (Vincenzo Chiminello pupil of the uncle Toaldo) (MICHELA ZAUPA) Antonio Vallisneri jr. e Giuseppe Toaldo (SANDRA CASELLATO) Session 2 CULTURAL INSTITUTION IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY La struttura e l'organizzazione dell'Universita di Padova nella 2a meta del Settecento (Structure and organization of the Padua University in the 2nd half of 18th century) (M. CECILIA GHETTI) L'Accademia patavina di scienze, lettere ed arti ai tempi del Toaldo (The Padua Academy of Sciences, Letters and Arts at the Toaldo's time) (PAOLO PRETO) Il Seminario vescovile di Padova nel Settecento (The Episcopal Seminary of Padua in the 18th century) (FILIBERTO AGOSTINI) Toaldo e la stampa padovana nel Settecento (Toaldo and the Press in Padua in the 18th century) (MARCO CALLEGARI) Session 3 ASTRONOMY AND ITS INSTRUMENTS, CORRELATE SCIENCES (GEODESIE, GEOGRAPHIE ETC.) AND PUBLIC OBSERVATORIES IN THE 18TH CENTURY L'evoluzione degli strumenti di osservazione astronomica nel Settecento (Evolution of intruments for the astronomical observations in the 18th century)(FABRIZIO BONOLI) L'insegnamento dell'astronomia all'Università di Padova nel Settecento (Teaching of astronomy at the Padua University in the 18th century) (LUISA PIGATTO) Toaldo, Cerato e la fabbrica della Specola astronomica di Padova: un sodalizio esemplare tra astronomo e architetto (Toaldo, Cerato and the Padua Astronomical Observatory building: an exemplary association between astronomer and architect) (ALESSANDRA FERRIGHI) I contributi degli astronomi di Brera alla meccanica celeste nella seconda meta del Settecento (Contributions to the celestial mechanics by Brera's astronomers in the in the 2nd half of 18th century) (PASQUALE TUCCI) L'astronomia nel Regno delle due Sicilie alla fine del XVIII secolo (Astronomy in the Reign of the two Sicilies at the end of 18th century) (GIORGIA FODERA' SERIO) L'insegnamento dell'astronomia nei Collegi dei Gesuiti nel Settecento (Teaching of astronomy in the Jesuit' Colleges in the 18th century) (JUAN CASANOVAS) Le dotazioni scientifiche fiorentine nel tardo Settecento (The scientific endowments of Florence in late 18th century) (MARA MINIATI) The Longitude: a long sought Conquest of the 18th century (MARCELLO PAGLIARI) Session 4 PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY IN 18TH CENTURY Il Settecento e le radici della seconda rivoluzione scientifica (The 18th century and the roots of the 2nd scientific Revolution) (ENRICO BELLONE) Giuseppe Toaldo e il conduttore elettrico (Giuseppe Toaldo and the electric conductor) (ANTONIO LEPSCHY) Francesco Algarotti: il newtonianesimo per le dame (Francesco Algarotti: the newtonianism for ladies) (GIANFRANCO FRIGO) Carlo Alfonso Guadagni, i suoi strumenti e i suoi manuali di fisica (Carlo Alfonso Guadagni and his physics intruments and handbooks) (ROBERTO VERGARA CAFFARELLI) Il mecenatismo del patriziato veneziano: Alvise Zenobio e gli strumenti inglesi (Patronage of the venetian aristocracy: Alvise Zenobio and the English instruments) (VIRGILIO GIORMANI) Lo sviluppo della chimica come scienza nel Settecento (The development of the chemistry as a science in the 18th century) (DIETRICH VON ENGELHARDT) La chimica a Padova nel tardo Settecento (The chemistry in Padua in the late 18th century) (FERDINANDO ABBRI) Session 5 MATHEMATICS AND PRACTICAL SCIENCES IN 18TH CENTURY La diffusione del calcolo leibniziano nella prima meta' del Settecento (The diffusion of the leibnitian calculus in the first half of the 18th century) (SILVIA ROERO) Il Settecento e la matematizzazione delle tecniche (The 18th century and the application of the mathematics to the thecniques) (EDOARDO BENVENUTO) Lo sperimentalismo come unificazione di "ars" e "ratio" nel Settecento in Veneto (The experimentalism as unification of "ars" and "ratio" in the 18th century in Veneto) (PASQUALE VENTRICE) La meccanica e le sue applicazioni nei seguaci di Newton nel Settecento (The mechanics and its application among the Newton follwers in the 18th century) (VITTORIO MARCHIS) From intellectualism to Empirism - the Swedish case (NILS-AXEL MORNER) Session 6 METEOROLOGY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP WITH SCIENCES OF NATURE (AGRICULTURE, BOTANY, MEDICINE, PHENOMENA OF NATURE) Contributions of Giuseppe Toaldo to the 18th century Meteorology (GASTON DEMAREE) Aspetti medico-biologici nell'opera di Toaldo (Medical-biological aspects in the Toaldo's work) (GIUSEPPE ONGARO) Il sistema meteorologico di Toaldo (The meteorological system of Toaldo) (STEFANO CASATI) Giuseppe Toaldo and his repercussion in the Czech Lands (JAN MUNZAR) Session 7 METEOROLOGICAL INSTRUMENTS AND INSTRUMENTAL SERIES IN 18TH CENTURY Gli strumenti meteorologici a Padova nel Settecento (Meteorological instruments in Padua in the 18th century) (GIAN ANTONIO SALANDIN) Toaldo e le origini della serie meteorologica di Padova (Toaldo and the origin of the meteorological series of Padua)(DARIO CAMUFFO) Le serie meteorologiche dell'Osservatorio astronomico di Brera dalla sua fondazione ad oggi (Meteorological series of the Brera's astronomical Observatory from its foundation to the present) (LETIZIA BUFFONI) La serie meteorologica dell'Osservatorio astronomico di Palermo dalla sua fondazione ad oggi (The meteorological series of the Palermo astronomical Observatory from its foundation to the present) (LOREDANA GRANATA) Data Homogeneity in time series: an application to the Tiber Data Set (TDS) (BERSANI P., PILOZZI L., PALMIERI S., SIANI A.M., VACCARO L.) Early meteorological measurements in the Czech Lands (JAN MUNZAR) Session 8 CLIMATOLOGY AND METEOROLOGICAL NETWORKS IN THE 18TH CENTURY Eighteenth century Meteorological Networks; Introducing the Space-Scale (TREVOR DAVIES) Toaldo and the "Meteorologica Societas Palatina" (MICHELE COLACINO) History of Meteorology in Florence from the beginnings to the present (GIAMPIERO MARACCHI) Climate of the 18th century in the Czech Lands: comparison of instrumental and historical weather records (RUDOLF BRADZIL) *************************************************************************** SCHEDA DI ISCRIZIONE / REGISTRATION FORM "Toaldo e il suo tempo / Toaldo and his time" 10-14 novembre 1997 / November 10-14, 1997 PADOVA -ITALY NOME/NAME............................................................... COGNOME/FIRST NAME...................................................... ISTITUTO/INSTITUTION.................................................... INDIRIZZO/ADDRESS....................................................... CODICE POSTALE/ZIP CODE................................................. NAZIONE/COUNTRY......................................................... TEL./PHONE.............................................................. FAX..................................................................... E-MAIL.................................................................. TITOLO DEL CONTRIBUTO ORALE/ TITLE OF ORAL CONTRIBUTION nella lingua prescelta/in the select language ........................................................................ INVIARE A/SEND TO: Luisa Pigatto - CONVEGNO TOALDO c/o OSSERVATORIO ASTRONOMICO Vicolo dell'Osservatorio, 5 - 35122 PADOVA-ITALY Tel./phone (49) 8293469//Fax (49) 8759840 E-mail Toaldo@astrpd.pd.astro.it ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) A translation of "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick Translated and Co-Edited by: Mr. Donald Bellunduno <76450.1741@compuserve.com> All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. The electronic newsletters are complement the printed "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" (in German) which currently appear semi-annually: Price: DM 1.50 / issue plus postage and packing costs outside Germany: free Subscription: Send in DM 2.50 (one issue) or DM 5.00 (Nos. 10-11) in stamps to the editor Editor: Dr. W. R. Dick, Otterkiez 14, D-14478 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 863199 Please ask for a free trial issue. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (+6592) 2150, Fax: (+6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Institut fuer Angewandte Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 22
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 22, May 30, 1997 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * Nr. 22, 29. Mai 1997 * * * * Redaktion: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Douglas Hoyt: Historical Sunspot Observations by Fink and Soemmering/Carrington 2. Peter van der Krogt: Identification of Persons on the Title-pages of Atlases 3. Chris Sterken: Zoellner photometers and spectrophotometers 4. Leos Ondra: Facsimile edition of Tychonis Brahe Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica 5. International Conference "Paleoastronomy: Sky and Mankind" 6. Conferences 1997 7. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... Historical Sunspot Observations by Fink and Soemmering/Carrington ----------------------------------------------------------------- By Douglas Hoyt, Greenbelt, MD, USA A paper by Ernst Zinner (Aeltere Beobachtungen von Sonnenflecken, Naturforschende Gesellschaft Bamberg, 33, pp. 36-37, 1952) lists "1788-1816 J. G. Fink, Lauenburg Gymnasialbibl. 104". I am interested in locating these sunspot observations because I am doing a new reconstruction of solar activity, observations are scarce in the late 1700's, and Wolf did not use these observations in his reconstruction. (See D. V. Hoyt et al., Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 21, pp. 2067-2070.) I have looked in the high school in Lauenburg Germany and Leborck Poland (formerly Lauenburg Prussia) with no luck. Also the Zinner collection in California has no information. Beyond this brief mention, I have found no record of J. G. Fink (or Finck). Any further information would be welcome. In a related matter, there is an article by Carrington on Dr. Soemmering's sunspot observations in Mon. Notices of the RAS, vol. 20, pp. 71 to 77. Apparently Carrington copied his solar disk drawings. Are these copies available anywhere? I think the originals are in some private collection somewhere. They were in the possession of Dr. Soemmering's son in Frankfurt in 1860. Do the original drawings still exist somewhere? ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... Identification of Persons on the Title-pages of Atlases ------------------------------------------------------- By Peter van der Krogt, Utrecht, The Netherlands The first volume of the new Koeman's Atlantes Neerlandici, the bibliography of atlases published in the Netherlands, will be published this summer. This first volume will include all folio atlases published by Gerard Mercator and his successors the Hondius family, Johannes Janssonius and their heirs. The engraved title-pages of these atlases will be illustrated and short described. For this I needed information about the depicted persons on the title-page of two atlases. With help of William B. Ashworth, Jr., of the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and Margriet Hoogvliet of Groningen University, I have made some progress in the identification. 1. The astronomers on the title page, engraved by F.H. van Hoven, of the Harmonia Macrocosmica by Andreas Cellarius, published by Johannes Janssonius, Amsterdam, 1660 and 1661; reprinted by Petrus Schenk and Gerard Valk in 1708. Illustration (42 Kb): http://kartoserver.frw.ruu.nl/HTML/STAFF/krogt/ill/MAPHIST/harmmacr.htm In the center Urania, personification of Astronony. The most left sitting person is Tycho Brahe, the sitting person on the right is Copernicus. The four standing figures are from left to right: Ptolemy, unidentified Arab astronomer (probably al-Battani), King Alphonsus (most likely, but not certain) and Philip Lansbergen, who is pointing with a wand to the emblem of the heliocentric theory (zodiac with in the center the sun, the earth circles around the sun). The same six figures and the emblem are depicted on Lansbergen's book "Tabulae Motuum Coelestium Perpetuae" (Middelburg: Zacharias Roman, 1632). Ref.: William B. Ashworth, Jr. "Allegorical Astronomy: Baroque Scientists Encoded Their Most Dangerous Opinions in Art". The Sciences 25, no. 5 (September/October 1985): 34-37. 2. Allegorical figures on title-page of the 1695 Ptolemy edition by Halma. Illustration (41 Kb): http://kartoserver.frw.ruu.nl/HTML/STAFF/krogt/ill/MAPHIST/vianen.htm (including links to two details) Fame in the clouds The four female figures around the globe are: 1. kneeling, winged, with a book: Geographia 2. to the right, standing: Geometria 3. standing with painter's palet: Pictura 4. to the left, standing, with lyra and trumpet and with a cloak with stars: Poesis Although the book is now in print, any further information is welcome. For more information about Koeman's Atlantes Neerlandici, see: http://kartoserver.frw.ruu.nl/HTML/STAFF/krogt/atlantes.htm Author's address: Dr Peter van der Krogt Map Historian, Explokart Research Program Faculty of Geographical Sciences, University of Utrecht P.O. Box 80.115 3508 TC UTRECHT, The Netherlands http://kartoserver.frw.ruu.nl/HTML/STAFF/krogt/krogt.htm e-mail: p.vanderkrogt@frw.ruu.nl ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... Zoellner photometers and spectrophotometers ------------------------------------------- By Chris Sterken, Brussels, Belgium We are compiling a list of "Zoellner" photometers and spectrophotometers. A preliminary list of such instruments will be published in the Proceedings of a Workshop on Zoellner and his photometry that has recently been held at Archenhold Observatory in Berlin. Updated versions of this list will be published in the Journal of Astronomical Data. We welcome any information related to whereabouts of these instruments. Please send replies to Chris Sterken (csterken@vub.ac.be) or Klaus Staubermann (kbs20@cus.cam.ac.uk). Author's address: Dr Chris Sterken University of Brussels, Pleinlaan 2, 1050 Brussels, Belgium Phone 00 32 26293469, Fax 00 32 93623976 The Journal of Astronomical Data: http://www.vub.ac.be/STER/JAD/JAD.html ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... Facsimile edition of Tychonis Brahe Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica --------------------------------------------------------------------- By Leos Ondra, Brno, Czech Republic At the occasion of the four hundred fifty years' anniversary of the birth of Tycho Brahe the publishing house KLP - Koniasch Latin Press, Prague, prepared a facsimile of coloured old print Tychonis Brahe ASTRONOMIAE INSTAURATAE MECHANICA, Wandesburgi in arce Ranzoviana prope Hamburgum, propria authoris typographia 1598. The facsimile is supplemented by a complete Czech translation and by an enlarged and revised English translation with numerous explanatory remarks. From Latin translated by Alena Hadravova (Institute for Classical Studies, Prague) with the assistance of Petr Hadrava (Astronomical Institute, Ondrejov) and Jole R. Shackelford (University of Minnesota). Further info: KLP - Koniasch Latin Press Na Hubalce 7 169 00 Praha 6 - Stresovice Czech Republic phone: +420 2 2051 1681 fax: +420 2 254 094 Author's address: Leos Ondra, Skretova 6, 621 00 Brno, Czech Republic E-mail: ondra@physics.muni.cz http://www.sci.muni.cz/~ondra ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... International Conference "Paleoastronomy: Sky and Mankind" ---------------------------------------------------------- First Announcement Dear Colleagues, We invite you to attend the conference "Paleoastronomy: Sky and Mankind" to be held in Moscow in the premises of the Moscow University and Sternberg Astronomical Institute. The conference will be held under the auspices of the Euro-Asian Astronomical Society (EAAS) as a part of the science program of the 4th regular EAAS Meeting (between 22nd of October and the 1st of November). The topics of the conference are: - Ancient Civilizations and SETI Problems - Archaeoastronomy - Ethnoastronomy - The Ancient Sun and the Mankind - The History of Astronomy in the History of Culture The working languages of the conference will be Russian and English. The Proceedings of the conference will be published in English in the international journal "Astronomical & Astrophysical Transactions". If you would like to participate in the conference, please, inform us at your earliest convenience. Please, mail the title of your contribution before May 31, 1997 and the full text of the abstract, before June 30, 1997. Organizer of the EAAS meeting Co-Chairperson, EAAS N.G.Bochkarev Mail address: Euro-Asian Astronomical Society Sternberg Astronomical Institute 13, Universitetskij prosp., Moscow 119899, Russia Phone/Fax: (7-095) 9328844 Fax (7-095) 9390126 E-mail: boch@astronomy.msk.su On behalf of EAAS I.Pustylnik Research Associate Tartu observatory Mail address: Tartu observatory, To~ravere, EE2444 Estonia Phone: (372)7- 410265 Fax : (372)7- 410205 E-mail: izold@aai.ee ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... Conferences 1997 ---------------- Further conferences in the year 1997 and 1998 have already been described in past issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced up to now, please see the following WWW address: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 14-15 May 1997, Rome, Italy International conference "Archaeoastronomy and beliefs in the ancient world" Place: Accademia dei Lincei, Via della Lungara, 10 Further information: Secretariat of the Accademia dei Lincei, Via della Lungara 10, Roma, Italy, e-mail: lincei@axcasp.caspur.it; or G. Romano, e-mail: romano@tv.shineline.it 22 May 1997, Oxford, Great Britain Annual Thomas Harriot Lecture, given by Professor John North of the University of Groningen, on "Stars and Atoms" Place: Oriel College 24 May 1997, Manchester, Great Britain Anglo-Saxon Astronomy: Aelfric's De Temporibus Anni and its Setting An interdisicplinary day-school on the theory and practice of astronomy in Anglo-Saxon England, focusing on the first work of astronomy in the English language. Further information: Dr David Hill, Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies, Department of English, The University, Manchester, M13 9PL, Great Britain, fax: 0161 275 3256 6 June 1997, Cambridge, Great Britain Afternoon conference of the Whipple Museum of the History of Science Among the talks: Adam Mosley on an early armillary sphere and Kemal de Soysa on a sixteenth century celestial planisphere. Time: 2.00 to 5.00 pm Further information: Curator Dr Liba Taub, Whipple Museum of the History of Science, Free School Lane, Cambridge CB2 3RH, Great Britain; Tel: 01223 334545 or 01223 330906, Fax: 01223 334554, E-mail: lct1001@cam.ac.uk 14 June 1997, Chicoutimi, Canada 4th annual meeting of the Quebec Sundial Society (La Commission des Cadrans solaires du Quebec) Contacts: Dr. Andre E. Bouchard, secretaire general, E-mail: 600009@ican.net, URL: http://cadrans_solaires.scg.ulaval.ca 1-6 July 1997, Copper Mountain, Colorado, USA The 50th Anniversary Convention of The Astronomical League Among the topics: Slide/paper presentations on League history For more information contact: ALCON '97, c/o Chamberlin Observatory, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208-0202, USA URL: http://www.du.edu/~pryan/alcon97.html ........................................................................... Item 7 ENHA No. 22, May 30, 1997 ........................................................................... New Books --------- Blunck, Juergen: Wilhelm Beer. Genius der Astronomie und Oekonomie, 1797-1850. Ausstellung und Katalog: Dr. Juergen Blunck. [Wilhelm Beer. Genius of astronomy and Economy, 1797-1850. Exhibition and catalogue: Dr. Juergen Blunck. - In German] Berlin: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preussischer Kulturbesitz, 1997. 156 pp., numerous illus., partly in colour, ISBN 3-88226-928-6, paperback. (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - PK, Ausstellungskataloge, N.F., 20) [DM 19.00 during the exhibition; Distribution: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin, Potsdamer Str. 33, D-10785 Berlin, Tel. 030/266-1. Afterwards DM 42.00 in bookshops; Distribution for bookshops: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, Wiesbaden.] Brush, Stephen G.: A history of modern planetary physics. Vol. 1: Nebulous Earth. From Laplace to Jeffreys. Vol. 2: Transmuted Past. From Lyell to Patterson. Vol. 3: Fruitful encounters. From Chamberlin to Apollo. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. 324 + 144 + 366, ISBN 0-521-55215-X, GBP 100 Czeike, Felix: Historisches Lexikon Wien, Band 2 (De-Gy). [Historical encyclopedia of Vienna. Vol. 2 (De-Gy). - In German] Wien: Verlag Kremayr & Scheriau, 1993. 652 pp. Review: V.Klimpel: Internationale Zeitschrift fuer Geschichte und Ethik der Naturwissenschaften, Technik und Medizin (NTM N.S.) 4 (1996) 1, 57 [Including entries on Doppler, Christian (1803-1853), and Fraunhofer, Joseph von (1787-1826).] De Gandt, Francois; Vilain, C. (Eds.): Histoire et Actualite de la Cosmologie. Vol. I : De Ptolemee a Hubble. Vol. II : De la relativite generale a la cosmologie contemporaine. Proceedings of the Conference held at Paris Observatory, 12-16 September 1994. Paris: Observatoire de Paris, 1996. [Most articles in French, some in English.] Dick, Steven J.: The biological universe. The twentieth-century extraterrestrial life debate and the limits of science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. 578, 24 x 16 cm, ISBN 0-521-34326-7, GBP 40, $ 54.95 (hb) Review: D.W.Hughes: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 102-103 Review: R.Jastrow: Sky & Telescope 93 (1997) 6, 62-63 Fauvel, John; Flood, Raymond; Shortland, M.; Wilson, Robin (Hrsg.): Newtons Werk. Die Begruendung der modernen Naturwissenschaft. Aus dem Englischen von P. Hiltner. Basel: Birkhaeuser Verlag, 1993. 322 pp., ISBN 3-7643-2890-8, DM 68.00 [German translation of: Let Newton Be. Oxford University Press, 1989] Review: G.Thimm: Sterne u. Weltraum 35 (1996) 4, 325 Gribbin, John: Companion to the Cosmos. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1996. Pp. 504, 25.5 x 18 cm, ISBN 0-297-81725-6, GBP 20 (hb) [Something like an introduction to cosmology and modern astronomy, in the form of an introduction, an A-Z of astronomical terms including biographies, and parallel timelines of biographies, science and history.] Review: F.Vincent: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1136, 65 Hamel, Juergen: Die Vorstellung von der Kugelgestalt der Erde im europaeischen Mittelalter bis zur Mitte des 13. Jahrhunderts - dargestellt nach den Quellen. [Ideas on the spherical shape of the Earth in the European Middle Ages up to the 13th century - described on the basis of the original sources. - In German] Muenster: Lit, 1996. 112 pp., ISBN 3-8258-2751-8, DM 29.80 (Abhandlungen zur Geschichte der Geowissenschaften und Religion/Umweltforschung, N.F., Bd. 3) [Collection of sources from the 6th to the 13th centuries, with commentaries; ca. 60 authors plus anonymous treatises.] Haramundanis, Katherine: Celilia Payne-Gaposchkin: an autobiography and other recollections. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xxii, 277, ISBN 0-521-48251-8, GBP 35.00 (hb), GBP 12.95 (pb) Review: J.Bell Burnell: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 106 (1996) 6, 346 Hearnshaw, John B.: The measurement of starlight: Two centuries of astronomical photometry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. xiv, 511, 23.5 x 16 cm, ISBN 0-521-40393-6, GBP 65.00, $ 89.95 (hb) Review: F.G.Watson: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 106 (1996) 6, 345 Review: D.Jones: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 108-109 Review: S.Kenyon: Sky & Telescope 93 (1997) 6, 64/66 Heilbron, John L.: Weighing imponderables and other quantitative science around 1800. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993. Pp. 337, ISBN 0-918102-17-0, $ 20 (Berkely Papers in History of Science, Vol. 13) [Also on Ramsden's und Borda's angle measuring devices.] Review: K.Hentschel: NTM N.S. 4 (1996) 1, 60 Herrmann, D.B.: 100 Jahre Archenhold-Sternwarte. Die Geschichte der Archenhold-Sternwarte. [100 years Archenhold Observatory. The history of the Archenhold-Sternwarte. - In German.] 2nd, enlarged ed. Berlin: Paetec Gesellschaft fuer Bildung und Technik, 1996. 91 pp., ISBN 3-89517-314-2, DM 19.80 (hb) [1st edition (1994) was entitled: Blick in das Weltall] Hoyt, W.G.: Lowell and Mars. Second printing. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1996. Pp. 376, 23 x 15 cm, ISBN 0-816-50514-4, $ 24.95 (pb) Review: D.W.Hughes: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 100 Kitchin, C.R.: Optical astronomical spectroscopy. Bristol (England): Institute of Physics Publishing, 1995. Pp. 272, ISBN 0-7503-0345-X, GBP 65.00 (hb); ISBN 0-7503-0346-X, GBP 20.00 (pb) [The first part gives a brief historical introduction beginning with Newton's experiments in 1666 trough the end of the 19th century.] Review: M.Gavin: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 106 (1996) 6, 345 Lang, Kenneth R.; Whitney, Charles A.: Planeten. Wanderer im All. Aus dem Englischen von Thomas Buehrke. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York etc.: Springer-Verlag, 1993. XVI, 393 pp. [German translation of: Wanderers in space: exploration and discovery in the solar system. Cambridge Unievrsity Press, 1991; contains numerous historical remarks.] Review: W.Martin: Sterne u. Weltraum 35 (1996) 10, 796 Lindberg, David C.: Von Babylon bis Bestiarum. Die Anfaenge abendlaendischen Wissens. Stuttgart, Weimar: Verlag J.B. Metzler, 1994. XXIII, 482 pp., 50 illus., ISBN 3-476-00958-0, DM 78.00 (hb) [German translation of: The beginnings of Western science: The European scientific tradition in philosophical, religious, and institutional context, 600 B.C. to A.D. 1450. University of Chicago Press, 1992.] Longair, Malcolm S.: Our evolving Universe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. Pp. 185, 28 x 25 cm, ISBN 0-521-55091-2, GBP 24.95, $ 34.95 (hb) [Introduction to astrophysics, including some historical facts and character-sketches of astronomers.] Review: H.Couper: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 103 Luminet, Jean-Pierre: Les poetes et l'univers. Paris: Le Cherche-Midi Editeur, 1996. Pp. 428, ISBN 2-86274-473-5, FF 148 [A history of astronomy and cosmology through poetry and literature; an essay and a collection of astronomical poems, from Hesiode to Rene Char. In French. More information and abstracts on-line at http://darc.obspm.fr/~luminet/Books/Antho.html] Messpunkt Leipzig. Herausgegeben von der Kulturstiftung Leipzig und der Stadt Leipzig, Staedtisches Vermessungsamt. [Measuring point Leipzig. Edited by the Cultur Fund of Leipzig and the Surveying Office of the City of Leipzig. - In German] Leipzig: Leipziger Blaetter, 1996. 112 pp., numerous illus., partly in colour, DM 20.00 + shipping (Leipziger Blaetter, Sonderheft) [History of geodesy, cartography, meteorology and other geosciences in Leipzig; contains also "The geodetic activities of the astronomers of the Leipzig University Observatory" by G.Muenzel and H.-J.Ilgauds] Petersen, Carolyn Collins; Brandt, John C.: Hubble vision: Astronomy with the Hubble Space Telescope. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Pp. xx, 252, 24.5 x 28 cm, US$ 39.95 (hb) [Begins with a history of the HST, extended back to Lyman Spitzer's 1946 proposal for a space telescope (Chapter 1).] Review: D.P.Hube: J. Roy. Astron. Soc. Can. 90 (1996) 5/6, 362-363 Rauschenbach, Boris: Ueber die Erde hinaus. Hermann Oberth, 1894-1989. Eine Biographie. [Beyond the Earth. Hermann Oberth, 1894-1989. A biography. - In German] Wiesbaden: Dr. Boettiger Verlag, 1996. 286 pp., ISBN 3-925725-23-7, DM 28.80 (pb) Review: T.Mueller: Sterne u. Weltraum 35 (1996) 5, 408 Rettig, Terrence W.; Hahn, Joseph M. (Eds.): Completing the inventory of the solar system. A symposium held in conjunction with the 106th Annual Meeting of the ASP held Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, Arizona, 25-30 June 1994. San Francisco, Ca.: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1996. Pp. xxiii, 395 [Contains also: C.W.Tombaugh: Struggles to find the ninth planet; S.A.Stern: The historical development and status of Kuiper Disk studies] Richter, Peter H. (Ed.): Sterne, Mond, Kometen: Bremen und die Astronomie. [Stars, moon, comets: Bremen and astronomy. - In German] Bremen: Verlag H. M. Hauschild, 1995. 327 pp., 150 illus., ISBN 3-929902-84-2, DM 64.00 (hb) Review: W.Martin: Sterne u. Weltraum 35 (1996) 10, 793 Schaaf, Fred: Comet of the century: From Halley to Hale-Bopp. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1996. Pp. 384, $ 29 [Recounts also the history of cometary research.] Review: A.Fitzsimmons: Nature 386 (1997) 13 March, 140-141 Sheehan, William: The planet Mars. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1996. Pp. 270, ISBN 0-8165-1640-5, $ 45.00 (hb), ISBN 0-8165-1641-3, $ 19.95 (pb) Review: L.J.Martin: Sky & Telescope 93 (1997) 3, 65-66 Sis, Peter: Starry Messenger: A book depicting the life of a famous scientist, mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, physicist Galileo Galilei. Frances Foster Book (Farrar, Straus and Giroux), 1996. $ 16.00 [Juvenile book, one of the winners of the Scientific American Young Readers Book Award] Review: P.Morrison: Sci. Amer. 275 (1996) 6, 92-93 Wallenwein, Eckhard H.: Das altaegyptische Universum. Fruehgeschichte der Astronomie und Kosmologie, Urspruenge des modernen Bildes von Raum und Zeit. [The ancient Egypt Universe. The early history of astronomy and cosmology, origins of the modern picture of space an time. - In German] Heidelberg: Julius Groos Verlag, 1995. 198 pp., 18 tabs., 18 illus., partly in colour, ISBN 3-87276-743-7, DM 40.00 Review: R.Fockenbrock: Sterne u. Weltraum 35 (1996) 5, 408-409 Warner, Deborah Jean; Ariail, Robert B.: Alvan Clark & Sons - artists in optics. Richmond, VA: Willmann-Bell, 1996. Pp. 298, 23.5 x 16 cm, ISBN 0-943-39646-8, $ 24.95 Review: R.V.Willstrop: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 110-111 Wetterer, Margaret K.: Clyde Tombaugh and the search for planet X. Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books, 1996. Pp. 48, ISBN 0-87614-893-3, $ 13.13 (hb), ISBN 0-87614-969-7, $ 5.95 (pb) [This biography of Tombaugh is for children ages 5 to 8. For more information, see Sky & Telescope, April 1997, p. 65.] Williams, Sheridan: UK solar eclipses from the year 1. Leighton Buzzard: Clock Tower Press, 1996. Pp. 109, 23 x 19 cm, ISBN 1-851-42093-2, GBP 11.95 (pb) [solar eclipses of the year 4 to 2974 for the British Isles and Ireland] Review: G.A.Wilkins: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1136, 63 Zimmer, Harro: Der Rote Orbit - Glanz und Elend der russischen Raumfahrt. [The red orbit - glory and misery of the Russian space travel. - In German] Stuttgart: Franckh-Kosmos Verlag, 1996. 159 pp., 49 illus., ISBN 3-440-07226-6, DM 24.80 (Kosmos Report) Review: H.J.Nitschmann: Astronomie + Raumfahrt 34 (1997) 2, 44 Zimmermann, V.; Bottanzi, U.; Howald-Haller, M. (Eds.): Die Werke von Daniel Bernoulli. Band 1. Medizin und Physiologie, Mathematische Jugendschriften, Positionsastronomie. [The works of Daniel Bernoulli. Vol. 1. Medicine and psychology, early mathematical writings, positional astronomy. - In German] Basel: Birkhaeuser Verlag, 1996. 528 pp., ca. 82 illus., ISBN 3-7643-5272-8 ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Juergen Hamel (Berlin), Klaus-Dieter Herbst (Jena), Jean-Pierre Luminet (Paris), Gisela Muenzel (Leipzig), G. Romano (Rom). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) A translation of "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick Translated and Co-Edited by: Mr. Donald Bellunduno <76450.1741@compuserve.com> All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. The electronic newsletters are complement the printed "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" (in German) which currently appear semi-annually: Price: DM 1.50 / issue plus postage and packing costs outside Germany: free Subscription: Send in DM 2.50 (one issue) or DM 5.00 (Nos. 10-11) in stamps to the editor Editor: Dr. W. R. Dick, Otterkiez 14, D-14478 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 863199 Please ask for a free trial issue. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (+6592) 2150, Fax: (+6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Institut fuer Angewandte Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 23
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 23, October 2, 1997 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * Nr. 23, 17. Juni 1997 * * * * Edited by: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * * Translated by: Mr. Donald Bellunduno <76450.1741@CompuServe.COM> * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- Editor's Note 1. Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in Innsbruck 2. Conference Announcement: Sixth Annual Convention of the Antique Telescope Society at Mt. Wilson Observatory, Sept. 12-15, 1997 3. Museums and Exhibits 4. Memorials 5. Historical Sunspot Observations by Fink and Soemmering/Carrington: Addendum to ENHA No. 22, Item 1 6. Conferences 1997 7. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Editor's Note ------------- Unfortunately, due to several circumstances Number 23 of ENHA appears with a considerable delay. Therefore, most of the conference announcements are now out of date. The editor and the translator apologize for this. To avoid delays in the future, the German and the English editions will be separated. All subscribers will be informed about the details, which have still to be worked out. Wolfgang R. Dick ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in Innsbruck ---------------------------------------------------------------------- [Abridged and updated version of the announcement] The meeting in the framework of the Fall Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft in Innsbruck was held on Monday, September 22, 1997. In conclusion, a meeting of the members of the working group took place. The coordinator of the meeting at Innsbruck was Dr. Anneliese Schnell. She can be reached at the Institute for Astronomy at the University of Vienna, Tuerkenschanzstrasse. 17, A-1180 Vienna, Tel.: (0043 1) 470 68 00 25 or 470 66 83 25 or 479 82 72 25, Fax: 470 68 00 15 or 470 66 83 15 or 479 82 72 15, e-mail: schnell@astro.ast.univie.ac.at. Summaries of the lectures (mostly in English) are published in "Astronomische Gesellschaft Abstract Series" No. 13, 1997. For the programme, including translated titles of most papers, please see our web site: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/treffen1997.html . ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: ------------------------ Sixth Annual Convention of the Antique Telescope Society at Mt. Wilson Observatory, Sept. 12-15, 1997 The Antique Telescope Society, an international society of collectors, researchers, students, museums and librarians with an interest in the history of the telescope and related astronomia will host its 6th annual convention in Southern California. Venues include: Mt. Wilson Observatory, Griffith Observatory, Hale's Solar Lab, Cal Tech & Palomar Observatory. The convention is open to members and guests of the society, including the general public. You do NOT have to be a member of the society to attend (although it is more economical to do so). In the past, ATS conventions have been first class gatherings in such places as Bath, England, Washington D.C. (USN Observatory), Yerkes, Lick, Ricard, Sproul, Chabot observatories and others. "Will we get to use any of the large historic instruments?" - Yes, currently, we have time reserved on the 60" Reflector at Mt. Wilson - weather permitting. "What do we do at these conventions?" - See great telescopes and observatories with significant historical records ... Hear great presentations related to telescopes, telescope makers, observatories, and related topics ... Eat good food ... See members' collectible telescopes ... Observe with large, historic instruments ... Get the "insider's" tour of these historic locations (you will get to see what the general public rarely gets to see) ... Make acquaintances from all over the country and other countries as well. "What does it cost?" - Prices haven't been set, but in every past convention, the perception of the members is that the value of the convention FAR exceeded the cost. In all cases, the ATS tries to do things in a first class manner and it has shown in the increased attendance and growth of the society. "How do I sign up?" - Email Bart Fried at nuvista@compuserve.com for further information. As the convention gets closer, details will be finalized and a packet will be available for anyone who wishes to consider attending. Program: Mt. Wilson Convention - Sept 1997 Friday 12th. 15.00 --- Registration at the Holiday Inn. 303 E. Cordova Street, Pasadena, CA 91101. Reservations Toll-free 1-800-457-7940 19.00 Reception. Apperitifs. Holiday Inn. 19.30 Dinner. 21.00 Keynote Speaker. 22.00 Adjourn, informal gathering at the hospitality suite Saturday 13th. Early departure for Mount Wilson. 9.30 Arrive and assemble at Mount Wilson. At this time the party will divide into four or five smaller groups for tours of the Observatory complex. Mount Wilson Docents will accompany groups on guided tours throughout the morning. Refreshments will be provided between 10.00 and 11.30 12.30-13.30 Buffet Lunch will be available in the auditorium. 14.00 First Paper Session. 15.30 Coffee / tea / break in the foyer. 15.50 Second Paper Session. 17.30 Adjourn. Free time until Dinner. 19.00 Buffet Dinner 20.30 Guest Lecture. 22.00 ******* Observing with the 60" Ritchey reflector.****** Sunday 14th. 9.00 A.T.S. Business Meeting (Annual General Meeting for Members only) at the Holiday Inn. 10.15 Coffee / Tea / biscuits will be available outside the meeting room. 10.30 Third Paper session at the Holiday Inn. 12.30 Break for Lunch. 14.00 Fourth Paper Session. 15.30-18.00 Visit to the Hale Solar Laboratory, where we will see Hale's original setup and have a small reception and then a visit to Caltech to see the collection of original Porter drawings of the 200" etc. 18.00 Informal dining at local restaurants 19.30 (or later) Assemble at the Griffith Observatory. See the Planetarium show at the Griffith Observatory and visit the Zeiss 12" Refractor until 22.00 hrs. *****Special Tour of the 200" Hale telescope at Palomar Observatory***** Monday 15th 14.00 Assemble at Palomar Mountain Observatory (Maps will be provided). We will be having a private tour inside the building, usually off limits to visitors. Conclusion of our visit with a brief gathering under the Hale Telescope. ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Museums and Exhibits -------------------- The special exhibit "Earth, Sun, Moon & the Stars: Globes, Sundials, and Astronomical Instruments," of the Historischen Museum [Historical Museum] of Frankfurt am Main will be available to the public from November 1996 to about November 1997. In this exhibit, put together by Reinhard Glasemann, the museum will display, for the first time, its complete collection of astronomical instruments, mainly from the early modern history. The exhibit was enhanced through pieces from the collections belonging to the Physikalischer Verein and the Institute for History of Science. The list of items exposed includes: 12 globes (Terrestrial globe by Schoener from 1515 and globes by van Langren, Homann, Andreae, Doppelmayr, Klinger and Franz); 29 sundials (by Ritter, Scriba, Nieborg, Willebrand, Feriary, Baradelle, Vogler, Mueller, Grassl, Keller, Neringer); 5 instruments used in the construction of sundials; 10 astrolabes and related instruments (among them Islamic from the 12th c., Islamic from the period around 1700, two French pieces from the 15th c., from the Lower Rhine from the 16th c.); 5 instruments from Erasmus Habermel around 1600 (sundials, a horological slide rule and a theodolite); 3 "Aequatorien"; 6 planetariums and world models; 9 telescopes and observational instruments (by Semitecolo, Deregni, Willson, Utzschneider and Fraunhofer, Steinheil, Brander and Breithaupt); 11 instruments used in positioning (by Volckmer, Schmalkalder and Huson); 8 books; 7 paintings and drawings (technical schematics, portraits, a bridge tower with sundial, temperaments and planets and their influence on people, as well as an allegory). A catalogue of the exhibit is available in manuscript form. Unfortunately, because of financial reasons, the manuscript could not yet be printed. Some pictures of items of the exhibit are available at the cash desk as post cards. Address: Historisches Museum, Saalgasse 19, D-60311 Frankfurt a. M., Germany, Tel. 069/212-35599, Fax 069/212-30702; Tours on appointment at 069/212-34611. With U-Bahn (subway): U4, station Roemer Opening hours: Tues, Thurs - Sun 10 am - 5 pm, Wed 10 am - 8 pm; Mon closed. The Bezirksmuseum [District Museum] Brigittenau in Vienna will show from the 3rd April up until the end of October 1997 the exhibit "Carl Friedrich Gauss. Mathematician - Astronomer - Surveyer". Address: Bezirksmuseum Brigittenau, Dresdner Str. 79, A-1200 Wien, Austria Opening hours: Thurs 5-7 pm, Sun 10-12 am; free admission. On August 30, 1997, the Wilhelm-Foerster-Sternwarte Berlin will re-inaugurate in a ceremony the restored Bamberg Refractor. Carl Bamberg (150th anniversary of his birth on Juli 12, 1997) built this 12-inch telescope in 1889 for the newly founded Berliner Gesellschaft Urania, a society for the popularization of science. Address: Wilhelm-Foerster-Sternwarte, Munsterdamm 90 (am Insulaner), D-12169 Berlin, Germany, Tel. (030) 79 00 93-0, Fax 79 00 93-12 From the 15th September until the 14th December 1997 an exhibit in Lutherstadt Wittenberg entitled "Melanchthon and Astrology" will be shown. Location: Lutherhalle, Collegienstr. 54, D-06886 Lutherstadt Wittenberg, Germany Opening hours: Tues - Sun 10 am - 5 pm (Source: http://www.sgi.de/melanchthon/expo_2.htm) The Mainfraenkisches Museum in Wuerzburg is housing an extended collection of ring, pocket, travel, table and other sundials, in addition single calendars as well as mathematical, geodetic, optical and related instruments, including hand-held telescopes. In the spring of 1997 the museum had the collection situated in the special exhibit entitled "Time and space: Sundials and scientific instruments" (See ENHA No. 20, Item 4). From this exhibit a catalogue is available (see section "New Books"). Specific examples from the collection are also on view to the public in the permanent exhibit which will be reopened shortly. By arranging in advance, the other instruments can be inspected for scientific purposes. Address: Mainfraenkisches Museum, Festung Marienberg, D-97082 Wuerzburg, Germany, Tel.: (0931) 4 30 16. Opening hours: April-October Thurs-Sun 10 am - 5 pm, otherwise 10-16 pm On September 13, 1996, after long reconstruction efforts the Archenhold Observatory in Berlin-Treptow was reopened. On the 12th October the observatory celebrated its 100th anniversary. The astronomical museum could not yet be opened again, however there are display cases in the hall in which the history of the observatory and the history of astronomy in general are depicted. On exhibit are three instruments from the workshop of R. Toepfer (Potsdam) from around 1950 (Hartmann microphotometer, plate measuring instrument, spectroscope), the telescope of the Berlin "street astronomer" Max Kutscher from 1950 and one theodolite. Address: Archenhold-Observatory, Alt-Treptow 1, D-12435 Berlin, Germany, Tel. 030/5 34 80 80 Public Tours: Wed 6 pm, Sat / Sun 3 pm; special events; The observatory opens 30 minutes before the beginning of the tours or events; reservations by telephone are recommended (Mon-Fri 8 am - 3 pm) The Orgelbaumuseum Schloss Hanstein [Organ Museum Castle Hanstein] in Ostheim (Rhoen) commemorates also Cuntz von der Tann (1567-1639), a knighted captain and inhabitant of the castle. He owned astronomical instruments and built an observational room in the castle's attic. From his diarys, it is clear that he was in contact with both Tycho Brahe und Johannes Kepler. - The museum would be interested in acquiring more information on the activities of Cuntz von der Tann. His diarys have up until today not been completely evaluated. The archives of the family von Tann are located in Deutsches Adelsarchiv, Schwanalle 21, 3D5037 Marburg, Germany. Address: Orgelbaumuseum Schloss Hanstein, Paulinenstr. 20, 97645 Ostheim, Germany, Tel. 09777/1743. Opening hours: Wed - Sat 10 - 12 am and 1 - 5 pm, Sun 1 - 5 pm In the hall of the Ministry for Science, Research and Culture of the Land of Brandenburg [Ministeriums fuer Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kultur des Landes Brandenburg] stands a display containing nine historical instruments on permanant loan from the collection of the Babelsberg Observatory of the Astrophysical Institute Potsdam. Address: Friedrich-Ebert-Str. 4, D-14467 Potsdam, Germany, Tel. 0331/866-0. The entrance is from "Staudenhof". Opening hours: Mon - Fri 8 am - 6 pm ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Memorials --------- In June 1993 a memorial plaque was erected at the birth house of Friedrich Simon Archenhold (1861-1939) in Lichtenau (Westfalen, Germany; Lange Strasse 22) in memory of the founder of the Treptow Observatory. Source: D. B. Herrmann, Blick in das Weltall, Berlin 1994, p. 79. On April 21, 1995, on the occasion of the 500th birthday of Peter Apian a memorial plaque was finally put in place at the house Markt 13 in Leisnig (Sachsen, Germany). It is the site, most likely, where Apian was born. The original building is said to have been burned to the ground by fire in 1700. The exact location of his birth is not known. However, there were several reasons why Leisnig was chosen. At the same house a coat of arms dating back to May 23, 1870, is put up, with an inscription pointing at Apian. In Leisnig also public places have been dedicated to the astronomer and cartographer: Peter-Apian-Platz and Peter-Apian-Mittelschule. - The Grossgemeinde [united municipality] Seubersdorf (Oberpfalz, Germany) named in 1995 a small street in Ittelhofen, in the vicinity of the church, after Apian; in April 1995 a street sign was erected at Apianstrasse. The Hofmark [farm march] Ittelhofen belonged to Apian since 1544. In the church of Ittelhofen can be found an epitaph for Apian's son Claudius as well as one for his son Karl (Carolus) and Karl's wife Ursula. Source: K. Roettel (Ed.), Peter Apian, Eichstaett 1995, pp. 26f., 64f., 284, 336. On March 20, 1996, a memorial plaque was erected on the director's house of the Jena University Observatory (Schillergaesschen 3) for Hermann Lambrecht (1908-1983), which was donated by the Gesellschaft der Freunde und Foerderer [Society of Friends and Patrons] of the Friedrich Schiller University at Jena. On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the discovery of Mira in Resterhafe (Ostfriesland) the local parish has placed a memorial plaque on the outside of the church in Resterhafe in memory of David Fabricius (1564-1617). The unveiling took place on August 31, 1996. On September 13, 1996, a bronze relief of Tycho Brahe was unveiled in Rostock on the building used by the Rostocker Volksbank (Glatter Aal). The relief was done by Jo Jastram, and was funded by the Volksbank. A sundial was also commemorated on the same day. On the sundial the world system of Tycho Brahe is depicted as well as the symbols of the zodiac. Source: Ostseezeitung, September 14, 1996. On November 19, 1996, on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the Carl Zeiss enterprise, the reconstructed monument to Ernst Abbe was rededicated on the Carl-Zeiss-Platz in Jena, Germany. Source: Potsdamer Neueste Nachrichten, November 20, 1996, p. 20. ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Historical Sunspot Observations by Fink and Soemmering/Carrington: ------------------------------------------------------------------ Addendum to ENHA No. 22, Item 1 ------------------------------- Please send your replies to Douglas V. Hoyt (Greenbelt, MD, USA), e-mail: Douglas_V_Hoyt_at_2-TAG4-HSTX@ccmail.stx.com ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... Conferences 1997 ---------------- Further conferences in the years 1997 and 1998 were reported in the recent issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all previously announced conferences see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 7 June 1997, Calgary, Canada The Rothney Astrophysical Observatory 25th anniversary celebration Further information: Dr. Eugene F. Milone, Physics & Astronomy Dept., The University of Calgary, 2500 University Dr., N.W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada, E-mail: milone@acs.ucalgary.ca URL: http://www.ucalgary.ca/~milone/raomeet.html 29-30 June 1997, Chicago, IL, USA History Sessions at the 109th Annual Meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Further information: Dr. Joseph S. Tenn, Dept. of Physics and Astronomy, Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, CA 94928-3609, USA, (707) 664-2594, Fax: (707) 664-2505, E-mail: joe.tenn@sonoma.edu URL: http://yorty.sonoma.edu/people/faculty/tenn/ASPHistory97.html 14 September 1997, Cittadella (PD), Italy Unione Astrofili Italiani, XXIX Congresso Nazionale, Sessione I: Storia e Cultura Astronomica Chairman: Francesco Azzarita, Via Fanelli 206 M, 70125 Bari, Italy ULR (of the Congresso Nazionale): http://www.mclink.it/mclink/astro/uai_cong.htm 3-5 October 1997, Porto San Giorgio (Ascoli Piceno), Italy Annual meeting of the Italian gnomonists Further information: Francesco Azzarita, azzarita.f@teseo.it ........................................................................... Item 7 ENHA No. 23, October 2, 1997 ........................................................................... New Books --------- Graf-Stuhlhofer, Franz: Humanismus zwischen Hof und Universitaet. Georg Tannstetter (Collimitus) und sein wissenschaftliches Umfeld im Wien des fruehen 16. Jahrhunderts. [Humanism between court and university. Georg Tannstetter (Collimitus) and his scientific environment in Vienna of the 16th century.] Vienna: WUV-Universitaetsverlag, 1996. 212 pp., 22 ilus., 23 x 15.6 cm, ISBN 3-85114-256-X, Pb ATS 268.00, DM 37.00 [About Tannstetter, called Collimitius (1482-1535), and his work as mathematician and astronomer als well as a pionier of the historiography of science, physician, cartographer and astrological adviser.] Grigull, Ulrich: Sechzig Jahre Kepler-Kommission. [The 60th anniversary of the Kepler Commission.] Munich: Verlag der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1996. 39 pp., ISBN 3-7696-4739-4 (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Mathematisch- naturwissenschaftliche Klasse, Sitzungsberichte 1996, Sonderdruck 1) Krafft, Fritz (Ed.): Otto von Guericke. Neue Magdeburger Versuche ueber den leeren Raum. [Otto von Guericke. New Magdeburg experiments about the empty space.] 2nd, enl. ed. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1996. CVIII, 306 pp., 52 illus., 18 tabs., ISBN 3-540-62248-9, Hb DM 68.00 (VDI-Buch) [Complete German translation (1968) of the Latin work published in 1672, being also of importance for the history of astronomy. With an extended introduction "Otto von Guericke in his time".] Schenkel, Peter Michael: Gesammelte Werke. Register zu Band I: Mysterium Cosmographicum, De Stella Nova. [Johannes Kepler, Collected works. Index to Vol. I: Mysterium Cosmographicum, De Stella Nova.] Munich: Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1997. 60 pp. (Berichte der Keplerkommission, Heft 8) [Distribution through exchange of publications only.] Wagner, Gerhard G.: Sonnenuhren und wissenschaftliche Instrumente. Aus den Sammlungen des Mainfraenkischen Museums Wuerzburg. [Sundials and scientific instruments. From the collections of the Mainfraenkisches Museum Wuerzburg.] Wuerzburg: Mainfraenkisches Museum Wuerzburg, 1997. 280 pp., numerous illus., partly in colour, ISBN 3-932461-00-2, Pb DM 25.00 + DM 7.00 postage [Catalogue of the museum's collection of sundials and single mathematical, geodetic, optical (including hand-held telescopes) and other instruments (see above, Item 3). Published on occasion of the special exhibit "Time and space: Sundials and scientific instruments", Spring 1997 (see ENHA No. 20, Item 4). Distribution: Mainfraenkisches Museum, Festung Marienberg, D-97082 Wuerzburg, Germany, Tel.: (0931) 4 30 16. Please enclose cheque.] ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we are indebted to: Volker Bialas (Munich), Reinhard Glasemann (Frankfurt a.M.), Willi Knuelle (Cologne), Wolfgang Meirich (Ilsede), Leopold Mersich (Muerzzuschlag), Rolf Riekher (Berlin), Reinhard Schielicke (Jena), Burkhard Stautz (Frankfurt a.M.), Bernhard Zimmermann (Warnemuende), Mainfraenkisches Museum Wuerzburg, Orgelbaumuseum Schloss Hanstein. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) A translation of "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick Translated and Co-Edited by: Mr. Donald Bellunduno <76450.1741@compuserve.com> All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. The electronic newsletters are complement the printed "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" (in German) which currently appear semi-annually: Price: DM 1.50 / issue plus postage and packing costs outside Germany: free Subscription: Send in DM 2.50 (one issue) or DM 5.00 (Nos. 10-11) in stamps to the editor Editor: Dr. W. R. Dick, Otterkiez 14, D-14478 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 863199 Please ask for a free trial issue. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (+6592) 2150, Fax: (+6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Institut fuer Angewandte Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 24
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 24, December 4, 1997 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * Nr. 24, 3. Dezember 1997 * * * * Edited by: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. The International Spring Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft 1998 2. Introducing the "Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage" 3. Axel D. Wittmann: Catalog of Naked-Eye Sunspot Observations and Large Sunspots, 165 BC to AD 1918 4. Thomas B. Settle: Mechanical Marvels: Invention in the Age of Leonardo (Announcement of an Exhibition) Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 24, December 4, 1997 ........................................................................... The International Spring Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft 1998 ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Gotha, Germany, May 11 - 15, 1998 The conference will take place in commemoration of the first astronomical congress held in 1798 at the Seeberg observatory. Therefore history of astronomy is one of two special fields of the meeting, with a natural focus on the 18th and 19th centuries. The other field is astrometry. We expect results from the satellite Hipparcos and the discussion of successing projects. The language will be the "lingua franca" of our times, English. Especially characteristic quotations in French and German may be presented in the original version as well. There will be invited lectures as well as short oral and poster contributions. Scientific Organizing Committee: Peter Brosche (Daun/Bonn), Wolfgang R. Dick (Potsdam), Roland Wielen (Heidelberg) Registration for the conference: Information and registration - chairman of the Local Organizing Committee: Oliver Schwarz, Uthmannstr. 8, D-99867 Gotha, Germany E-mail: SternwGTH@aol.com Other information (e.g., about travel to Gotha and accomodation) may be downloaded from URL http://members.aol.com/SternwGTH . Later also the preliminary programme will be placed there. The Organizing Committee asks for registration as early as possible, not later than by March 15, 1998. Registered participants will receive a list of hotels and bed & breakfast in Gotha. O. Schwarz may help you with organizing your accomodation. Fees: Members of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: DM 60, students DM 40, non-members DM 80. Excursion to Inselsberg: DM 25 In case that your conference fee will be received by January 15, 1998, the excursion will be free for you. Please make your payments to Acct # 750 003 715, Sparkasse Gotha, BLZ 820 520 20, indicating "Fruehjahrstagung". Requests for re-funding of fees received later than one week prior to the conference may be granted only at 50 %. Scientific programme: Please send your requests concerning the programme as well as your abstracts of papers and posters by March 15, 1998, to Prof. Peter Brosche, University of Bonn, Observatorium Hoher List, D-54550 Daun, Germany. We ask for your understanding that contributions submitted later may not be accepted. In difference to other meetings of the Astronomische Gesellschaft, no abstract book will be published due to a lack of funds. However, we intend to publish the abstracts together with the invited papers in the Proceedings to appear after the meeting. For this you may edit your abstracts later. Prior to the meeting the abstracts will be published in the WWW (URL see above). For this, authors are asked to submit machine-readable abstracts, either on diskette together with the hardcopy to Prof. Brosche (any formats, also Word or WordPerfect, except Macintosh formats), or by e-mail to the LOC at SternwGTH@aol.com (ASCII, HTML or LaTeX), or by ftp to ftp.potsdam.ifag.de into the directory pub/incoming/wdi with a short e-mail notice to wdi@potsdam.ifag.de (any formats, except Macintosh). Preliminary schedule: May 11 2 pm opening ceremony, opening of a special exhibition 7 pm informal gathering in Hotel Lindenhof May 12 9 am presentations on history of astronomy 7 pm public evening lecture held by Dr. Oliver Schwarz entitled "Die Vermessung des Weltalls" May 13 9 am history of astronomy astrometry 7 pm reception by the mayor of the city of Gotha May 14 9 am astrometry May 15 10 am astronomical-geodetic excursion to the Inselsberg, the highest mountain of the Thuringian Forest Invited speakers (with short titles): Suzanne Debarbat: Astronomy at the Paris Observatory Jean-Claude Pecker: The diary of Lalande Peter Brosche: Astronomy in Gotha Karin Reich: Astronomy - the leading discipline Manfred Schneider: Astrometry and geodesy Leslie V. Morrison: Sands of Time and Tidal Friction Adriaan Blaauw: History of the HIPPARCOS project Roland Wielen: The FK6 and the double stars Helmut Jahreiss: HIPPARCOS and the nearby stars Wilhelm Seggewiss: Distance scale and HIPPARCOS Michel Mayor: Radial velocities and extra-solar planets Jacques Colin: The automatic meridian circle of Bordeaux Christian de Vegt: HIPPARCOS for wide field astronomy Alain Fresneau: Carte du Ciel and HIPPARCOS Michael Geffert: CCD astrometry Lennart Lindegren: HIPPARCOS and the future Ulrich Bastian: The astrometric satellite DIVA Michael H. Soffel: Relativity and space astrometry Erik Hog: [title not yet defined] General information about Gotha Gotha is one of the Thuringian residence towns, which, despite being the capitals of only small states, were of great importance for the cultural development in Germany. The reigning dukes supported the arts, and one of the last, Ernst II (1745-1804) had a great passion for astronomy. He founded an observatory and made Franz Xaver von Zach (1754-1832) the first director. Following astronomy also related sciences were developed: Justus Perthes' "Geographische Anstalt" made significant contributions to cartography. A great share of the cultural heritage of Gotha is concentrated in the large castle Friedenstein which was the residence of the dukes. There are the Science and State Library Gotha, the Thuringian State Archives, several museums and a unique baroque theater. The collections include astronomical instruments, globes and clocks. Many of Johann Sebastian Bach's ancestors lived in the area surrounding Gotha. However, he was born in Eisenach about 30 km to the West of Gotha. The centre of German classical literature, Weimar, is 40 minutes by train to the East. Inbetween lies Erfurt, the capital of Thuringia and one of the most remarkable German medieval cities. Not second to the cultural highlights is the possibility to explore the beauties of nature: the foot of the Thuringian Forest can be reached by tram and the ridge by buses. From the Inselsberg (which we shall visit) one can see the stage of the opera "Tannhaeuser", the Wartburg, in the North-West. More about Gotha at http://www.gotha-online.de/ ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 24, December 4, 1997 ........................................................................... Introducing the "Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage" -------------------------------------------------------------- Following extensive discussions at the recent General Assembly of the IAU, a research publication titled the "Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage" is to be launched in 1998. This will go some way towards providing an alternative outlet for those who liked to publish in the "Quarterly Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society" and in "Vistas in Astronomy". JAH2 will be published twice-yearly, in June and December, and will feature review papers, research papers, short communications, and book reviews. Papers on all aspects of astronomical history will be considered, including studies which place the evolution of astronomy in political, economic and cultural context. Papers on astronomical heritage may deal with historic telescopes and observatories, conservation projects (including the conversion of historic observatories into museums of astronomy), and historical or industrial archaeological investigations of astronomical sites and buildings. All papers will be refereed prior to publication. Managing Editor of the new journal is John L. Perdrix, from Perth, Australia, who is closing down the "Australian Journal of Astronomy" in order to activate the new journal. Papers Editor is Dr Wayne Orchiston, Executive Director of the Carter Observatory (the National Observatory of New Zealand). An international Editorial Board is in the process of being formed, and Dr Bambang Hidayat (Indonesia, and IAU Vice-President), Professor Rajesh Kochhar (India), Professor Brian Warner (South Africa), Commander Derek Howse (England), Dr Wolfgang Dick (Germany), Dr David Andrews (Northern Ireland), Dr Alan Batten (Canada), Dr Steve Dick (USA, and Chairman of IAU Commission 41), Professor Ben Gascoigne (Australia), and Professor Don Osterbrock (USA) have already agreed to join. The annual subscription, for individuals, is just $US20. Queries regarding subscriptions, book reviews and the production of the new journal should be directed to Mr J. Perdrix at Astral Press, PO Box 107, Wembley, WA 6014, Australia (or e-mail: geochem@techpkwa.curtin.edu.au). Queries regarding papers should be directed to Dr W. Orchiston at the Carter Observatory, PO Box 2909, Wellington, New Zealand (or e-mail: Wayne.Orchiston@vuw.ac.nz). ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 24, December 4, 1997 ........................................................................... Catalog of Naked-Eye Sunspot Observations and Large Sunspots ------------------------------------------------------------ 165 BC to AD 1918 ----------------- By Axel D. Wittmann, Goettingen, Germany Large ('naked-eye') sunspots may serve as one of the primary indicators of solar activity; their distribution shows the typical features of solar activity (11-year cycle, butterfly diagram, bimodal maxima, Maunder-type maxima and minima, etc.). Historical naked-eye sunspot observations are one of the very few direct (non-proxy) means of studying solar activity during the past. This cataloge contains observations of large sunpots (or what may possibly have been a large sunspot!) with the naked eye. 'Modern' spots (more recent spots observed telescopically) are only included if they were large enough to be (in principle, at least) visible to the naked eye. When trying to interpret the data, and in particular the ancient Chinese observations, note that they are not at all systematic, i.e. 'dense' in time (or statistically 'complete'), but were made more or less by chance, or were often cited inaccurately in the chronicles! In particular, the ancient astronomers were trying to determine the phase of the new moon (for calendar purposes), and that is why often sunspots were preferrably detected near the day of new moon (whereas their actual 'maximum' was sometime else): So be careful and don't mis-interpret the meagre statistics! Data from 165 BC to AD 1684 were compiled by Axel D. Wittmann, University Observatory, Goettingen, Germany, and Zhen-Tao Xu, Purple Mountain Observatory, Nanjing, China; cf. Ref. [1]. This data has been updated and expanded (in particular for the time from 1685 to 1918) by data taken from the catalog of Kevin K.C. Yau and F. Richard Stephenson, University of Durham (cf. Ref. [2]) by A.D. Wittmann in 1988. The 'modern' observations (after AD 1764, and in particular those of the 20th century) were compiled by A.D. Wittmann; if possible they include the measured area and the observed heliographic latitude. The date usually is that of the CMD passage. Electronic copies of the catalogue are available from the author upon request. A downloadable version is available from the WDC-A for Solar- Terrestrial Physics at Boulder (for more information please contact Dr. Helen Coeffey, Editor Solar-Geophysical Data, hcoffey@ngdc.noaa.gov). References: [1] Wittmann,A.D., Xu,Z.T.: 1987, Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. 70, pp. 83-94. [2] Yau,K.K.C., Stephenson,F.R.: 1988, Quart. J. Roy. Astron. Soc. 29, 175. Author's address: Dr. A.D. Wittmann, University Observatory, Geismarlandstr. 11, D-37083 Goettingen, Germany, Phone: +(49)-551-395045, Fax: +(49)-551-395043, E-mail: wittmann@uni-sw.gwdg.de ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 24, December 4, 1997 ........................................................................... Mechanical Marvels: Invention in the Age of Leonardo ---------------------------------------------------- Announcement of an Exhibition ----------------------------- By Thomas B. Settle, Brooklyn, NY, USA 24 October, 1997 - 1 March, 1998 World Financial Center in lower Manhattan, New York, USA This show is the most recent edition of two previous ones entitled "Renaissance Engineers from Brunelleschi to Leonardo da Vinci" held at the Palazzo Strozzi in Florence a year ago and in Paris before that. It was organized by a team at the Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienze of Florence under the direction of Prof. Paolo Galluzzi, the Director of the Istituto. The show has three major sections: on "Filippo Brunelleschi" and various aspects of the design and construction of the Cupola of the Florentine Cathedral; on the "Sienese Engineers", including Taccola and Francesco di Giorgio; and on Leonardo da Vinci. Featured are excellent and large working models of both real and imaginary machines figured in the original documents. There will be catalogs and CDs available on site. For an introduction to the show you might want to visit: http://galileo.imss.fi.it/news/mostra/index.html Also availabe by a link through the World Financial Center Page: http://www.worldfinancialcenter/com/art/fall97/page2.html For location of and directions to the World Financial Center as well as other information: http://www.worldfinancialcenter.com/ Author's address: Thomas B. Settle Tel. +1 718 260 3406 (w) History of Science and Technology Fax. +1 718 260 3136 Polytechnic University Em. tsettle@duke.poly.edu Brooklyn, NY 11201 tsettle@galileo.imss.firenze.it Web. http://galileo.imss.firenze.it/~tsettle/index.html (Note: This is an informal and unofficial announcement. Please excuse cross-posting; but feel free to pass the information on to others.) ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank: Peter Brosche (Bonn/Daun), Wayne Orchiston (Wellington), Oliver Schwarz (Gotha/Daun), Reinhard Schielicke (Jena). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) A translation of "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. The electronic newsletters are complement the printed "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" (in German) which currently appear semi-annually: Price: DM 1.50 / issue plus postage and packing costs outside Germany: free Subscription: Send in DM 2.50 (one issue) or DM 5.00 (Nos. 10-11) in stamps to the editor Editor: Dr. W. R. Dick, Otterkiez 14, D-14478 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 863199 Please ask for a free trial issue. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (+6592) 2150, Fax: (+6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (+331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 25
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 25, January 28, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Editor's note 2. Journal for the History of Astronomy 3. Announcement of a New Journal: Culture and Cosmos 4. XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium 5. Conferences 1998/99 Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 25, January 28, 1998 ........................................................................... Editor's note ------------- No. 25 of the Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) will be the first one being not a complete translation of Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte (EMA). From now on ENHA will appear independently, but will contain selected contributions from EMA translated from German into English. All contributions which were submitted in English will appear in both newsletters, but not necessarily first in EMA as it was the case up to No. 24. When a contribution appeared first in the other newsletter this will be indicated. The advantage will be that both newsletters may contain rapid information without waiting for a complete translation of the previous issue of EMA. Donald Bellunduno has agreed to continue doing the translations. However, any additional help in translating single contributions would be much appreciated. In each case the translator will be indicated. Please contact me if you would like to help. W.R.D. ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 25, January 28, 1998 ........................................................................... Journal for the History of Astronomy ------------------------------------ (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 25, 16. Januar 1998, Item 2) Journal for the History of Astronomy was founded in 1970 and is now in its twenty-ninth year. Originally published every six months, it now appears quarterly, together with an annual supplement devoted to archaeoastronomy. Each issue consists of 96 pages, and is printed at Cambridge University Press on paper suitable for high-quality reproduction of artwork. To private subscribers purchasing copies direct for their personal use, the annual subscription is GBP 35 ($ 70 in the Americas and Japan) for the five issues, GBP 29 ($ 58) for the quarterly issues without the supplement. Articles for publication should be sent to the Editor, Dr Michael Hoskin, Churchill College, Cambridge CB3 0DS, UK (e-mail: MAH15@CUS.CAM.AC.UK); books for review to Professor Owen Gingerich, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA; and subscriptions to Science History Publications Ltd, 16 Rutherford Road, Cambridge CB2 2HH, UK (phone and fax: +44 1223 565532; e-mail: shpltd@aol.com). Further information can be obtained from http://members.aol.com/shpltd/index-page3.html. A Table of Contents for the latest issues can be found at http://members.aol.com/shpltd/index-page6.html . M.A.H. ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 25, January 28, 1998 ........................................................................... Announcement of a New Journal: Culture and Cosmos ------------------------------------------------- Culture and Cosmos A Journal of the History of Astrology and Cultural Astronomy ISSN 1368-6534 PO Box 1071, Bristol BS99 1HE, UK, E-Mail: culture@caol.demon.co.uk Editor: Nicholas Campion Deputy Editor: Patrick Curry PhD Publication: twice a year in Spring/Summer and Autumn/Winter Subscriptions for two issues are: Individuals: GBP 13 UK and Europe, GBP 15 overseas Institutions: GBP 22 UK and Europe, GBP 15 24 overseas Single issues: GBP 6.50 UK and Europe, GBP 7.50 overseas Subscriptions: Culture and Cosmos, PO Box 1071, Bristol BS99 1HE, UK; E-mail: subs@caol.demon.co.uk Payment must be in sterling. Visa and Mastercard accepted: we need your card number and expiry date, the full name on the card and your mailing address. Culture and Cosmos is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the study of the history of cultural astronomy and astrology. If astrology is the use of celestial phenomena to provide meaning for human life, then cultural astronomy is the broader use of astronomical beliefs and theories to regulate and inform society, politics, the arts and every aspect of human life. This encompasses the new disciplines of ethno-astronomy and archaeo-astronomy. The journal is independent and has been launched as a result of a feeling for at least the last ten years that the increasing amount of research into the history of astrology, together with the argument that the history of astrology makes an important contribution to the history of religion, ideas and science, now justifies a new publication. Astrology though, cannot be narrowly defined, and has no existence outside of a broader philosophical, religious, scientific, cosmological and social context. Hence it is felt that the journal's scope should extend beyond the strict study of astrology itself. We will consider articles on any aspect of the history of astrology or cultural astronomy, from earliest times down to the present day. Our subjects may vary from the development of astrology in ancient Sumer, to astral alignments in central America or the British Isles, astral mythology in the Renaissance, the function of astrology in the arts and literature, the political consequences of the Copernican revolution and contemporary belief in alien abduction. We will also carry news and reviews. Our editorial board is drawn from every area of the study of the history of astronomy and astrology from ancient times to modern, covering all perspectives, from scientific to religious. Editorial Board Dr. Silke Ackermann, Professor Anthony F. Aveni, Dr. Guiseppe Bezza, Professor. J. Bruce Brackenbridge, Dr. David Brown, Dr. Charles Burnett, Dr. Hilary M. Carey, Dr. ohn Carlson, Professor Robert Ellwood, Dr. Germana Ernst, Dr. Ann Geneva, Dr. Jacques Halbronn, Robert Hand, Professor Norris Hetherington, Professor Michael Hunter, Professor Ronald Hutton, Annabella Kitson MA, Dr. Nick Kollerstrom, Dr. Edwin C. Krupp, Dr. J. Lee Lehman, Professor Kenneth Negus, Professor John North, Professor P. M. Rattansi, Professor Francesca Rochberg, Professor James Santucci, Robert Schmidt, Professor Richard Tarnas, Dr. David Ulansey, Robin Waterfield, Dr. Charles Webster, Dr. Graziella Federici Vescovini, Dr. Paula Zambelli, Robert Zoller. Contents, Vol 1 no 1: Robin Heath (Cardigan): An Astronomical Basis for Solar Hero Myths Norris Hetherington (California): Ancient Greek Cosmology and Culture: A Historiographical Review Alan Weber (State University of NY, Binghamton): The Development of Celestial Journey Literature, 1400 - 1650 Ken Negus (Princeton, New Jersey), Kepler's Tertius Interveniens John Durant (Imperial College, London) and Martin Bauer (London School of Economics): British Public Perceptions of Astrology: An Approach from the Sociology of Knowledge Future articles will feature: Alexander Militarev and Lara Bobrova (Moscow): The Origin of Semitic and Greek Star Names Nick Kollerstrom (London): The Original Starry Zodiac Robert Zoller (New York): The Hermetica as Ancient Science Jurgen Hoppman (Berlin): Melanchthon's horoscope of Luther Edgar Laird (State University, Texas): Christine de Pizan and courtly controversy concerning Astronomia Elizabeth Heine (New Jersey): W.B.Yeats, Poet and Astrologer Milky Way Dreaming: contemporary aboriginal art of the stars N.C. ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 25, January 28, 1998 ........................................................................... XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium -------------------------------------------------- 20-25th July 1998, Soro, Denmark Conference announcement and call for papers The Scientific Instrument Commission (SIC) will visit Scandinavia for the first time in 1998 when it holds its XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium in Denmark. The Conference will be held at Soro Academy. Soro Academy houses Hauchs Physiske Cabinet, one of Europe's largest cabinets of physics and chemistry from about 1800. The conference will include three full days of papers, a full-day museum trip to Copenhagen, a post-conference tour to the Steno Museum in Aarhus, besides social activities. Participation by and contributions from persons who have not previously attended the meetings of the Commission are welcome and encouraged. Call for papers and posters: The Commission and the Local Organising Committee strongly encourage suggestions for papers and posters for the Conference. There will be two main themes for the Conference: 1. Cabinets of Physics and Chemistry, 2. Instruments- and Instrument Makers in Scandinavia. Although these themes will be given priority, we also welcome papers in other areas. The language of the conference is English, although papers in other languages may be accepted. Speakers will have 20 minutes for their paper, and there will be an additional 5 minutes for questions. There will be provisions for posters next to the conference room and recreational area. The titles and abstracts of papers and posters should be sent to the conference Office. They will be considered by the Academic programme Committee after the closing of the deadline. The deadline for submission of titles and abstracts is April 1st 1998. Please contact the Conference Office if you have any queries. The Scientific Instrument Commission The SIC is a commission under the Division of History, of the International Union of History and Philosophy, of Science, which is an organisation affiliated to UNESCO. The SIC seeks to promote interest and encourage research in the history of scientific instruments. President: Dr. Jim Bennett, Keeper, Museum of the History of Science, Oxford. Vice-president: Dr. Paolo Brenni, CNR - Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, Firenze. Secretary: Dr. Peter de Clercq, Museum Boerhaave, Leiden The Local organising Committee: Chairman: Jan Tapdrup, History of Science Dept., Univ. of Aarhus/Magdalen College, Oxford. General Secretary: Jorgen From Andersen, Soro Academy. Secretary: Hanne Wagner, Soro Academy. Committee members: Mogens Bencard, Director, Rosenborg; Dr. Kristian Peder Moesgaard, Director, the Steno Museum; Professor Helge Kragh, History of Science Dept. Univ of Aarhus; Jon Villadsen, Soro Academy. Academic Programme Committee: Chairman: Professor G.L'E. Turner, Imperial College, London. Vice-chairman: Dr. Jim Bennett, Keeper, Museum of History of Science, Oxford. Secretary: Jan Tapdrup, History of Science Dept., University of Aarhus/Magdalen College, Oxford. Further information: Please write to the conference office for the first circular. Further information is also avaliable on the web-page for the conference. http://www.sic.iuhps.org/symposium98/ Deadlines: The second circular for the conference will be sent out in February 1998. The deadline for registration will be April 1st 1998. Registration after this date will be subject to a surcharge. Registration by letters received later than 20th June 1998 is unfortunately not possible due to booking of accommodation and staff considerations. The deadline for offering papers and posters is April 1st 1998 Conference Office: Please send any queries or letters to the conference office: XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium, Soro Academy, Postbox. 37, DK-4180 Soro, Denmark Phone: +45 5782 0135 E-mail: ievhjan@dfi.aau.dk Fax: +45 5782 0136 ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 25, January 28, 1998 ........................................................................... Conferences 1998/99 ------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 25, 16. Januar 1998, Item 6. Partial translations by the editor.) Further conferences in the year 1998 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 6-10 January 1998, Washington, DC, USA 191st Meeting of the American Astronomical Society Among the sessions: Jan. 6, 1:00-5:00pm: LeRoy E. Doggett Memorial Session (HAD I) Jan. 7, 10:00-11:30am and 2:00-3:30pm: Historical Astronomy Division, II & III These sessions are organized by David DeVorkin, nasdsh03@sivm.si.edu URLs: http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas191/program/ http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas191/program/had1.html http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas191/program/had23.html 24-27 February 1998, Trier, Germany Conference: "Historical-thematic cartography: concepts, methods, applications" Information: Martin Schmidt, schmidtm@uni-trier.de URL: http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/trier.htm 13-14 March 1998, London, Great Britain Harmony of the Heavens Conference organized by the British Museum and the Warburg Institute. Invited papers from historians working in astronomy, art and music with a strong emphasis on scientific instruments. Information: Silke Ackermann, Department of Medieval and Later Antiquities, British Museum, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG, phone 0171-323 8395 21-23 May 1998, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Science and travels, 35th Symposium of the German "Gesellschaft fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte" [History of Science Society], in cooperation with the Dutch "Genootschap voor Geschiedenes der Geneeskunde, Wiskunde, Natuurwetenschapen en Techniek" [Society for the History of Medicin, Philosophy, Science and Technology] From the programme: H. Hecht (Potsdam): New dimensions of scientific travels in the 18th century. Maupertuis' expedition to Lapland. - R. H. van Gent (Utrecht): The German Clergyman Johan Maurits Mohr and his private astronomical observatory in Batavia (Java). Registration: Prof. Dr. Wolfgang U. Eckart, President of the Gesellschaft fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Institut fuer Geschichte der Medizin, Ruprecht-Karls-Universitaet Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 368, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany, e-mail: Wolfgang.eckart@urz.uni-heidelberg.de URL: http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/reisen.htm 21-24 May 1998, Weil am Rhein, Germany 27th Annual Meeting of the Arbeitskreis Sonnenuhren [Sundial Working Group] in the Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Chronometrie [German Chronometric Society] Place: Atlas-Hotel Weil am Rhein, 1500 m from the suburbs of Basel Fee: Non-members DM 55.00, speakers DM 35.00 (including excursion) Cultural programme: Visits to museums and sundials in Basel (Switzerland) and surroundings Deadline: 31 January 1998 Organisation: Margrit und Robert Felix, Kleinhueningerstr. 170, CH-4057 Basel, Switzerland, Tel. + Fax +41 61 631 10 34, e-mail: rfelix@compuserve.com 25 June - 1 July 1998, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA 110th Annual Meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Sunday, June 28: History Session: invited lectures on Astronomy in New Mexico and on Cosmology 1948 - 1998 Inquiries to: Joe Tenn, e-mail: joe.tenn@sonoma.edu URL: http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/people/faculty/tenn/ASPHistory1998.html 20-25 July 1998, Soro, Denmark XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium of the Scientific Instrument Commission of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science Main themes: Cabinets of Physics and Chemistry, Instruments and Instrument Makers in Scandinavia. Papers not related to these subjects will also be considered. Opening lecture on Tycho Brahe by Owen Gingerich. Tours: To Copenhagen with visits to Rundetaarn (Astronomical Observatory), the Danish National Museum and Rosenborg (the Royal Chronological Collections); to the Steno Museum at Aarhus. Information: XVII International Scientific Instrument Symposium, Soro Academy, Postbox 37, DK-4180 Soro, Denmark, Phone: +45 5782 0135, Fax +45 5782 0136, e-mail: ievhjan@dfi.aau.dk URL: http://www.sic.iuhps.org/symposium98/ [See also the extended announcement in Item 3 of this issue.] 22 July 1998, Brighton, Great Britain The History of Measurement. Symposium of the FIG (the International Federation of Surveyors) ad hoc History Commission during the FIG XXI Congress. Themes: 18th century; introduction of the metric system in the 1790s; introduction of the electronic distance measurement in the 1940s Information: J.R.Smith Esq FRICS, FIG ad hoc Commission, 24 Woodbury Ave, Petersfield, Hants GU32 2EE, England, phone/fax +44 1730 262 619, e-mail: 101765.332@compuserve.com 18-27 August 1998, Berlin, Germany International Congress of Mathematicians, Section 19: History of Mathematics Chairman of the Program Committee: Phillip A. Griffiths, Institute for Advanced Study, Olden Lane, Princeton, NJ 08540-0631, USA Phone: +1/609/734-8200, Fax: +1/609/683-7605, E-mail: pg@math.ias.edu URL: http://elib.zib.de:8000/ICM 23-28 August 1998, Berlin, Germany 8th International Conference on the History of Science in China (ICHSC) Contact Address: Welf H. Schnell Technische Universitaet Berlin, Institut fuer Philosophie, Sekr: 14 - 7, Ernst-Reuter-Platz 7, 10587 Berlin, Germany URL: http://station4.kgw.tu-berlin.de/ 3-7 October 1998, Berlin, Germany IXth Symposium of the International Coronelli Society Theme: Everything related to old globes, armillary spheres, planetaria and their makers. Conference languages: German and English Place: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin (State Library at Berlin) Further programme: Excursion to Dresden to visit a special exhibition on maps, globes, and instruments; visits to globe collections in Berlin Contacts: Internationale Coronelli-Gesellschaft, Dominikanerbastei 21/28, A-1010 Vienna, Austria, Fax +43 1 532 08 24. 1-7 July 1999, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 111th Annual Meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Sunday, July 4: History Session: invited lectures Monday, July 5: History Session: contributed papers Inquiries to: Joe Tenn, e-mail: joe.tenn@sonoma.edu 11-16 July 1999, Athens, Greece 18th International Conference on the History of Cartography 'The Cartography of the Mediterranean World' - and any other aspect of the history of cartography. Further Information: Tony Campbell, Map Librarian and Chairman of Imago Mundi Ltd, British Library, Map Library, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG, UK, Phone: 0171 412 7525, International: +44 171 412 7525, Fax: 0171 412 7780, International: +44 171 412 7780, email: tony.campbell@bl.uk URL: http://ihr.sas.ac.uk/maps/confmnu.html (under construction) ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For contributions and information we thank: Nicholas Campion (UK), Margrit und Robert Felix (Basel, Switzerland), Klaus-Dieter Herbst (Jena, Germany), Michael A. Hoskin (Cambridge, UK), Jan Tapdrup (Aarhus, Denmark, Oxford, UK), Joe Tenn (Rohnert Park, CA, USA). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 26
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 26, March 6, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Colloquium: Harmony of the Heavens 2. Exhibitions 3. Conferences 1998/99 4. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 26, March 6, 1998 ........................................................................... Colloquium: Harmony of the Heavens ---------------------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 28, 6. Maerz 1998, Item 2.) 13th and 14th March 1998 The British Museum and the Warburg Institute, London This interdisciplinary colloquium will consider the interaction of astronomy and other disciplines, the crafts of mathematical practitioners, music and art, and how this interaction contributed to changing perceptions of the world. It will involve the discussion of both text-based and object-based studies. THE BRITISH MUSEUM LECTURE THEATRE Friday 13 March 1998 9.30 Doors open: registration 10.00 FIRST SESSION Welcome by Robert Anderson Chaired by Nicholas Mann Rob van Gent The unknown author of the 'Harmonia Macrosmica' (1600); the life and career of the Dutch cosmographer Andreas Cellarius 10.45 Coffee 11.15 Benno van Dalen Islamic astronomical tables and their transmission to Europe and China Silke Ackermann Heaven and earth in harmony: calendars on scientific instruments 12.45 Lunch 2.00 SECOND SESSION Chaired by W.F. Ryan David King Sacred geography of Islam: from folk astronomy to Mecca-centred world maps Anthony Turner Henrician heavens: clocks, instruments and alien craftsmen at the court of Henry VIII 3.30 Tea 4.00 Koen Van Cleempoel The Louvain school of instrument makers, 1540-1600 Gerard Turner Humphrey Cole and Elizabethan instrument-making 5.30 Reception (Gallery 69a, with view of the Humphrey Cole exhibition) 7.00 Buffet supper (Warburg Institute, for invited guests) THE WARBURG INSTITUTE LECTURE ROOM Saturday 14 March 1998 9.45 Doors open: registration 10.00 THIRD SESSION Chaired by Silke Ackermann Bruce Stephenson Musica mundana in Kepler's astronomy Penelope Gouk Changing musical models: cosmic and human harmonies in the Scientific Revolution 11.30 Coffee 11.45 John North Holbein's The Ambassadors. Is time really out of joint? Kristen Lippincott Astronomy, astrology and the problem with pictures 1.15 Lunch 2.15 FOURTH SESSION Chaired by Martin Kemp Alison Morrison-Low A heavenly library: early instruments in the Crawford Library Liba Taub Astrometeorology in antiquity: tradition and prediction 3.45 Tea Guenther Oestmann In the service of astrology: instruments belonging to Count Heinrich Rantzau (1526-1598) Final discussion Full fee: GBP 20; students and unwaged: GBP 10 (proof required). Lunch, Friday 13 March: GBP 10 Conference fee includes coffee, tea and biscuits on both days, entry to reception and exhibition on Friday and lunch on Saturday. Lunch on Friday 13 March is by ticket only and must be booked by 1 March. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Title (Prof., Dr, Mr, Mrs, Ms): Name (capital letters): Institution (if applicable): Home address: daytime tel no: I wish to attend the colloquium/*and the lunch on Friday 13 March/ and enclose my cheque for GBP made payable to "British Museum". *delete as appropriate Signed: Date: Please return completed form and payment to: Sovati Smith, Dept of Medieval and Later Antiquities, The British Museum, London WC1B 3DG tel. 0171 323 8626 fax 0171 323 8496 email MLA@British-museum.ac.uk ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 26, March 6, 1998 ........................................................................... Exhibitions ----------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 25, 16. Januar 1998, Item 5. Translations by Donald Bellunduno and the editor.) On May 11, 1998, during the conference of the Astronomische Gesellschaft in Gotha, two exhibits will be opened. In the Spiegelsaal [Mirror Hall] of the Forschungs- und Landesbibliothek Gotha [Research and State Library Gotha] in Schloss [Palace] Friedenstein, the exhibit "Gotha Astronomers" will be on display approximately until the 31st of August. The biographies of the most important astronomers and their work pertaining to the Gothaer observatories will be on display both in manuscript and publication form. The materials for the exhibit come from the library's collection. For more information about the library and its collection of globes, please see also ENHA 14, Item 2.) Opening hours of the library: Monday 1-5 pm, Tuesday-Thursday 9 am - 5 pm, Friday 10 am - 7 pm. With exception of lunch time (12 am - 1 pm) the exhibit can be visited up until 4 pm. Entrance is free of charge. For more information: Forschungs-und Landesbibliothek Gotha, Postfach 30, 99851 Gotha, Germany, Phone: (03621) 3080-0, Fax: (03621) 3080-38 "Sternstunden in Gotha" [Great Moments in Gotha] is the title of the second exhibit in the Museum der Natur [Natural Museum] in Gotha which is devoted to the history of the observatories. Observational instruments, as well as original documents from the Thueringer Staatsarchiv [Thuringian State Archives] in Gotha and from other institutions will be on display. The exhibition focuses on the astrometric research carried out at Gotha. Another item will be the first astronomical conference held at Gotha in 1798. The exhibit can be seen up until August 23. For more information: Museum der Natur, Parkallee 15, Gotha, Germany, Phone (03621) 8230-0. Opening hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10 am -5 pm At least up until the end of February 1998 the small exhibition "Astronomische Instrumente - gestern und heute" [Astronomical instruments - yesterday and today] will be on display in the Zeiss-Grossplanetarium in Berlin. Historical instruments from the collection of the Archenhold Observatory are among the items shown. For more information: Zeiss-Grossplanetarium, Prenzlauer Allee 80, D-10405 Berlin, Germany, Phone (030) 42 18 45 12 The Heimat- und Palitzsch-Museum [Local and Palitzsch Museum] in Dresden celebrates its 10th anniversary on June 6, 1998. For information: Heimat-und Palitzsch-Museum, Gamigstr. 24, D-01239 Dresden, Germany, Tel. (0351) 2843030 "Poder y Tecnologa en el Siglo XVI: Lovaina como centro de difusion de los instrumentos cientificos" [Power and Technology in the XVIth Century: Louvain as the centre of diffusion of scientific instruments] was the title of an exhibition at the Real Diputacion San Andres de Los Flamencos, Fundacion Carlos de Amberes, Claudio Coello 99, 28006 Madrid, Spain, which was open from November 25, 1997, to February 2, 1998. Several scientific books, engravings and manuscripts formed the backdrop for about 60 Flemish and Spanish scientific instruments from the 16th and the beginning of the 17th centuries. A catalogue is available in Spanish, possibly also in English. Further information: Phone +34 (9) 1 4352201, Fax +34 (9) 1 5781092. From April 16 to May 30, 1998 , the Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Hamburg [State and University Library in Hamburg] will house an exhibition displaying information and events on the life of Johann Georg Repsold. The exhibition was formed by Juergen Koch. Inauguration: April 15, 5 pm. Place: Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Hamburg, Von-Melle-Park 3, 20146 Hamburg, Germany, Phone (040) 4123-2233; for information, please contact Frau Dr. Engelhorn, Phone 4123-5857. Opening hours: Mo - Fr 9 am - 9 pm, Sa 10 am - 1 pm From May 28 and up until October 1998 the special exhibition "The Art of Mapmaking - of Globemaking - and of Instrument Making from the 16th to the 18th centuries", a choice of artifacts from the Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon, the State Library of Saxonia, Dresden, and the collections of Rudolf Schmidt and Heide Wohlschlaeger, Vienna, will be on display at the Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon in Dresden. Address: Staatlicher Mathematisch-Physikalischer Salon, Zwinger, D-01067 Dresden, Germany, Phone: +49 (3 51) 4 95 13 64 Opening hours: Mon - Wed, Fri - Son: 9.30 am - 5.00 pm ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 26, March 6, 1998 ........................................................................... Conferences 1998/99 ------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 26, 18. Februar 1998, Item 3. Partially translated by the editor.) Further conferences in the years 1998 and 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 17-19 April 1998, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Midwest Junto for the History of Science Contacts: Ed Layton, Chair of Local Arrangements, c/o Barbara Eastwold, Program in History of Science and Technology,148 Tate Laboratory of Physics, University of Minnesota, 116 Church Street SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA, E-mail: eastwold@physics.spa.umn.edu URL: http://www.physics.umn.edu/groups/hsci/junto.html 17-21 May 1998, Grand Junction, Colorado, USA The Seventy Fourth Annual Meeting of the Southwestern and Rocky Mountain Division, American Association for the Advancement of Science A scientific session "In Search of Extraterrestrial Life: Past, Present and Future" will take place on Wednesday, May 20. Contacts: Alexander A Gurshtein, E-mail: alex@MESA7.MESA.COLORADO.EDU 22-23 May 1998, Wittenberg, Germany "Geodesy, Surveying und Belief". The influence of religion and Reformation on education, science and technology. Working Meeting of the Fachgruppe Geschichte des Vermessungswesens [Division for the History of Surveying] in the Bildungswerk des Verbandes Deutscher Vermessungsingenieure [Education Foundation of the Association of German Surveying Engineers] Informationen: Dipl.-Ing. Heinz Juergen Lagoda, Westfaelische Str. 30, D-47169 Duisburg, Germany, Phone 0203/59 82 47 August 14-16, 1998, Paderborn, Germany International Conference on the History of Computing (ICHC'98) Contacts: Prof. Dr. Raul Rojas, ICHC'98, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Takustr. 9, 14195 Berlin, Germany, Tel.: 49/30/83875100, FAX: 49/30/83875109, E-mail: rojas@inf.fu-berlin.de URL: http://www.inf.fu-berlin.de/~widiger/ICHC/ 14 September 1998, Heidelberg, Germany Splinter Meeting "History of Astronomy" in the framework of the Annual Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft. The Annual Meeting of the AG will be held in Heidelberg on occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Landessternwarte [State Astronomical Observatory] Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl (1898 to 1998). Coordinator: Dr. Reinhold Bien, Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Moenchhofstr. 12-14, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany, Phone: (06221) 405-120, Fax: (06221) 405-297, E-mail: reinhold@relay.ari.uni-heidelberg.de URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/treffen1998.html September 17-20, 1998, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Mephistos 1998: 17th Annual Graduate Student Meeting for the History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science, Technology, Medicine, and related fields Contacts: Mark Largent, Program in History of Science and Technology, Tate Laboratory of Physics, 116 Church Street S.E., Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA, Tel.: (612) 626-8722, Fax: (612) 624-4578, E-mail: larg0007@tc.umn.edu URL: http://home.att.net/~Olorin/mephistos/meph2.htm 28-29 September 1998, Stockerau, Austria Annual Meeting of the Working Group for Sundials in the Austrian Astronomical Society (Arbeitsgruppe Sonnenuhren im Oesterreichischen Astronomischen Verein) Information: Frau Dr. Ilse Fabian, Hietzinger Hauptstr. 152/2/8, A-1130 Vienna, Austria, Phone: 01 - 713 44 23/Kl. 29; Mag. Franz Vrabec, Giessergasse 4/16, A-1090 Vienna, Austria, Phone: 01-408 40 98 (at evenings only) 10 October 1998, Weida, Germany Colloquium about Georg Samuel Doerffel Information: Georg-Samuel-Doerffel-Gymnasium, Ernst-Thaelmann-Str. 23, D-07570 Weida, Germany, Phone: (036603) 62272 15-17 January 1999, Vinius-Kaunas, Lithuania 19th Baltic Conference on the History of Science Among the subjects: History of mathematics and astronomy Language: English, other languages in special cases (in workshops if motivated by the subject matter) Deadline: May 1, 1998 Contacts: Prof. J.A. Krikstopaitis, Saltoniskiu 58, 2600 Vilnius, Lithania, Fax: 370-2-751898, 370-2-749719, e-mail: lfsi@ktl.mii.lt ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 26, March 6, 1998 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 26, 18. Februar 1998, Items 4 and 5. Partial translations by the editor.) Baiada, Enrica; Bonoli, Fabrizio; Braccesi, Alessandro: Museo della Specola. Catalogo. Italiona - Inglese. Bologna: Bologna University Press, 1995. Pp. 204, numerous illus., partly in colour, ISBN 88-7794-073-5, Lire 40,000 [Catalogue of the museum of the Bologna Astronomical Observatory. With an introduction on the history of astronomy in Bologna. All texts in Italian and English. Distribution: Editrice Compositori s.r.l., via Stalingrado 97/2, I-40128 Bologna, tel. (0039) 51 327811, fax 327877. Credit cards are accepted.] Bialas, Volker: Vom Himmelsmythos zum Weltgesetz. Eine Kulturgeschichte der Astronomie [From the celestial myth to the world law. A cultural history of astronomy; in German] Wien: Ibera Verlag, 1998. ca. 600 pp., ISBN 3-900436-52-5, DM 75.00 (hb) Brack-Bernsen, Lis: Zur Entstehung der babylonischen Mondtheorie : Beobachtung und theoretische Berechnung von Mondphasen. [On the origin of the Babylonian lunar theory : Observations and theoretical calculations of lunar phases; in German] Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1997. VIII, 142 pp., ISBN 3-515-07089-3, DM 48.00 (pb) (Boethius, vol. 40) [Also: Frankfurt (Main), University, Habilitations-Schrift (Dissertation for the Venia Legendi), 1997.] Chapman, Allan: Astronomical instruments and their users. Aldershot: Variorum, 1996. Pp. 332, 23 x 15 cm, ISBN 0-860-78584-X, GBP 52.50 (hb) [Collection of previously published papers.] Review: C.Jenkins: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1140, 318-319 Christianson, Gale E.: Edwin Hubble: Mariner of the Nebulae. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1996. Pp. 420, ISBN 0226105210, $ 18.95 (pb) Christianson, Gale E.: Edwin Hubble: Mariner of the Nebulae. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing, 1997. Pp. xi, 420, 24 x 16.5 cm, ISBN 0-7503-0423-5, GBP 19.50 (hb) Review: I.Howard-Duff: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 107 (1997) 5, 288-289 Review: D.Stickland: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1140, 325-326 Cocks, E.E.; Cocks, J.C.: Who's who on the Moon. A biographical dictionary of lunar nomenclature. Greensboro, NC (USA): Tudor Publishers, 1995. Pp. ix, 600, ISBN 0-936389-27-3, US$ 45.00 [Biographical sketches, 1,586 entries. Appendix: Key lists, including the women who have been honored, the countries of birth and the professions of all the honorees; two lists of lunar features by size and by location; maps of the Moon.] Doering, Detlef: Der Briefwechsel zwischen Gottfried Kirch und Adam A. Kochanski : 1680-1694. Ein Beitrag zur Astronomiegeschichte in Leipzig und zu den deutsch-polnischen Wissenschaftsbeziehungen. [The correspondence between Gottfried Kirch and Adam A. Kochanski : 1680-1694. A contribution to the history of astronomy in Leipzig and the German/ Polish scientific relations; in German] Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1997. 94 pp., 3 illus., ISBN 3-05-003223-5, ca. DM 48.00 (pb) (Abhandlungen der Saechsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, Philologisch-Historische Klasse, Bd. 74, H. 5) Fischer, Daniel; Duerbeck, Hilmar W.: Hubble: A new window to the Universe. Berlin, Heidelberg, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. Pp. x, 175, ISBN 0-387-94672-1, DM 48.00 [Translation of: Hubble: Ein neues Fenster zum All (1995); contains also a short history of telescopes in general and of the HST.] Review: J.Rendtel: Sterne 72 (1996) 5, 306 Forbes, Eric G.; Murdin, Lesley; Willmoth, Frances (Eds.): The correspondence of John Flamsteed, first Astronomer Royal. Vol. 2: 1682-1703. Bristol: Institute of Physics Publishing, 1997. Pp. xlvii, 1095, 25 x 19 cm, ISBN 0-750-30391-3, $ 280.00, GBP 140.00 (hb) Review: D.W.Hughes: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1139, 234 Review: T.Mahoney: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 117 (1997) 4, 223 Grant, Edward: Planets, Stars, and Orbs. The Medieval Cosmos, 1200-1687. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. xxiii, 816 pp., 16 x 30 cm; ill., bibl., index, GBP 45.00/$ 69.95 (hb) Review: R.C.Brooks: J. Roy. Astron. Soc. Can. 91 (1997) 5, 233-234 Hentschel, Klaus: The Einstein Tower : an intertexture of dynamic construction, relativity theory, and astronomy. Translated by Ann M. Hentschel. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1997. Pp. xiv, 226, ill., bibliographical references (p. [191]-219), index, ISBN 0-8047-2824-0, $ 45.00 (hb) (Writing science) [Extended and revised English translation of "Der Einstein-Turm", 1992] Hernschier, Wolfgang: Ich wollte, ich waere ein guter Schuhflicker: Das unglueckliche Leben des bayerischen Astronomen Johann Nepomuck Fischer (1749-1805). Eine dokumentarische Biographie. [I wished I was a good cobbler. The unfortunate live of the Bavarian astronomer Johann Nepomuck Fischer (1749-1805). A documentary biography; in German] Bassum: Verlag f. Geschichte d. Naturwiss. u. d. Technik, 1997. 77, XXIII pp., ISBN 3-928186-34-5, DM 25.00 (pb) Hoskin, Michael A. (Ed.): The Cambridge illustrated history of astronomy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. Pp. ix, 392, 26 x 21 cm, ISBN 0-521-41158-0, GBP 24.95 (hb) Review: A.J.Kinder: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 107 (1997) 2, 94-95 Review: P.D.Hingley: Astronomy and Geophysics 38 (1997) 1, 32 Review: R.Argyle: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1140, 323 Lankford, John; Slavings, Ricky L.: American astronomy : community, careers, and power, 1859-1940. John Lankford ; with the assistance of Ricky L. Slavings. Chicago, London: The University of Chicago Press, 1997. Pp. xxvi, 447, ill. ; 24 cm, ISBN 0-226-46886-0, $ 65.00 (hb) Lorenz, Martina (Ed.): Im Turm, im Kabinett, im Labor. Streifzuege durch die Regensburger Wissenschaftsgeschichte. [In the tower, in the chamber, in the laboratory. Excursions through the history of sciences at Regensburg.] With contributions by Michaelo Haberkorn, Martin Kirschke, Michael Klein, Martina Lorenz, Petra Schachtner, Markus Tanne, Willi Unglaub, Sandra Wilde und Klaus Zeitler. Regensburg: Universitaetsverlag Regensburg, 1995. 183 pp., ISBN 3-930480-60-3, DM 19.80 (pb) [Contains also several remarks on the history of astronomy, as well as a chapter on "Johannes Kepler in Regensburg".] Luminet, Jean-Pierre (Ed.): Alexandre Friedmann, Georges Lemaitre : "Essais de Cosmologie". Preceded by Jean-Pierre Luminet : "L'invention du Big Bang". Paris: Ed. du Seuil, 1997. Pp. 320, ISBN 2-02-023284-7, 169 French Francs [Presentation, translation and comments on "The universe as space and time" by A. Friedmann (1923), Friedmann's cosmological articles (1922, 1924), cosmological papers by Georges Lemaitre (1927, 1931, 1946), various letters and historical material. General introduction by J.-P. Luminet. In French.] Mett, Rudolf: Regiomontanus. Wegbereiter des neuen Weltbildes. [Regiomontanus. Pioneer of the new world view; in German] Stuttgart, Leipzig: B.G.Teubner Verlagsgesellschaft, 1996. 204 pp., 38 illus., ISBN 3-8154-2510-7, DM 24.80 (pb) (Series: Einblicke in die Wissenschaft : Wissenschaftsgeschichte) [also: Zuerich: vdf, Hochschulverlag an der ETH. ISBN 3-7281-2311-0] Review: H.-J.Felber: Astron. Nachr. 318 (1997) 3, 172 North, John D.: Viewegs Geschichte der Astronomie und Kosmologie. Braunschweig, Wiesbaden: Friedrich Vieweg & Sohn Verlagsgesellschaft, 1997. XIII, 463 pp., ISBN 3-528-06644-X, DM 78.00 (hb) [German translation of: "Fontana history of astronomy and cosmology", 1994] Review: T.Buehrke: Physik in unserer Zeit 28 (1997) 5, VIII-IX Schaldach, Karlheinz: Roemische Sonnenuhren. Eine Einfuehrung in die antike Gnomonik. Geschichte und Vielfalt der roemischen Sonnenuhren. [Roman sundials. An introduction into ancient gnomonics. History and variety of Roman sundials; in German] Frankfurt am Main: Verlag Harri Deutsch, 1997. 123 pp., 66 illus., tables, ISBN 3-8171-1537-7, DM 29.80 (pb) [This books gives an insight into the history and variety of the types of Roman sundials, as well as into the scientific foundations needed for an assessment of a Roman sundial. The possibilities and limits of a mathematical analyses are demonstrated with the help of selected examples.] Schroeder, Wilfried; Treder, Hans-Juergen (Ed.): Theoretical meteorology, weather prediction, cosmology, and general applications. Selected scientific papers by Hans Ertel. Bremen-Roennebeck, 1995. Pp. 156 (Newsletter of the Interdivisional commission on history of IAGA, No. 29) [p. 108-129: H.-J. Treder, W. Schroeder: Hans Ertel und die Kosmologie. p. 130-154: H. Ertel's publications in astronomy. All these publications are in German.] Taton, Rene; Wilson, Curtis (Eds.): Planetary astronomy from the Renaissance to the rise of astrophysics. Part B: The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Cambridge, New York, Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Pp. xiii, 281, ISBN 0-521-35168-5, GBP 45.00, US$ 69.95 (hb) (The General History of Astronomy, Vol. 2B) Review: S.J.Dick: Sky & Telescope 92 (1996) 2, 54-55 Review: M.Connors: J. Roy. Astron. Soc. Can. 90 (1996) 5/6, 365-366 Thurston, Hugh: Early astronomy. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1996. Pp. X, 268, 23.5 x 15.5 cm, ISBN 0-387-94822-8, DM 48.00, GBP 22.50 (pb) [Paperback edition; first published in 1994.] Review: A.F.Aveni: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1139, 244-245 Zenkert, Arnold: Bruno Hans Buergel (1875-1948). Ein Lebensbild. [A biography; in German] Velten: Reinhardt Becker Verlag, 1996. VIII, 221 pp., ISBN 3-89597-267-3, DM 25.00 (pb) Review: M.Iven: PUTZ. Die Potsdamer Universitaetszeitung (1996) 5, 26 Review: M.Iven: Sterne 72 (1996) 5, 304-305 Zenkert, Arnold: Zaehl die heitren Stunden nur: Sinnsprueche auf Sonnenuhren. [Count the bright hours only: aphorisms on sundials; in Latin/German] Illus. by Rudolf Peschel. 4th ed. Berlin: Eulenspiegel - Das Neue Berlin, 1996. 96 pp., ISBN 3-359-00317-9, DM 14.80 (hb) ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Silke Ackermann (London, UK), Volker Bialas (Munich, Germany), Juergen Blunck (Berlin, Germany), Lis Brack-Bernsen (Regensburg, Germany), Peter Brosche (Daun, Germany), Fabrizio Bonoli (Bologna, Italy), Detlef Doering (Leipzig, Germany), Hilmar W. Duerbueck (Muenster, Germany), Heino Eelsalu (Tartu, Estonia), Mrs. Engelhorn (Hamburg, Germany), Klaus Hentschel (Goettingen, Germany), Klaus-Dieter Herbst (Jena, Germany), Cornelia Hopf (Gotha, Germany), Juergen Koch (Hamburg, Germany), Siegfried Koge (Dresden, Germany), Heinz Juergen Lagoda (Duisburg, Germany), Jean-Pierre Luminet (Meudon, France), Guenther Oestmann (Hamburg, Germany), Elvira Pfitzner (Chemnitz, Germany), Karin Reich (Hamburg, Germany), Klaus Schillinger (Dresden, Germany), Oliver Schwarz (Gotha, Germany), Karl Schwarzinger (Sistrans, Austria), Museum der Natur Gotha. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 27
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 27, May 8, 1998 * * * * A translation of * * * * ELEKTRONISCHE MITTEILUNGEN ZUR ASTRONOMIEGESCHICHTE * * Nr. 29, 30. April 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * * Translated by: Donald Bellunduno * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- Editorial 1. Reimar Luest Grant 2. Conference Announcement: North American Sundial Society Meeting 3. Conference Announcement: On Time: History, Science, Commemoration 4. Tributes to Fritz Zwicky 5. Exhibitions 6. Conferences 1998 7. Other Events 8. [Omitted] 9. Antiquarian's Astronomy Catalog Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Editorial --------- No. 25 of the Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) was the first one being not a complete translation of Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte (EMA). Since then, EMA Nos. 26 to 29 and ENHA No. 26 appeared. Thanks to Donald Bellunduno, No. 27 is again a complete translation, with exception of the omitted Item 8 "Author Needed", which was intended for German readers only. Wolfgang R. Dick ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Reimar Luest Grant ------------------ The Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science offers the Reimar Luest Grant The time span of the grant is from 1 October 1998 up until the 30 September 2000. It recognizes the efforts of a recent graduate with outstanding accomplishments in the field of the history of science, and was named after the former president of the Max Planck Society Professor Dr. Reimar Luest. The grant will be given for a scientific investigation on "The history of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics". The grant can be applied for by students from all nationalities. Priority will be given to handicaped with equal qualification. We encourage applications by women. The amount of the grant is 3,300.00 DM per month. It is expected that the project will be carried out at the institute in Berlin. Candidates are required to provide a curriculum vitae, a list of publications, a short sample text (for example, a chapter of the dissertation) and a proposal for two referees. The material is due before 31 May 1998. Please send all materials to: Max-Planck-Institut fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Abt. I Wilhelmstrabe 44, D-10117 Berlin, Germany http://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement North American Sundial Society Meeting -------------------------------------- Seattle, USA, 11-13 September 1998 The fourth annual meeting of the North American Sundial Society (NASS) will be held for the first time on the West Coast. A group of Seattle diallists promise to put on a great meeting in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. The meeting will begin with an informal get-together on the evening of Friday, 11 September, and continue with activities the entire weekend of 12-13 September (the weekend after Labor Day). September is a lovely month in Seattle, one of the three months that are *not* part of the 9-month Seattle rain festival. The meeting will be held in the new Physics/Astronomy Building of the University of Washington (check http://www.washington.edu to set the scene and www.phys.washington.edu/Department/tour/ for the building, including its large wall dial). The University is on the shore of Lake Washington and about five miles from downtown Seattle, five miles from Puget Sound, and two hours' drive from the Olympic and Cascade Mts. Detailed plans are still developing, but preliminary ideas include a Swap Meet and Show & Tell session, a bus tour of ~10-12 dials in Seattle (For a list as of 1996 see www.sundials.co.uk/~seattle.htm), a banquet with live Renaissance music on the topic of time and sundials (!), a software demonstration session, and the usual talks on all aspects of gnomonics. For further information, contact Woody Sullivan at 206-543-7773 (daytime) or 206-784-1052 (evenings) or woody@astro.washington.edu or 6532 Palatine Ave N, Seattle, WA 98103 USA. Proposals for papers are now being accepted, whether in oral or display format. The final deadline will be July 15, but expressions of interest at this time will greatly aid in planning. Please send your title, a brief summary (100 words max), proposed length of time (if oral) or required display space, and any audio-visual needs other than an overhead projector, VCR, or slide projector (all of which will be available). We also plan on having a swap/sales session of gnomonica (dials, books, gadgets) - please let us know if you plan to bring more than a small amount to this session. We will try to accomodate all who wish to contribute, but time constraints may mean that some proposed oral papers will have to become display type, and others will have to be shortened. This meeting is open to nonmembers, but we encourage you to join. NASS was established in 1994, currently has several hundred members (including many outside of North America), and publishes a quarterly journal, "The Compendium." For more information about NASS and membership, contact: Sara Schechner Genuth (Secretary), sgenuth@aip.org or 1142 Loxford Terrace, Silver Spring, MD 20901 There is the possibility that we may be able to charge no registration fee for persons from overseas. Please inquire if you are interested in this possibility. Prof. Woodruff T. Sullivan, III woody@astro.washington.edu Dept. of Astronomy, Box 351580 tel. 206-543-7773 Univ. of Washington fax 206-685-0403 Seattle, WA 98195 USA ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement On Time: History, Science, Commemoration ---------------------------------------- CALL FOR PAPERS On Time: History, Science, Commemoration at National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside (NMGM), Liverpool, UK a British Society for the History of Science (BSHS), Royal Historical Society (RHS) and NMGM conference 16-19 September 1999 The approach of the millenium has heightened awareness of the conventions and cultures of time. But what is time? This question has been of growing interest amongst historians. Their research is markedly interdisciplinary, spilling over the boundaries between social, economic and cultural historians, and historians of science, technology, medicine and mathematics. 'On Time', organised by the British Society for the History of Science (BSHS), Royal Historical Society (RHS) and NMGM responds to this interdisciplinarity. The conference will be held at the NMGM (which includes the Merseyside Maritime Museum, in the heart of Liverpool's historic Albert Dock), a holder of a highly significant collection of timepieces. Papers with a wide interest and historiographical scope are invited. Possible sessions include: Beginnings and Origin Stories Commemoration Maritime Time Timetables and Technology Workplaces and Time Lifetimes and Servitude Units of Time Calendars Time and Political Economies Scientific Instruments and Time Cultures of Time and Space Religion and Time Nostalgia Rhythms and Cycles in the Natural Sciences Evolution Relativity Anthropology and Time Past-Futures Ends of Time Immortality Roughly thirty minutes will be given for each paper chosen. Abstracts of 50-100 words should be sent before 1 September 1998 to either: Dr William J. Ashworth (BSHS) Department of Economic and Social History, The University of Liverpool, 11 Abercromby Square, Liverpool, L69 3BX, e-mail: wja@liverpool.ac.uk or Dr Roland Quinault (RHS) School of Historical, Philosophical and Contemporary Studies, Faculty of HTE, University of North London, 166- 220 Holloway Road, London N7 8DB, England Interested speakers will be informed by the end of September 1998 as to whether their paper has been accepted. The On Time programme committee are: Dr Jon Agar (University of Manchester), Dr Jeff Hughes (University of Manchester), Dr Roland Quinault (University of North London), Dr William J. Ashworth (Liverpool University) ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Tributes to Fritz Zwicky ------------------------ On the memory of his 100th birthday, the astrophysicist and morphologist Fritz Zwicky will be honored in several different venues in Switzerland. The Fritz Zwicky Endowment is sponsoring two events: On the 14th of February, his birthday, a memorial celebration took place in Zwicky's home town of Mollis (Kanton Glarus). On the 14th of November a morphological treatment of the theme "unemployment" will be demonstrated during a conference in Glarus (Prof. R. Groner). The town museum in Mollis has a long standing memorial exhibit. Opening times: Tuesday: 3 pm - 5 pm, or after arrangement: +41 (0)55 6123210/6123860. During school vacation, the exhibit is closed. Information on the museum can also be obtained by calling +41 (0)55 612 10 32. On the 9th of April, from 8 pm to 9 pm, the Swiss radio station DRS1 repeated the broadcast "Fritz Zwicky, Explorer of the heavens", a document from 1968, showing Zwicky also as a witty man and raconteur. In an interview, that was done over 30 years ago with Otmar Hersche, Zwicky reports in the Glarus dialect about his work in astrophysics in Pasadena, of his successes and failures in rocketry, his many famous acquaintances, and on his international contracts. Sources: Neue Zuercher Zeitung, 14./15.2.1998, p. 30 ("Schweiz); http://www.drs.ch/site/drs1/programm/19980406/092000.html http://www.fridolin.ch/unterhaltung02.htm http://www.tbw.ch/ksgl/Kultur.htm http://www.glarusnet.ch/kultur/ku_htm/ku_samus.htm ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Exhibitions ----------- From the 3rd of May to the 21st of June 1998 the Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkunde und Vorgeschichte [State Museum for Natural History and Pre-History] of Oldenburg will have on display the exhibit "'Welt erforschen - Welten konstruieren' [Exploring and constructing the world]. Experimentational culture in physics from the 16th to the 19th centuries". In five separate clusters, the exhibit will portray information on the lives of individual scientists. Among those depicted are Aristotle, Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Giordano Bruno, Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler, Newton, John Herschel and Carl Friedrich Gauss. All will be portrayed in the historical context of their time. On hand, physical experiments will be performed which will attempt to duplicate and give form to the many contributions these scientists gave to the world. Among the instruments which also be on display, a copy of a sextant used by Tycho Brahe. From "Changing world view" the exhibit will lead through "Electricity in the salons" to the "French Revolution", and from the "Romantic awareness of nature" to "Measuring and controlling the world". Opening: Sunday, 3 May, 11:15 am Opening lecture: Prof. Dr. Gudrun Wolfschmidt, Universitaet Hamburg On Thursday, the 7th May, from 3.00 pm up until 5.00 pm, the museum invites to a guided tour. Opening times: Tuesday - Thursday 9 am - 5 pm, Friday 9 am - 3 pm, Saturday/Sunday 10 am - 5 pm. Information: Staatliches Museum fuer Naturkunde und Vorgeschichte Oldenburg, Tel.: 0441/9244-300. E-mail: Museum@logiplan.de URL: http://www.logiplan.de/museum/ (see escpecially http://www.logiplan.de/museum/info/sonder.html for further information). "'Lines of Faith' - Instruments and Religious Practice in Islam" is the tile of an exhibition running from 10 March to 27 June 1998 at the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford. The 1998 Student Exhibition displays Islamic scientific instruments from this museum, which houses one of the best collections of this type in the world. These instruments are inscribed with many elaborate engravings, which show that they not only had a scientific role - they also played an integral role in religious practice. Art and scientific knowledge were cultivated intensively in the Islamic world during its first six centuries, especially in the 9th and 10th centuries AD. In Islam, the study and practice of astronomy and astrology were of practical importance and significance for two reasons - the study of the cosmos could be seen as part of the revelation of the true meaning of the Qur'an and of God's universe, and secondly for practical reasons related to the rituals of religious life. The Qur'an states that Muslims must pray in the direction of Mecca at certain times of the day, and fast during the Holy Month. Each of these requirements involves complex astronomical and mathematical problems, which led to the production of scientific instruments with a clear religious function, displaying 'Lines of Faith'. Opening hours: 12 noon - 4 p.m., Tuesday to Saturday, free admission. Location of the museum: at the very centre of Oxford, on Broad Street, next to the Sheldonian Theatre and directly opposite Blackwell's Bookshop. Address: Museum of the History of Science, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3AZ, Great Britain, phone (+44) [0]1865 277280, e-mail: museum@mhs.ox.ac.uk More information: http://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/students/97to98/exhibits/ The exhibition "Peter the Great in England 1698" is running at the National Maritime Museum, London, from 2 April to 27 September 1998. It commemorates the four months Peter the Great spent in England from January to April 1698, and focus specifically on Tsar Peter's stay in Deptford, where he learnt about shipbuilding in the adjacent Royal Dockyards and astronomy at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich. Opening times: 10:00-17:00 hours daily. Last admission 16:30 Enquiries: Miss Catherine Sones, Research Group Executive, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, SE10 9NF, UK, Tel: +44 (0)181 312 6716, Fax: +44 (0)181 312 6722, E-mail: cesone@nmm.ac.uk URL of the museum: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/ "'An University Within Ourselves'. Science in Cambridge in the Eighteenth Century" is on display at the Whipple Museum of the History of Science until the foreseeable future. This exhibition deals mainly with astronomy and natural philosophy in the various Cambridge colleges, in particular in Trinity and St John's College. Further details: Whipple Museum of the History of Science, Department of the History of Science, Free School Lane, Cambridge CB2 3RH, Great Britain, Tel: 01223 334545, Fax: 01223 334554, E-mail: lct1001@cam.ac.uk Source: Scientific Instrument Society, Bulletin No. 56, March 1998, p. 36. ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Conferences 1998 ---------------- Further conferences in the years 1998 were already listed in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html 12-14 June, Dresden, Germany Conference "The photographic pioneer Hermann Krone. Photography and devices. Culture of pictures and photographic technique in the 19 century" Hermann Krone (1827-1916) took also astronomical pictures. The conference program contains also a lecture by Prof. Dr. Klaus-Guenter Steinert on "The beginnings of photographic astronomy in Dresden" and other lectures related to history of science and technology. Place: Kulturrathaus, Koenigstr. 15 Conference fee: 100 DM Reservations up until 1 May: Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Photographie, Rheingasse 8-12, D-50676 Koeln, Tel. 0221/9 23 20 69, Fax 0221/9 23 20 70 26-28 June, Feucht near Nuremberg, Germany Celebration exhibit: 75 years "Rockets to the planets, and into space" by Prof. Hermann Oberth 1923, and colloquium on the History of Space Travel Information: Hermann-Oberth-Raumfahrt-Museum e.V., Tel.: 09128/3502, Fax: 09128/14920 ........................................................................... Item 7 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Other Events ------------ 26 May, Dresden, Germany Symposium of the Urania Dresden honouring Manfred von Ardenne (1907-1997) Among the lectures: Ardenne - the Youth und the Heavens (Prof. Dr. Dieter B. Herrmann) Place and Time: Studiotheater des Kulturpalastes, 7 pm Entrance fee: 7.00 DM 20 June 1998, Potsdam, Germany Open house day for the Astrophysical Institute in Potsdam Place and Time: Observatory Babelsberg, An der Sternwarte 16, D-14482 Potsdam, Tel. +49-331-74990; 10 am - 6 pm Among the displays for visitors: History of astronomy in Potsdam/Berlin Further information: http://www.obs.aip.de/Astro-WWW/AIP_tag.html http://kosmos.aip.de/~lie/publications/plj351.html 6 July 1998, Munich, Germany Colloquium in the German Museum. Prof. Dr. Helge Kragh, Aarhus/Denmark: National and scientific styles in mid-20th-century cosmology. Place and Time: Filmsaal im Bibliotheksbau des Deutschen Museums, Museumsinsel 1, 80538 Munich; 4:30 pm Up-to-date information via the Internet: http://www.deutsches-museum.de/forsch/wissen/kolloq.htm ........................................................................... Item 8 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Author Needed ------------- Omitted here (intended for German readers only). ........................................................................... Item 9 ENHA No. 27, May 8, 1998 ........................................................................... Antiquarian's Astronomy Catalog ------------------------------- In February 1998 the antiquarian Gerhard Renner issued as No. 86 "Astronomy" a 92-page illustrated catalog of old to nearly new books and journals in the fields of astronomy, astrophysics and space flight (62 pages), geodesy, cartography, geophysics, theory of relativity, meteorology, scientific instruments and clocks. For many of the 1861 items bibliographical details are given. Some examples: Fontenelle, Dialoge ueber die Mehrheit der Welten, Berlin 1780 (DM 400.00); Gauss, Theorie der Bewegung der Himmelskoerper, welche in Kegelschnitten die Sonne umlaufen, Hannover 1865 (DM 1450.00); Ley, Vorstoss ins Weltall, Wien 1949 (DM 65.00). [The catalog contains also entries in other languages.] Free copies of the catalog may be requested from: Antiquariat Gerhard Renner, Postfach 1648, D-72439 Albstadt, Germany, email: buch@antiquar-renner.com Gerd Kueveler ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- In addition to the authors, we also thank: Jon Agar (Great Britain), William John Ashworth (Liverpool), Peter Brosche (Daun), Klaus-Dieter Herbst (Jena), Jochen Schneider (Berlin), Klaus-Guenter Steinert (Dresden). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick Translator: Donald Bellunduno All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 28
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 28, May 20, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Conference Announcement: Peter the Great and the West: New Perspectives 2. The 1998 Annual Meeting of the Antique Telescope Society 3. Second International Conference on "The Inspiration of Astronomical Phenomena" ("INSAP II") 4. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 28, May 20, 1998 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement Peter the Great and the West: New Perspectives ---------------------------------------------- International Conference, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, 9-11 July 1998 This conference is one of a number of events being held in the UK to mark the three hundredth anniversary of the visit to Britain in 1698 of Tsar Peter I of Russia (reigned 1682-1725), during which he learnt also about astronomy at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich. It has been organised jointly by the National Maritime Museum and the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, the University of London's specialist institution for the study of Central and Eastern Europe and the former USSR. The conference will explore British-Russian relations in the area of shipbuilding and navigation, but will also address broader questions of modernisation and Westernisation associated with Peter's reforms. It will be hosted by eminent lecturers from Russia, the UK and the USA, Subjects to be covered include `Russia and Europe', `Peter - the man and his methods', and `the Petrine legacy and its relevance to today's Russia'. Peter the Great and the West will be of interest to historians, diplomats, maritime and military specialists, and anyone interested in Russia's past and present. The conference coincides with the exhibition, Peter the Great in England 1698, which will be running at the National Maritime Museum from 2 April to 27 September 1998 (see ENHA 27, Item 5). The Conference begins with an Introductory Lecture in the early evening of Thursday 9 July, and closes at 4.45pm on Saturday 11 July. In addition, a Conference Dinner will take place on Friday 10 July. Conference information: There will be a charge for registration at the Peter the Great Conference: GBP 60.00. Conference Dinner Tickets: GBP 35.00. For a conference leaflet with full booking details contact: Catherine Sones, Research Group Executive, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London, SE10 9NF, UK, Tel: +44 (0)181 312 6716, Fax: +44 (0)181 312 6722, E-mail: cesone@nmm.ac.uk For more information, see also: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/rcs/conf/peter.html ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 28, May 20, 1998 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement The 1998 Annual Meeting of the Antique Telescope Society -------------------------------------------------------- The 1998 Annual Meeting of the Antique Telescope Society will be held October 23-25 at Harvard University. Activities include paper sessions, keynote address by Owen Gingerich, invited lectures by Barbara Welther and Peter Hingley, tours of the Harvard College Observatory, the Harvard Collection of Historic Scientific Instruments, and other sites of astronomical and historical interest, a display of rare books on astronomy in Widener Library, and displays of instruments by members. For further information, contact the Secretary of the Society. Antique Telescope Society Walter H. Breyer, Secretary 1275 Poplar Grove Lane Cumming, GA 30041 e-mail: whbreyer@mindspring.com [Provided by Peter Abrahams, e-mail: telscope@europa.com] ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 28, May 20, 1998 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement Second International Conference on "The Inspiration of Astronomical ------------------------------------------------------------------- Phenomena" ("INSAP II") ----------------------- 7-14 January 1999, The Mediterranean Island of Malta The sky makes up half of mankind's world; the Earth around us makes up the other half. This meeting will explore mankind's fascination with the astronomical phenomena that define the sky - the lights in the sky, by day and by night - which have been a strong and often dominant element in human life and culture. Scholars from a variety of disciplines (including Archaeology, Art, Classics, History and Prehistory, Mythology and Folklore, Philosophy, the Physical Sciences, and Religion) will attend "INSAP II" to discuss the impacts astronomical phenomena have had on mankind. Presentations by attendees will be grouped under four main topics: Literature; Art; Myth and Religion; History and Prehistory. The Conference will allow the attendees to address the many and variegated cultural impacts of the perceptions of the day and night skies, providing a mechanism for a broad group of artists, historians, philosophers, and scientists to meet, compare notes, and have the chance to ask those questions of each other about their work which may have been lying fallow for decades. Attendance will be by invitation from among those applying. Full information on the Conference and an application form can be obtained by contacting the Organizing Committee, or from our Website (URL: http://ethel.as.arizona.edu/~white/insap.htm). This Conference is the second to be held on this general theme. Details of the first meeting (held at Castel Gandolfo, Vatican State, 27 June-2 July 1994), and the publication references that include many of the papers presented there, may be found also at the above Website (URL as given). This Conference is sponsored by the OTS Foundation and the Vatican Observatory. The Organizing Committee: Professor Raymond E. White, Steward Observatory, University of Arizona (Chair) (rwhite@as.arizona.edu) Rev. George V. Coyne, S. J., The Vatican Observatory (gcoyne@as.arizona.edu) Dr. Rolf M. Sinclair, National Science Foundation, Arlington VA (rsinclai@nsf.gov) Prof. Frank Ventura, Malta (fven@cis.um.edu.mt) ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 28, May 20, 1998 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 27, 3. Maerz 1998, Item 3. Partial translations by the editor.) Academy Building. The heart of Leiden University. Leiden: Leiden University, Press and Information Services, 1996. Pp. 16, NLG 5.00 [A short history of and guide through the Academy Building, now the main building of Leiden University, and the small University Museum inside. The use of the building as an observatory in the 17th century is shortly described. Distribution: Press and Information Services, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9500, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands.] Baum, Richard; Sheehan, William: In search of planet Vulcan. The ghost in Newton's clockwork universe. New York: Plenum Press, 1997. Pp. xiv, 310, 21.5 x 15 cm, ISBN 0-306-45567-6, $ 28.95 (hb) Review: P.Moore: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 117 (1997) 4, 222 Review: E.A.Whitaker: Sky & Telescope 94 (1997) 4, 68-70 Review: P.Moore: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1141, 382-383 Chown, Marcus: Afterglow of creation: From the fireball to the discovery of cosmic ripples. Mill Valley, CA: University Science Books, 1996. Pp. xii, 222, 16.5 x 24 cm, ISBN 0-935702-40-7, $ 28.50, GBP 19.95 (hb) [Popular account of the discovery of the cosmic microwave background radiation and thirty years of progress in the field. The book begins with the 1920s and culminates with the flight of the COBE satellite.] Review: D.M.F.Chapman: J. Roy. Astr. Soc. Can. 91 (1997) 3, 141-142 Cornelius, Geoffrey: Was Sternbilder erzaehlen. Die Mythologie der Sterne. [What constellations are telling. The mythology of the stars. - In German] Stuttgart: Franckh-Kosmos Verlag, 1997. 176 p., 88 illus., 16 x 23,5 cm, ISBN 3-440-07495-1, DM 29.80 (pb) Datnow, Claire L.: Edwin Hubble : Discovering of Galaxies. Springfield, NJ: Enslow Publishing, 1997. Pp. 128, illus., ISBN 0894909347, $ 18.95 (hb) (Great minds of science) [Juvenile book. Chronology: p. 113-115. Includes bibliographical references (p. 125) and index.] Diacu, F.; Holmes, P.: Celestial encounters. The origins of chaos and stability. Princeton (New Jersey, USA): Princeton University Press, 1996. Pp. xvii, 233, ISBN 0-691-02743-9, US$ 24.95 [Account of celestial mehanics, ranging from the birth of chaos theory to the latest work on the stability of the solar system. The book is leavened by anecdotes about the pioneering scientists and their discoveries.] Dimitrijevic, Milan S.; Milogradov-Turin, Jelena; Popovic, Luka C. (Eds.): Razvoj astronomije kod srba. Developments of astronomy among Serbs. Beograd (Belgrade): Astronomical Observatory, 1997. Pp. 276 (Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade, No. 56) [Proceedings of a conference, Belgrade, 7-9 April 1997. In Serbian, abstracts in English.] Edmondson, Frank K.: AURA and its US National Observatories. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. Pp. 367, 25 x 18 cm, ISBN 0-521-55345-8, GBP 65, $ 80 (hb) Review: D.Stickland: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1140, 322-323 Eisfeld, Rainer: Mondsuechtig. Wernher von Braun und die Geburt der Raumfahrt aus dem Geist der Barbarei. [Moonstruck. Wernher von Braun and the birth of space flight from the spirit of barbarism. - In German] Reinbeck bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Verlag, 1996. 288 p., 24 tabs., ISBN 3-498-01660-1, DM 42.00 (hb) Emter, Elisabeth: Literatur und Quantentheorie. Die Rezeption der modernen Physik in Schriften zur Literatur und Philosophie deutschsprachiger Autoren (1925-1970). [Literature and Quantum Theory. The reception of modern physics in writings on literature and philosophy by German authors (1925-1970). - In German] Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 1995. X, 358 p., ISBN 3-11-014873-0, DM 168.00 (hb) (Quellen und Forschungen zur Literaturgeschichte und Kulturgeschichte, Bd. 2) [Demonstrates also, to which extent Friedrich Duerrenmatt's writings were indebted to the philosophical studies of Arthur Eddington.] Review: M.Springer: Spektrum der Wissenschaft (1997) 7, 116-117 Fischer, Ernst Peter: Aristoteles, Einstein & Co. Eine kleine Geschichte der Wissenschaft in Portraets. [A short history of science in portraits. - In German] Muenchen, Zuerich: R. Piper, 1995. 448 p.; 2nd corr. ed. 1996. 442 p., illus., ISBN 3-492-03778-X, DM 42.00 (hb) [Contents: Aristoteles, Almagest and alchemy, Alhazen and Avicenna, Albertus Magnus, Nicolaus Copernicus, Francis Bacon, Galileo Galilei, Johannes Kepler, Rene Descartes, Isaac Newton, Antoine Lavoisier, Michael Faraday, Charles Darwin, James Clerk Maxwell, Hermann von Helmholtz, Gregor Mendel, Ludwig Boltzmann, Marie Curie, Lise Meitner, Barbara McClintock, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Linus Pauling, John von Neumann, Max Delbrueck, Richard P. Feynman.] Review: T.Rubitzko: Spektrum der Wissenschaft (1997) 6, 141 Fischer, Ernst Peter: Aristoteles & Co. Eine kleine Geschichte der Wissenschaft in Portraets von der Antike bis ins 19. Jahrhundert [A short history of science in portraits from antiquity to the 19th century. - In German] Muenchen: R. Piper, 1996. 235 p., 12 illus., ISBN 3-492-22326-5, DM 16.90 (pb) (Serie Piper, Bd. 2326) Fischer, Ernst Peter: Einstein & Co. Eine kleine Geschichte der Wissenschaft der letzten hundert Jahre in Portraets [A short history of science during the last 100 years in portraits . - In German] Muenchen: R. Piper, 1997. 229 p., ISBN 3-492-22491-1, DM 16.90 (pb) (Serie Piper, Bd. 2491) Fischer, Ernst Peter: Einstein. Ein Genie und sein ueberfordertes Publikum. [Einstein. A genius and his audience which could not cope. - In German] Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1996. XIV, 243 p., 44 illus., ISBN 3-540-61112-6, DM 36.00 (pb) Review: I.Derado: Phys. Bl. 53 (1997) 9, 907 Fox, Mary Virginia: Edwin Hubble: American Astronomer. New York: Franklin Watts, 1997. Pp. 112, ISBN 053111371X, $ 21.50 (hb) (Book Report Biographies) [Juvenile book. Includes bibliographical references and index.] Godwin, Francis: The Man in the Moon. With a modern introduction by Andy Johnson and Ron Shoesmith. Woonton Almeley, Herefordshire: Logaston Press, 1996. Pp. ix, 70 + 8 plates, 22 x 14 cm, ISBN 1-873-82764-4, GBP 8.95 (hb) [Francis Godwin (1562-1633) was Bishop of Hereford. He described the idea of a journey to the Moon, with surprising understanding of gravity. Distribution: Post free from Logaston Press, Little Logaston, Woonton, Almeley, Herefordshire HR3 6QH, Great Britain.] Review: R.F.Griffin: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1138, 155-156 Review: J.H.Rogers: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 107 (1997) 1, 42 Grundmann, S.: Einsteins Akte. Einsteins Jahre in Deutschland aus der Sicht der deutschen Politik. [Einstein's file. Einstein's years in Germany from the point of view of German politics. - In German] Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, 1997. XIV, 550 p., 70 illus., ISBN 3-540-63197-6, DM 48.00 (hb) [With documents of the time published here first and with previously unknown documents about Einstein.] Haas, M.R.; Davidson, J.A.; Erickson, E.F. (Eds.): From gas to stars to dust. Proceedings. Airborne Astronomy Symposium on the Galactic Ecosystem: From gas to stars to dust, Moffett Field, CA (USA), 5-8 July 1994. San Francisco, Ca.: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1995. Pp. xxxii, 737, ISBN 0-937707-92-9, US$ 38.00 (Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series, Vol. 73) [From the contents: 8. KAO history and education] Hetherington, Norriss S.: Hubble's cosmology: A guided study of selected texts. Tucson: Pachart Publishing House, 1996. Pp. xx, 218, ISBN 0-88126-287-0, $ 67.00 (pb) (Pachart History of Astronomy Series, v. 11) [Eight of Hubble's papers, reprinted in facsimile, with extensive commentary and annotations.] Isaac Newton and Woolsthorpe Manor. London: The National Trust, 1997. Pp. 30, GBP 1.95 Kafatos, Menas; Kondo, Yoji (Eds.): Examining the Big Bang and diffuse background radiations. Proceedings of the 168th Symposium of the International Astronomical Union, held in The Hague, The Netherlands, August 23-26, 1994. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996. Pp. xi, 586, ISBN 0-7923-3815-4, Dfl. 320.00 (International Astronomical Union, Symposium, No. 168) [Contains also: Virginia Trimble: Background and Big Bang: Some extracts from their history] Kaminski, Heinz: Sternenstrassen der Vorzeit. Von Stonehenge nach Atlantis [Star ways of prehistoric times. From Stonehenge to Atlantis.- In German] Muenchen: Bettendorf, 1995. 356 p., ISBN 3-88498-092-0, DM 39.80 (hb) [To be used with caution.] Review: W.Schlosser: Astron. Raumfahrt 33 (1996) 35 (5/96), 45 Kepler, Johannes: Gesammelte Werke, Band 15. Briefe, Band III: 1604-1607. [Collected works, vol. 15. Letters, vol. III: 1604-1607] Herausgegeben von der Kepler-Kommission der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. 2nd, unaltered ed. Muenchen: Verlag C.H.Beck, 1995. 563 p., ISBN 3-406-01667-7, DM 168.00 (pb) Klare, Gerhard (Ed.): Abstracts of contributed talks and posters presented at the scientific fall meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft at Bochum, September 27-October 1, 1993. Hamburg: Astronomische Gesellschaft, 1993. Pp. 212, illus. (Astronomische Gesellschaft Abstract Series, No. 9) [Contains also abstracts from the meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy.] Kowal, C.T.: Asteroids. Their nature and utilization. 2nd edition Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 1996. Pp. xvii, 153, 24.5 x 17 cm, ISBN 0-471-96039-X, GBP 30.00 (hb) [Includes a chapter on history.] Review: D.W.Hughes: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1138, 164 Review: A.J.Hollis: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 107 (1997) 3, 149 Kragh, H.: Cosmology and controversy. The historical development of two theories of the universe. Princeton (New Jersey, USA): Princeton University Press, 1996. Pp. xiii, 500, ISBN 0-691-02623-8, US$ 35.00 Moore, Patrick: Eyes on the Universe. The story of the telescope. London: Springer-Verlag, 1997. Pp. viii, 114, ISBN 3-540-76164-0, GBP 9.95 (pb) Review: H.McGee: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 117 (1997) 4, 221 Paturi, Felix R.: Harenberg Schluesseldaten Astronomie. Von den Sonnenuhren der Babylonier bis zu den Raumsonden im 21. Jahrhundert. [Harenberg key data of astronomy. From Babylonian sundials to the space probes of the 21st century. - In German] Dortmund: Harenberg Lexikon Verlag, 1996. 616 p., numerous illus., most in colour, ISBN 3-611-00537-1, DM 68.00 (hb) [Chronological history of astronomy, complemented by thematic tables. p. 585-595: outstanding astronomers. Contains an index of persons and items. Contains no references and no bibliography.] Ramsay, John T.; Licht, A. Lewis: The comet of 44 BC and Caesar's funeral games. Atlanta (Georgia, USA): Scholar's Press, 1996. Pp. 236, ISBN 0-7885-0274-3, $ 17.95 (pb) Review: D.W.Hughes: Astronomy and Geophysics 38 (1997) 3, 32-33 Rosen, Dennis; Rosen, Sylvia: London science. Museums, libraries, and places of scientific, technological & medical interest. London: Prion (Multimedia Books), 1994. Pp. 224, numerous illus., most in colour, ISBN 1-85375-140-5, GBP 9.99 (hb) [Describes museums, teaching centres, learned societies, libraries, laboratories, works of art, monuments, memorial plaques, graves, instrument and book dealers. The emphasis is on history of science rather than modern science. Includes many places of interest for historians of astronomy.] Schultz, Uwe (Hrsg.): Scheibe, Kugel, Schwarzes Loch. Die wissenschaftliche Eroberung des Kosmos. [Disc, sphere, black hole. The scientific conquest of the universe. - In German] Frankfurt a.M., Leipzig: Insel Verlag, 1996. 360 p., numerous illus., ISBN 3-458-33504-8, DM 19.80 (pb) (Insel-Taschenbuecher, Nr. 1804) [Paperback edition. First published in 1990. Popular articles on astronomy and its history, with contributions by W.Schlosser, W.Saltzer, F.Krafft, P.Kunitzsch, D.King, H.M.Nobis, M.Schramm, F.Schmeidler, G.D.Roth, D.B.Herrmann, A.Wittmann, H.-H.Voigt, R.Kippenhahn and others.] Sobel, Dava: Laengengrad. Die wahre Geschichte eines einsamen Genies, welches das groesste wissenschaftliche Problem seiner Zeit loeste. Berlin: Berlin Verlag Arno Spitz, 1996. 239 p., ISBN 3-8270-0214-1, DM 36.00 (hb) [Translation of: Longitude (1995); on John Harrison (1693-1776) and the problem of longitude at sea.] Spitzer Jr., Lyman; Ostriker, Jeremiah P. (Eds.): Dreams, stars, and electrons. Selected writings of Lyman Spitzer, Jr. Princeton (New Jersey, USA): Princeton University Press, 1997. Pp. 536, 23.5 x 15 cm, ISBN 0-691-03702-7, $ 99.50 (hb) Review: P.W.J.L.Brand: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1141, 377 Springford, M. (Ed.): Electron. A centenary volume. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. Pp. 330, 25 x 18 cm, ISBN 0-521-56130-2, GBP 37.50 (hb) [First chapter: details of J. J. Thomson's experiments. Next chapters: different aspects of the electron, tracing their development during this century (among these: the electron in the cosmos).] Review: E.A.Davis: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1141, 384 Stephenson, F. Richard: Historical eclipses and the Earth's rotation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997. Pp. xvi, 557, ISBN 0-521-46194-4, GBP 95.00 (hb) Review: J.E.Jones: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 117 (1997) 4, 220 van Helden, Anne C.; van Gent, Rob H.: The Huygens Collection. Leiden: Museum Boerhaave, 1995. Pp. V, 32, ISBN 90-6292-107-8, NLG 10.00 (pb) (Communication / Museum Boerhave, 264) [Translation of: De Huygenscollectie. Leiden: Museum Boerhaave, 1995. (Mededeling / Museum Boerhave, 262)] Westfall, Richard S.: Isaac Newton - Eine Biographie. [Isaac Newton - a biography. - In German. Translated from English.] Heidelberg: Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, 1996. 330 p., numerous illus., ISBN 3-8274-0040-6, DM 58.00 (hb) Review: D.Hoffmann: Physik in unserer Zeit 28 (1997) 2, XIV Willis, Allan J.; Hartquist, Thomas W. (Eds.): Astrophysical and laboratory plasmas. A Festschrift for Professor Sir Robert Wilson. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996. Pp. 399, 24.5 x 16 m, ISBN 0-792-34151-1, GBP 99, $ 156 (hb) [Originally published as Astrophysics and Space Science Vol. 237 (1996), No. 1-2.] Review: R.J.Tayler: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1137, 115 Wilson, Raymond N.: Reflecting telecope optics I. Basic design theory and its historical development. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1996. Pp. xiv, 573, 214 figs., 24 x 16 cm, ISBN 3-540-58964-3, DM 128.00 (hb) (Astronomy and Astrophysics Library) Review: J.Solf: Sterne Weltraum 35 (1996) 12, 980 Review: C.F.W.Harmer: The Observatory 117 (1997) 1138, 173 Review: [Anonymous:] Messenger (1997) 90, 35 Wright, Helen: Sweeper in the sky: The life of Maria Mitchell. Clinton Corners, NY: College Avenue Press, 1997. Pp. 270, ISBN 1-883551-70-6, $ 24.95 [First published in 1949. Unabridged text of the first edition, with new preface, epilogue, and numerous photographs.] ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank: Peter Abrahams, Larry Klaes (Boston), and Catherine Sones (London). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 29
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 29, May 29, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. IAU Commission 41 (History of Astronomy) - IAU Commission 41 on the Web - Current officers (1997-2000) - New Resolutions - IAU Commission 41 50th Anniversary 2. Indian Society for the History of Astronomy 3. Progress Report on the New Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 4. NCHALADA Meeting in Oakland, CA 5. Meetings and Celebrations 6. Book Review: Thalheim, Klaus: Katalog der Meteoriten am Staatlichen Museum fuer Mineralogie und Geologie zu Dresden (Wolfgang Czegka) Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... IAU Commission 41 (History of Astronomy) ---------------------------------------- IAU Commission 41 on the Web ---------------------------- Commission 41 (History of Astronomy) of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) is now on the WWW. You may access it directly at http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/iaucomm41. Or you may link to it from the IAU Web site Commission page at http://www.intastun.org/commissions.html. The site contains C 41 officers, members and their current addresses, newsletters, and the Bibliography on History of Astronomy, compiled by Ruth Freitag of the Library of Congress in Washington, D. C. The C 41 site also links to the history of astronomy site maintained for several years by the History of Astronomy Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft, and now also maintained on behalf of Commission 41. Steven J. Dick, Wolfgang R. Dick Current officers (1997-2000) ---------------------------- President: Steven J. Dick (USA) Vice-President: F. Richard Stephenson (UK) Immediate Past President: S. M. R. Ansari (India) Organizing Committee: Wolfgang R. Dick (Germany) Alexander A. Gurshtein (Russia) Il-Seong Nha (Korea) Wayne Orchiston (New Zealand) Edoardo Proverbio (Italy) Woodruff T. Sullivan (USA) Xi Zezong (China) The total membership of the Commission stands at 139, plus 19 consultants. New Resolutions --------------- New resolutions adopted during the Kyoto General Assembly of the IAU (August 1997) included the following: 1) Whereas historical astronomical records are important to the heritage of astronomy and may be essential to applied astronomy The IAU supports the recovery, inventory and preservation of astronomical archives of national and international institutions, including observatories, societies and other institutions. 2) That Commission 41 records its serious concern regarding grave losses at Pulkovo as the result of fire, and supports the assessment of these losses to the cultural heritage of astronomy. 3) That, in order to facilitate research into the history of astronomy in a country (the "host country") that was subjugated or governed by another country ("governing country"), and where the relevant source material now resides in the governing country, every attempt should be made to provide copies of such source material to the host country. 4) Noting that vital primary source material pertaining to history of astronomy in a country (the host country) that was ruled or governed by another (the governing country) resides in the governing country, it is recommended that visiting fellowships be created by IAU, European Union, and bilateral agreements between countries to enable researchers from a host country to consult source material in a governing country. (Source: Report from the Kyoto General Assembly. In: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, October 1997, Issue # 1) IAU Commission 41 50th Anniversary ---------------------------------- Commission 41 was formed at the 1948 meeting of the IAU, and therefore celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. C 41 member Woody Sullivan (University of Washington) recently brought to my attention the first report of Commission 41, in IAU Transactions, 8, page 623, published in 1954. The report shows that Commission 41 had a bit of a rocky start. Otto Neugebauer, appointed the first C 41 president in his absence, expressed his conviction that "an international organization in the history of astronomy has no positive function ... my only activity during my term of service consisted in iterated attempts to resign." This is perhaps one of Neugebauer's few statements to have been proven wrong! Under the circumstances Herbert Dingle acted as President for the 1952 meeting. The first members of the Commission were Armitage, Birkenmajer, Danjon, Dijksterhuis, Dingle, Dittrich, Hubble, Idelson, Spencer Jones, Kukarin, Kulikovsky, Lundmark, Marguerat, Nordenmark, Norlund, Pannekoek, Pelseneer, Pogo, Sadykov, Seydl, Volta, and Zinner. It is appropriate to give here the complete list of Commission 41 Presidents. 1948-1952 Neugebauer (USA) 1952-1955 Dingle (UK) 1955-1958 Dingle (UK) 1958-1961 Kulikovsky (USSR) 1961-1964 Kulikovsky (USSR) 1964-1967 Rybka (Poland) 1967-1970 Rybka (Poland) 1970-1973 Gingerich (USA) 1973-1976 Gingerich (USA) 1976-1979 Dobrzycki (Poland) 1979-1982 Hoskin (UK) 1982-1985 Pederson (Denmark) 1985-1988 Eddy (USA) 1988-1991 North (UK) 1991-1994 Debarbat (France) 1994-1997 Ansari (India) 1997-2000 S.J. Dick (USA) Steven J. Dick (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, April 1998, Issue # 2) ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... Indian Society for the History of Astronomy ------------------------------------------- The B.M. Birla Science Centre has conducted a One Day National Symposium on "Indian Astronomy Through the Ages" on October 13, 1997. The symposium dealt mainly with the ancient Indian and medieval Indian-Islamic astronomy. Eminent scientists from all over the country participated in this seminar. During the scientific sessions, some talks were on researches which dated back the Vedic civilization to more than 5000 B.C. on the basis of astronomical evidence. Other talks were on medieval Indian astronomy (Arabic-Persian, Malyalam, Telugu sources). Though India has the longest continuing tradition of astronomy in the world, its contribution to the field has not got its due place in the World History of Science. This is also true for other countries in Asia, e.g. West Central Asia. Consequently the seminar was concluded by launching the much awaited 'Indian Society for the History of Astronomy' (ISHA). The following governing council of the society was elected by the founder members of the society. 1. President - Prof. S.M.R. Ansari, the first Asian as (former) President of the International Astronomical Union's Commission for History of Astronomy. He is retired Professor of Physics of Aligarh Muslim University. 2. Vice-President - Prof. K.D. Abhyankar, Professor Emeritus, Astronomy Department, Osmania University, Hyderabad. 3. Secretary - Dr. B.G. Sidharth, Director-General, B.M. Birla Science Centre, Hyderabad. 4. Joint Secretary - Mr. Y. Ravi Kiron, Assistant Director, B.M. Birla Science Centre, Hyderabad. 5. Treasurer - D. G.M. Ballabh, Department of Astronomy, Osmania University, Hyderabad. 6. Counsellor - Dr. B.V. Subbarayappa, President, International Union for the History and Philosophy of Science, which he is currently holding. 7. Counsellor - Dr. A. Bandyopadhyay, Former Director, Positional Astronomy Centre, Calcutta. 8. Counsellor - Dr. S.D. Sharma, Physics Department, Patiala University, Punjab. The society is to be registered shortly at Hyderabad. Its office will be located at B.M. Birla Science Centre, Adarsh Nagar, Hyderabad - 500 063 (India). Some of the main activities of the society will be as follows: 1. To promote research studies of all apects of the history of astronomy in general, Indian astronomy and astronomy in Asia, in particular. 2. To ensure such publications (e.g. journal, newsletter etc.) from time to time as may be decided by the executive council of the society. 3. To hold scientific meetings for presentation of original papers, review talks etc. 4. To keep liaison with other historians of Indian and Oriental astronomy all over the world, and also with the international groups or commissions for history of astronomy. 5. To collect all possible literature concerning ancient and medieval Indian astronomy (Vedic, Islamic and South Indian language sources etc.) thereby to set up a data base on history of astronomy in Asia. 6. To draw young scholars to the discipline of history of science, to make them aware of our Indian and Asian astronomical heritage and to coordinate researches among Indian historians of astronomy. Dr. B.G. Sidharth Secretary of ISHA Director B.M. Birla Science Centre Adarsh Nagar Hyderabad - 500 063 (India) Prof. S.M.R. Ansari President of ISHA C/o Physics Department Aligarh Muslim University Aligarh - 202002 (India) (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, April 1998, Issue # 2) ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... Progress Report on the New Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage ----------------------------------------------------------------------- We are making good progress with the JAH2, and expect to see the first issue off the press on schedule, in June. It will feature the following research papers: Brueck, Mary T.: "Mary Ackworth Evershed nee Orr (1867-1949), solar physicist and Dante scholar" Dick, Steve: "Observation and interpretation of the Leonid meteors over the last millennium" Orchiston, Wayne: "Mission impossible: William Scott and the first Sydney Observatory directorship" Pasachoff, Jay: "Williams College's Hopkins Observatory: the oldest extant observatory in the United States" We are happy to announce that in addition to papers and book reviews, each issue of JAH2 will feature Ruth Freitag's on-going bibliographies on the history of astronomy. The composition of the Editorial Board has been finalised, and comprises: Dr Dave Andrews (Northern Ireland), Dr Alan Batten (Canada), Dr Allan Chapman (England), Dr Steve Dick (USA), Dr Wolfgang Dick (Germany), Professor Ben Gascoigne (Australia), Professor Bambang Hidayat (Indonesia), Commander Derek Howse (England), Professor Rajesh Kochhar (India), Professor Don Osterbrock (USA), and Professor Brian Warner (South Africa). Subscriptions information is available from the Managing Editor on astral@psinet.net.au, while enquiries regarding papers should be directed to the Papers Editor at: Wayne.Orchiston@vuw.ac.nz. A "Guide for Authors" is on the WEB at: http://www.vuw.ac.nz/~bankst/software.html John Perdrix (Managing Editor), Wayne Orchiston (Papers Editor) (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, April 1998, Issue # 2) ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... NCHALADA Meeting in Oakland, CA ------------------------------- The next meeting of the Northern California Historical Astronomy Luncheon and Discussion Association will occur Saturday, June 6, at Chabot Observatory, 4917 Mountain Blvd., Oakland, CA 94619, USA. From 10 AM to about 12:30 the topic is "Lord Rosse of Birr Castle". After lunch at a local restaurant, the 2-5 PM discussion will be "Chinese Astronomy". NCHALADA discussions are informal (no dissertations or tenure at risk) and often good-humored. Meetings are free and there are no pre-requisites, though people who bring munchies are very popular. This is the 46th NCHALADA meeting since beginning in 1985 as a copy of Southern California's "Society of the History of Astronomy". For further information about NCHALADA, contact Norm Sperling, Everything in the Universe, 185 John Street, Oakland, CA 94611, USA. Phone & fax: 510-547-6523. eMail: nsperling@global.california.com. For SHA, contact Margot Wood, 210 S. Guadalupe Avenue, Redondo Beach, CA 90277, USA. Phone 310-379-8339. ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... Meetings and Celebrations ------------------------- Early Astronomy in Sydney, July 4, 1998 C 41 OC member Wayne Orchiston, Director of Carter Observatory (the National Observatory of New Zealand) reports that on 1998 July 4, the Colonial Science Club in Sydney will host a seminar on "Colonial Astronomy in Sydney". Shirley Saunders with speak on the topic of her Ph.D thesis, Parramatta Observatory, which Governor Brisbane established in 1821. Dr Raymond Haynes from the Australia Telescope National Facility (and an author of Explorers of the Southern Sky) will examine the development of astronomy in Australia, but particularly the interrelations of science in the colonies to the management from London. Wayne Orchiston will speak on William Scott and the early years of the Sydney Observatory, based on his paper to appear in the Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage. The final speaker, Dr Nick Lomb, Curator of Astronomy at the Sydney Observatory, will present a paper about the history of the Observatory between 1870 and 1900. This paper will relate directly to the major new display at the Observatory titled "By the Light of the Southern Stars". After closing as a research institution in 1982, the Observatory became a branch of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences. Alfraganus 1200th Anniversary, Uzbekistan, October 23-24, 1998 C 41 member Dr. Shuhrat Ehgamberdiev, Director of the Ulugh Beg Astronomical Institute of the Uzbek Academy of Sciences in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, writes that "We have now a new important tradition in Uzbekistan. We express respect to our eminent predecessors, which we couldn't do before the Independence. In 1998 we will celebrate 1225th anniversary of Imam al Bukhari, who well known in the Islamic world as a great expert in Khoran and author of the Hadises. This year we will also celebrate 1200th anniversary of great encyclopaedist, astronomer, geographer, mathematician - Ahmad al-Fargani (Alfraganus). Both jubilees will be celebrated simultaneously on 23rd and 24th Oct. 1998." The Government of Uzbekistan has invited about 100 scientists, religious people and distinguished guests. The events will take place in Samarkand and Fargana. Third International Conference on Oriental Astronomy, Japan, October 27-30, 1998 C 41 member Kwan-Yu Chen (University of Florida) reports that the Third International Conference on Oriental Astronomy will be held in Fukuoka, Japan, October 27-30, 1998. The First Conference was held in Seoul, Korea in 1992, and the Second Conference in Yingtan, China in 1995. This year, the theme is "From Calendar Scholars to Telescopes." The program will include sessions on calendar making, star catalogues and atlases, historical records of astronomical observations, instrumentation, observatories, and exchange of astronomical knowledge between Asian countries and Japan. Dr. Chen may be contacted for more information at Dept. of Astronomy, University of Florida, 211 SSRB, Gainsville, FL 32611. Also see the web site at http://www.fukuoka-edu.ac.jp/meeting/ICOA.html, or e-mail ICOA@fukuoka-edu.ac.jp. (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, April 1998, Issue # 2) ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 29, May 29, 1998 ........................................................................... Book Review ----------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 27, 3. Maerz 1998, Item 2.) Thalheim, Klaus: Katalog der Meteoriten am Staatlichen Museum fuer Mineralogie und Geologie zu Dresden. Dresden: Staatliches Museum fuer Mineralogie und Geologie, 1997. 92 p., numerous illus. in colour, ISBN 3-91006-17-5, Paperback DM 49.00 (Schriften des Staatlichen Museums fuer Mineralogie und Geologie zu Dresden; 7) The catalogue is divided in two parts. The first part contains a history of the Dresden meteorite collection from 1581 to 1997. In 44 pages Thalheim gives a survey on the historical development of the collection. Some repros with details of important older catalogues or handwritten meteorite-lists are added. The second part presents in 43 pages the details of every meteorite of the Dresden museum collection in an unusual form. Every data set is illustrated by a high-quality colour print. The collection includes unique samples like the Nenntmansdorf Iron. A detailed index and a list of references are added. Except of some misprints (in 1791 even Chladni didn't know anything about meteorites; misprint for 1797? see page 8) the book is a recommendable high quality product. Unfortunately, the reader will miss some detailed information on the lusatian tektites from Saxony, which could have been added thematically also to the catalogue. Wolfgang Czegka, Potsdam For more detailed information contact: Staatliches Museum fuer Mineralogie und Geologie Augustusstr. 2 D-01067 Dresden Germany Phone: +49-351-4952446 Fax: +49-351-4952468 e-mail: mmg@sik.de URL: http://hpkom21.geo.uni-leipzig.de/~mmg/ ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank: Steven J. Dick (Washington, DC), Norman Sperling (Oakland, CA). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 30
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 30, July 10, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in Heidelberg 2. James Caplan: Historical Conservation at the Marseille Observatory 3. NCHALADA's 47th Meeting 4. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 30, July 10, 1998 ........................................................................... Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in Heidelberg ----------------------------------------------------------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 32, 8. Juli 1998, Item 1. Translation by the editor.) The meeting will take place on Monday, September 14, 1998, as the splinter meeting "History of Astronomy" in the framework of the International Scientific Annual Conference of the Astronomische Gesellschaft (AG) in Heidelberg. The place of the meeting will be the campus of Heidelberg University (Neuenheimer Feld 308). It will start between 9 and 10 a.m. and will end around 4 p.m. After the splinter meeting a general assembly of the members of the working group will take place, guests are welcome. There will be the possibility to obtain some history of astronomy books during the meeting. Coordinator of the meeting is Dr. Reinhold Bien, Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Moenchhofstr. 12-14, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany, Phone: (06221) 405-120, Fax: (06221) 405-297, e-mail: reinhold@ari.uni-heidelberg.de . Please send your requests concerning the meeting and your registration to the coordinator. He will also allocate the time for oral presentations (probably not more than 20 min per paper). Please register also in the case that you will not present a paper, so that you may be informed about the exact time and place of the meeting and may receive the programme. For Sunday evening an informal gathering is being planned. Please inform Mr. Bien wether you would like to take part in this gathering. Papers may be presented in English or German, but English is to be preferred. Submissions of papers received after July 29 may be taken into account only in the case that time for presentations will still be available. The abstracts of the papers may be published in Volume 14 of AG Abstract Series. The abstracts are to be written using the new macro of the AG (http://www.astro.uni-jena.de/Astron_Ges/agamacro.html or available by e-mail from the coordinator). The editor will accept only contributions in the requested form, in English and without illustrations, sent by e-mail as LaTeX source code (not zipped, not coded, and not as MIME or tar files) to the coordinator and the editor (schie@astro.uni-jena.de) before July 29. In the case that you are not able to write your abstract in LaTeX and/or cannot send it by e-mail, please contact Mr. Bien in advance for asking about the possiblity to send it in another form and about the necessary date of submission. The abstracts will be available around mid-August through the Astrophysics Data System (ADS). Participants taking part exclusively in this splinter meeting do not have to pay the conference fee. They have to find their accomodation themselves, and should register only with Mr. Bien. Those who wish to take part in the complete conference of the AG have to register also with the LOC: Dr. Gerhard Klare, Landessternwarte Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany, Phone: 06221/509208 oder 509249, Fax: 06221/509202, e-mail: e.baer@lsw.uni-heidelberg.de . In this case the conference fee is DM 100.00 for members of the AG, DM 50.00 for students and DM 120.00 for non-members. At mid-August the detailed programme of the meeting will be available at http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/treffen1998.html . At this address further information about the conference and about Heidelberg is given already now. After the founding meeting of 1863 and the conferences in 1900, 1928, and 1950, Heidelberg serves for the fifth time as the meeting place for the AG, this time on occasion of the 100th anniversary of the observatory (Landessternwarte) Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl. The observatory my be visited on one afternoon during the conference, probably on Wednesday. Detailed information will be given in the programme of the splinter meeting which will be sent to registered participants at the beginning of September. ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 30, July 10, 1998 ........................................................................... Historical Conservation at the Marseille Observatory ---------------------------------------------------- By James Caplan, Marseille (From: "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 12, Juni 1998, p. 1.) A brief history The Marseille Observatory was founded in 1702 by the Jesuits, in the Sainte Croix convent near the Vieux Port, and was subsidized by the King and the Royal Navy. The first director was Laval, followed by Pezenas until 1763, when the Jesuits were expelled from France. During most of the old observatory's subsequent history it was state-controlled, and was at times called the Naval Observatory. The first non-Jesuit director was Saint-Jacques de Silvabelle; he was followed by Thulis, Blanpain, Gambart and Valz. Franz Xaver von Zach, a frequent visitor to Marseille, played an indirect role in the observatory's history in the decades around 1800. Jean-Louis Pons, the observatory concierge who became a noted comet hunter, was a protege of Zach. In the 1860s, Le Verrier, then director of the Paris Observatory, wished to build an observing station in the south of France. Upon Valz's retirement, he took over control of the Marseille Observatory, giving the building to the City of Marseille in exchange for the present observatory site on the Plateau Longchamp (at that time at the edge of the built-up area). During ten years the Marseille Observatory was directed by Le Verrier as an annex to the Paris Observatory. The old observatory's instruments were transferred to the new site, although few of them were used since new equipment was furnished (including an 80-cm Foucault telescope). The Marseille Observatory again became independent of the Paris Observatory in 1873. Today it is associated with the Universite de Provence and with the CNRS. The 'Groupe Patrimoine' The Marseille Observatory's 'Groupe Patrimoine' works towards the protection, inventory and (in some cases) reversible restoration of the observatory's historical heritage, and makes it available for display and consultation. This material includes instruments, books and the observatory's archives. They would like to make the astronomical/historical community aware of this collection. As often happens, the historical material has suffered in the past from negligence and inadequate protection. But since 1990 most of the old instruments (including telescopes, repeating circles, etc., mostly from the old observatory) have been gathered together in a small 'museum'. (As part of a separate operation, the Foucault Telescope is on display in a space principally dedicated to public outreach programmes.) The collection of a few hundred old books from the observatory library is kept in the museum. The archives are at present at the Archives departementales in Marseille where they were recently inventoried, and where a large part is now being microfilmed; but in a few months they will be returned to the observatory and stored adjacent to the museum. The book catalogue in a preliminary form is available on their Web site; the inventory of the archives should be posted soon. The Web site can be consulted at http://www-obs.cnrs-mrs.fr/patrimoine/patrimoine.html where one can also find information about the history of the observatory in the form of old texts that are not otherwise easily accessible. Soon there will be information about the instrument collection. The Groupe Patrimoine regret that there is not yet much historical information posted, but within the limited time they have been able to devote to this effort, they have judged urgent to give priority to the *protection* of the material and have therefore rather neglected the historical research which of course is the ultimate goal. Much remains to be done. For example, now that the basic structure of the archives has been defined by professional archivists, they plan to do a computer-searchable extension containing much more information about individual items. Also they hope to digitize the microfilms for computer consultation, thus by-passing classical microfilm readers. Contacts, visits and moral support are welcome! Contact the Groupe Patrimoine (James Caplan, Gerard Lemaitre and Marie-Louise Prevot) at Observatoire de Marseille, 2 place Le Verrier, 13248 Marseille Cedex 4, France, e-mail: patrimoine@observatoire.cnrs-mrs.fr, telephone +33-4-9504-4189. ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 30, July 10, 1998 ........................................................................... NCHALADA's 47th Meeting ----------------------- The Northern California Historical Astronomy Luncheon and Discussion Association's 47th meeting will be on Saturday, November 7, 1998, at Chabot Observatory, 4917 Mountain Blvd., Oakland, USA. Topics: 10 AM - 12:30 PM: "Ole Roemer". 2-5 PM: "Horizon Markers in Archaeoastronomy". Further details from: Norm Sperling, nsperling@global.california.com. ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 30, July 10, 1998 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 32, 8. Juli 1998, Item 3. Translations by the editor.) A measure of time. 25th anniversary Trevor Philip & Sons. London: Trevor Philip & Sons, [1997]. 52 p., 22 x 28.5 cm, numerous ill. (all in colour), GBP 15.00 (hb). [Catalogue of clocks, sundials, instruments (including astronomical), globes and models in museums, private collections and in the shop, sold or offered by London's leading dealer of antique scientific instruments. Address: Trevor Philip & Sons Ltd, 75a Jermyn Street, London SW1Y 6NP, UK, Tel: 0171-930 2954, Fax: 0171-321 0212.] Allmer, Franz: Simon Stampfer. 1790-1864. Ein Lebensbild. [Simon Stampfer. 1790-1864. An account of his live. - In German] Graz, 1996. 133 p., Paperback ATS 200.00 (Mitteilungen der geodaetischen Institute der Technischen Universitaet Graz ; Folge 82). [Distribution: Geodaetische Institute, Technische Universitaet Graz, Steyrergasse 30, A-8010 Graz, Austria. Order Code: 274/1-82. About Stampfer see also below: Schuster und Strasser: Simon Stampfer.] Brosche, Peter (Hrsg.): Astronomie der Goethezeit : Textsammlung aus Zeitschriften und Briefen Franz Xaver von Zachs. [Astronomy during the time of Goethe. Collection of texts from journals and letters of Franz Xaver von Zach. - In German] 2nd, rev. ed. Thun, Frankfurt am Main: Verlag Harri Deutsch, 1998. 230 p., 24 illus., facsimiles, 12 x 19 cm, ISBN 3-8171-3400-2, Pb DM 38.00 (Ostwalds Klassiker der exakten Wissenschaften ; Bd. 280) Dorschner, Johann: Astronomie in Thueringen. Skizzen aus acht Jahrhunderten. Mit besonderer Beruecksichtigung der DDR-Zeit und der neuen astronomischen Forschungslandschaft im Freistaat Thueringen. [Astronomy in Thuringia. Sketches rom eight centuries. With special emphasis on GDR times and the new astronomical research landscape in the Freistaat Thuringia. - In German] Jena: Jenzig-Verlag, 1998. ca. 140 p., 50 illus., ISBN 3-910141-32-3, ca. DM 25.00. [To appear probably in August 1998.] Gosteli, Leo; Boschung, Urs; Brosche, Peter (Eds.): Astronom, Weltbuerger, Blasensteinpatient. Franz Xaver von Zachs Briefe an Rudolf Abraham von Schiferli 1821-1832. [Astronomer, cosmopolitan, bladder stone patient. Franz Xaver von Zach's letters to Rudolf Abraham von Schiferli 1821-1832. - In German] Basel: Schwabe & Co. Verlag, 1998. 382 p., SFr 45.00, DM 54.00 (Gesnerus, Swiss Journal of the History of Medicine and Sciences, Supplementum ; 45). [Distribution: Schwabe & Co. AG, Steinentorstrasse 13, CH-4010 Basel, Tel. ++41/+61/278 95 65, Fax ++41/+61/278 95 66, e-mail: verlag@schwabe.ch, URL: http://www. schwabe.ch/ ] Hamel, Juergen: Geschichte der Astronomie. Von den Anfaengen bis zur Gegenwart. [History of astronomy. from the beginnings to present time. - In German] Basel: Birkhaeuser Verlag, 1998. 352 p., 19 colour und 92 b/w illus., ISBN 3-7643-5787-8, Hardbound SFr 58.00, DM 68.00 Hamel, Juergen: Bibliographia Kepleriana : Verzeichnis der gedruckten Schriften von und ueber Johannes Kepler. Ergaenzungsband [zur 2. Auflage]. [Bibliographia Kepleriana : Inventory of the printed papers by and about Johannes Kepler. Complementary volume [to the 2nd ed.]. - In German.] Muenchen: Verlag C.H.Beck, 1998. 192 p., ISBN 3-406-01687-1, hardbound ca. DM 138.00; ISBN 3-406-01689-8, paperback ca. DM 118.00. [Additions to the Kepler bibliography compiled by Max Caspar.] Hentschel, Klaus: Zum Zusammenspiel von Instrument, Experiment und Theorie : Rotverschiebung im Sonnenspektrum und verwandte spektrale Verschiebungseffekte von 1880 bis 1960. [On the interaction of instrument, experiment and theory : Redshift in the solar spectrum and related spectral effects 1880 to 1960. - In German] Hamburg: Verlag Dr. Kovac, 1998. 1030 p., 15 x 21 cm, 170 illus., ISBN 3-86064-730-X, hb DM 295.00 (Schriftenreihe Naturwissenschaftliche Forschungsergebnisse ; 58) [Habilitation work 1995; ca. 6000 entries in the list of references; further information: http://www.gwdg.de/~khentsc/habil.html .] Herrmann, Dieter B.: Der Stern von Bethlehem. Die Wissenschaft auf den Spuren des Weihnachtssterns. [The Star of Bethlehem. The science investigates the Christmas Star. - In German] Berlin: Paetec, Gesellschaft fuer Bildung und Technik, 1997. 96 p., 15 illus., 12 x 19 cm, ISBN 3-89517-665-6, hb DM 34.80 Huettermann, Armin: Tobias Mayer Museum Marbach. Museumsfuehrer. [Tobias Mayer Museum Marbach. Guide through the museum. - In German] Marbach am Neckar: Tobias Mayer Museum e.V., 1998. 78 p., 15.5 x 22.5 cm, numerous illus., pb DM 15.00 (Schriftenreihe des Tobias Mayer Museum e.V.; Nr. 24) [With a biography of Mayers by Erwin Roth (p. 61-75).] Huettermann, Armin: Tobias Mayer und seine Familie. Katalog zur Ausstellung vom 17.2.1998 bis 15.3.1998 im Rathausfoyer Marbach am Neckar. [Tobias Mayer and his family. Catalogue of the exhibition from February 17, 1998, to March 15, 1998, in the lobby of the Town Hall of Marbach am Neckar. - In German] Marbach am Neckar: Tobias Mayer Museum e.V., 1998. 60 p., 16.5 x 24 cm, numerous illus., pb DM 10.00 (Schriftenreihe des Tobias Mayer Museum e.V. ; Nr. 25) Huettermann, Armin (Hrsg.): Biografie Tobias Mayer. In der Transkription von Menso Folkerts, mit biografischen Ergaenzungen. [Biography of Tobias Mayer. In the transcription by Menso Folkerts, with biographical additions. - In German] Marbach am Neckar: Tobias Mayer Museum e.V., 1998. 40 p. + 28 p. faksimiles, 17.5 x 21 cm, pb/hb DM 25.00. [Autobiography of Mayer as facsimile (faithful copy in a separately bound volume) and in transcription. Together in a nicely designed cover. A fine edition. Distribution of all three books: Tobias Mayer Museum e.V., Torgasse 13, 71672 Marbach am Neckar, Germany Tel./Fax (07144) 16942] Iven, Mathias (Hrsg.): Von den Sternen auf die Erde. 110 Jahre Urania. Eine Festschrift. [From the stars to Earth. 100 years of Urania. A festschrift.- In German] Berlin, Milow: Schibri-Verlag, 1998. 75 p., 13.5 x 19 cm, numerous illus., ISBN 3-928878-79-4, pb DM 14.80. [Contains also contributions about Wilhelm Foerster, Max Wilhelm Meyer and Werner von Siemens.] Johannes Keplers Beitrag zur deutschen Fachsprache. [Contributions by Johannes Kepler to the German scientific language. - In German] Muenchen: Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1998. 55 p. (Berichte der Kepler-Kommission ; Heft 9). [Contains besides a contribution by Hella Kothmann on the theme of the booklet three short notices on Kepler research und reception. Distribution: Through exchance of publications only.] Rund um die Sternwarte Sonneberg. [Around the Sonneberg Observatory. - In German.] Hildburghausen: Verlag Frankenschwelle, 1998. 103 p., 15 x 21.5 cm, numerous illus., ISBN 3-86180-071-3, hb DM 18.80 (Sonneberger Geschichten ; Bd. 3). [Contents: Cuno Hoffmeister (p. 6-66), Allerlei Unterhaltsames [anecdotes about Sonneberg astronomers] (p. 67-94), timeline.] Schuster, Peter; Strasser, Christian: Simon Stampfer, 1790-1864. Von der Zauberscheibe zum Film. [Simon Stampfer, 1790-1864. From the magic disk to the movie. - In German] Salzburg: Land Salzburg, Landespressebuero, [1998]. 223 p., 17 x 24 cm, numerous illus., facsimiles, ISBN 3-85015-154-2, paperback (Schriftenreihe des Landespressebueros, Serie "Sonderpublikationen" ; Nr. 142) [Biography of the Austrian geodesist and astronomer Simon Stampfer, who invented as pioneer of cinematography the stroboscopic disks. Free copies available from Buergerbuero (Tel. 0662/8042-2035 or 2036), Kaigasse 39, or from Landespressebuero (Tel. 0662/8042-2047), Chiemseehof, A-5010 Salzburg, Austria.] Strumpf, Manfred: Gothas astronomische Epoche. [Gotha's astronomical epoch. - In German] Horb am Neckar: Geiger-Verlag, 1998. 96 p., 21 x 20 cm, numerous illus., ISBN 3-89570-381-8, hb DM 29.80. [Distribution: Verein Gothaer Sternwarten e.V., c/o M. Strumpf, Heinoldsgasse 10, D-99867 Gotha, Germany, e-mail: MaStrumpf@aol.com. Price including postage DM 33.00, payable by cheques.] Wutzke, Ulrich: Durch die weisse Wueste : Leben und Leistungen des Groenlandforschers und Entdeckers der Kontinentaldrift Alfred Wegener. [Through the white desert : The live and achievements of Alfred Wegener, explorer of Greenland and discoverer of the continental drift. - In German.] Gotha: Justus Perthes Verlag, 1997. 240 p., 73 illus., ISBN 3-623-00354-9, hb 54.00 (Edition Petermann) [Partial contents: Student years (p. 15-22; also about Wegener's history of astronomy dissertation); Moon craters (p. 144-147).] ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: (++6592) 2150, Fax: (++6592) 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: (++331) 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 31
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 31, September 10, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy during the International Conference of the Astronomische Gesellschaft - Programme 2. Michael J. Crowe: Fourth Biennial History of Astronomy Workshop 3. Bart Fried: The Antique Telescope Society and its Journal 4. Emily Gillingham: Metascience - A review journal for history and philosophy of science 5. Charles A. Wood: A new Web site: Exploring the Moon 6. New book on astrolabes Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... Meeting of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy during the -------------------------------------------------------------------- International Conference of the Astronomische Gesellschaft ---------------------------------------------------------- Programme --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 33, 8. September 1998, Item 1, sligtly abridged. Partial translations by the editor.) Sunday, 13 September 1998 Informal gathering in the restaurant, "Da Claudia", Brueckenstrasse 14, in Heidelberg, from around 7 pm, open end. Monday, 14 September 1998 Place: Campus of Heidelberg University (Neuenheimer Feld 308), Hoersaal [Lecture room] 2 in the Central Area of "Theoretikum", building 306 9:00 Welcome 9:10 Reinhold Bien (Heidelberg): A history of local astronomy 9:30 Andreas Haenel (Osnabrueck): Do megalithic graves have an astronomical orientation? A European perspective 9:50 Harald Gropp (Heidelberg): Some remarks on the calendar of Coligny 10:10 Heiner Lichtenberg (Bonn): Zur Verknuepfung des Sonnen- und Mondkalenders im Gregorianischen Kalender 10:30 Coffee break 11:00 Ari Belenkiy (Israel): Kepler's Ellipse and Jewish Astronomical Tradition 11:20 Elvira Pfitzner (Chemnitz): Doerffelforschung - Moeglichkeiten und Grenzen 11:40 Ulrich Bastian (Heidelberg): Bessel's Parallax of 61 Cygni Visualized 12:00 Lunch 14:00 Colin Humphreys (Cambridge, UK): The Star of Bethlehem, a Comet in 5 BC, and the Date of the Millenium 14:40 Manfred Schuermeyer (Dreieich): The Comet of Bethlehem and its year of appearance 15:00 Wolfgang Czegka (Bruehl): Wilhelm Schickard, Isaac Habrecht and the first empirical meteor height determination in 1623 15:20 Break 15:30 Wolfgang Kokott (Munich/Bonn): Variations of a Constant - On the History of Precession 15:50 Gudrun Wolfschmidt (Hamburg): Max Wolf as a Pioneer of Astrophotography 16:10 Wolfgang R. Dick (Potsdam): Encyclopedias of Astronomical Biographies - Status and Prospects 16:30 Assembly of the members of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy (guests are welcome) Abstracts of the papers were published in "Astronomische Gesellschaft Abstract Series" No. 14, Hamburg 1998, p. 75-81. These are available in electronic form at the Astrophysics Data System (ADS). Links to the abstracts of the papers listed above are to be found in http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/treffen1998-e.html . There are also links to the complete programme of the conference, as well as to documents about the history of astronomy in Heidelberg, to museums and to general information about this city. Other events Monday, 14 September, to Friday, 18 September 1998 International Scientific Conference of the Astronomische Gesellschaft The following poster paper (P 121) has been submitted: Johann Dorschner (Jena): Max Wolf and the Thuringian Private Astronomer Anton Thraen Wednesday, 16 September 1998 Tour of the Landessternwarte (Observatory) Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl At 3 pm you may visit the Landessternwarte on the Koenigstuhl hill. Saturday, 19 September 1998 Programme for teachers The programme includes also: Heiner Lichtenberg (Bonn): Zeitrechnung im Gregorianischen Kalender - ein Schulthema? Please send all requests to the coordinator of the meeting: Dr. Reinhold Bien, Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Moenchhofstr. 12-14, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany, Tel.: (06221) 405-120, Fax: (06221) 405-297, e-mail: reinhold@ari.uni-heidelberg.de ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... Fourth Biennial History of Astronomy Workshop --------------------------------------------- By Michael J. Crowe, Notre Dame, IN The Fourth Biennial History of Astronomy Workshop will be held July 1-4, 1999 at the University of Notre Dame. Co-Program Chairs are Mike Crowe and Steve Dick. Matt Dowd will serve as local arrangements chair. Persons having suggestions or proposals should write as soon as possible to either Steven J. Dick U.S. Naval Observatory 3450 Massachusetts Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20392-5420, USA E-mail: dick@ariel.usno.navy.mil tel.: 202-762-1438 or to Michael J. Crowe Program of Liberal Studies Univ. of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA E-mail: Crowe.1@nd.edu tel.: 219-631-6212. Registration information can be obtained from Astronomy Center for Continuing Education Univ. of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA E-mail: cce.cce.1@nd.edu Local Arrangements information can be secured from Matthew F. Dowd Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science Univ. of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA E-mail: Matthew.F.Dowd.11@nd.edu tel.: 219-287-7226 The workshop is sponsored by the History and Philosophy of Science Graduate Program of the University of Notre Dame, the History of Astronomy Special Interest Group of the History of Science Society, and the Historical Astronomy Division of the American Astronomical Society. Regarding transportation, flights come to the South Bend Airport from a number of major cities. Persons arriving via Chicago can take the United Limo Bus, which runs from the United Terminal at O'Hare Airport directly to the Notre Dame campus. Round-trip fare is $52. For a schedule and reservations, call United Limo at (800)833-5555. For those driving, ample parking is available. A campus map and parking information will be sent in the CCE information packet. The conference will include a book exhibit and display tables. Participants are welcome to bring materials to display. Please contact Matt Dowd with regard to how much space will be needed. The sixty-five historians of astronomy who attended the Third Biennial History of Astronomy Workshop, held at Notre Dame in June, 1997, praised the lively and informed sessions, the comfortable and informal atmosphere, and the reasonable room rates. Further information will be forthcoming. For the present, please mark your calendar and pass the word! ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... The Antique Telescope Society and its Journal --------------------------------------------- By Bart Fried, Plymouth Meeting, PA (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 33, 8. September 1998, Item 3.) The Antique Telescope Society is an international non-profit society whose purpose is to unite colleagues interested in antique astronomical telescopes, binoculars, instruments, books, atlases, and related items. It's further purpose is to promote the membership's interests in astronomical history and discovery, the history of optics, and the preservation and use of these instruments through stewardship and education. The principal activities of the society are publishing a regular journal, organizing meetings, providing assistance with the restoration of instruments, hosting shows and displays, preserving historical data and guiding collectors. The Journal of the Antique Telescope Society is an 18-24 page, 21.5 cm x 28 cm soft-covered volume printed on glossy paper and illustrated with black and white photographs, drawings and diagrams, etc. Articles have been of a very high caliber, including much new or re-discovered information about the history of telescope making. Submissions are peer-reviewed for accuracy and letters and requests for information are published. Yearly conventions have been at such interesting and prestigious places as the Herschel Society/Bath, England; U.S. Naval Observatory; Yerkes Observatory; Lick Observatory; Chabot Observatory; Ricard Observatory; Mt. Wilson Observatory; Sproul Observatory and Palomar Observatory. Membership in the society is currently $40.00 US for each four Journal issues, published 3-4 times per year. For more information, visit the society's Web site: http://www1.tecs.com/oldscope/ (Please note that the site will soon be updated, and the address might change.) To join the ATS or get further information, please contact: Dr. Walter Breyer, ATS Secretary 1275 Poplar Grove Road Cumming, GA 30041 USA e-mail: whbreyer@mindspring.com ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... Metascience - A review journal for history and philosophy of science -------------------------------------------------------------------- By Emily Gillingham, Oxford (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 33, 8. September 1998, Item 4.) Metascience is a review journal which publishes high quality, comprehensive reviews of books in history and philosophy of science, science and technology studies and related fields. Metascience specialises in innovative styles of reviewing, including standard reviews, essay reviews, CD-Rom reviews, non-anglophone reviews, discipline survey reviews and round-table or review symposia in which up to four reviewers provide independent essay reviews of one book. Metascience is non-specialist as all reviews are accessible to a wide cross-section of the HPS/STS community. Free Sample Copy Available If you would like to review a sample copy of the journal prior to subscribing, please reply to egilling@blackwellpublishers.co.uk with 'METASCIENCE-SAMPLE COPY REQUEST' in the subject line and your full name, postal address, and the following information in the message, i.e. whether you are planning to: a) Submit a review to the journal. b) Recommend your library to subscribe. If so, I would be grateful for the name of the librarian and institution... c) Subscribe to the journal yourself. Special Offer - Electronic Access is included in your institutional subscription to the print edition. Special Discounts available for Members of the following societies: AAHPSSS, APA, HSS, BSHS, PSA, AHSA, ISHPSSB. See below for more details. Contents of Volume 7, Issue 2, July 1998: Review Symposium: Brute Science: Dilemmas of Animal Experimentation, by Hugh LaFollette and Niall Shanks Reviewed by Jane Azevedo, John Forge, Alan MacKay-Sim, Merry Maisel, Don Howard Survey Reviews: Science Communication: A Growth Area in Science and Technology Studies By Rosaleen Love Marketing the Scientific Revolution-New Stories for Beginners By John A. Schuster Literature Survey: Spain and the Dawn of Modern Science By Beatriz Helena Domingues Essay Review: Steve Fuller, Science, Reviewed by David Hess CD-ROM Review: Daniel Dennett, Artificial Life: the Tufts Symposium, Reviewed by Terry Dartnall Reviews include: Steven J. Dicks, The Biological Universe: The Twentieth Century Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science Reviewed by Kim Sterelny H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr, The Foundations of Bioethics Reviewed by John Forge Steven Epstein, Impure Science: AIDS, Activism and the Politics of Knowledge Reviewed by Ivan Crozier Karen Newman, Fetal Positions: Individualism, Science, Visuality Reviewed by Yvonne Luxford Paul Churchland, The Engine of Reason, the Seat of the Soul Reviewed by Richard McDonough Bettyann Holtzmann Kevles, Naked to the Bone: Medical Imaging in the Twentieth Century Reviewed by Randall Albury Edited by John Forge ISSN: 0815-0796, 3 issues a year, Volume 7, 1998 Institutional Subscription Rates: $ 123.00 (N America), GBP 75.00 (UK/Europe), A$ 99.00 (Australia/New Zealand), GBP 75.00 (Rest of World) Personal Subscription Rates: $ 46.00 (N America), GBP 29.00 (UK/Europe), A$ 50.00 (Australia/New Zealand), GBP 29.00 (Rest of World) AAHPSSS Members: A$ 45.00 APA, HSS, BSHS, PSA, AHSA, ISHPSSB Members: $40.00 (N America), GBP 25.00 (Rest of World) More information is available at the following Web site: http://www.sct.gu.edu.au/~sctforge/index.html Author's address: Emily Gillingham Blackwell Publishers 108 Cowley Road Oxford, OX4 1JF UK Email: egilling@blackwellpublishers.co.uk http://www.blackwellpublishers.co.uk ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... A new Web site: Exploring the Moon ---------------------------------- By Charles A. Wood, Grand Forks, ND (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 33, 8. September 1998, Item 5.) In ENHA No. 19 (April 9, 1997, Item 4) I mentioned that I was developing a web site about the Moon and the history of its explorations. The site, Exploring the Moon, is now available at: http://www.space.edu/moon One goal is documentation of all significant studies of the Moon, especially the classical era from Gilbert, Harriot and Galileo through Apollo. Currently more than 100 books, maps and planetary missions are briefly described - some with photos and text excerpts. A second goal is compilation of a virtual photographic atlas of the Moon. Presently there are about 25 different regions depicted, both from high quality amateur and professional photos. The third major section is an online version of the Lunar & Planetary Lab (Tucson) Catalog of Lunar Craters, which I lead nearly 30 years ago. This unpublished catalog of lunar crater positions, diameters and depths should be online in a few weeks. Necessarily, this web site is incomplete. I strongly encourage students of the Moon to send me corrections, comments and additions - any of which can be entered on the site along with the name of the contributor. Author's address: Charles A. Wood Tel: 701-777-3167 Space Studies FAX: 701-777-3711 Univ. of North Dakota VolcanoWorld: volcano.und.edu Grand Forks, ND 58202-9008 Space Studies: www.space.edu E-mail: cwood@badlands.nodak.edu ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 31, Sep. 10, 1998 ........................................................................... New book on astrolabes ---------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 33, 8. September 1998, Item 6.) The History of Astronomy Department of the Adler Planetarium & Astronomy Museum, Chicago, is pleased to announce the publication of Western Astrolabes by Roderick and Marjorie Webster. This book is the inaugural volume of our catalogue project documenting the Adler's collection of historic scientific instruments and rare books. The Adler Planetarium & Astronomy Museum is home to one of the world's great collections of astrolabes. In this volume Marjorie and the late Roderick Webster, Adler Curators Emeriti, have carefully documented 47 astrolabes, astrolabe-quadrants, and mariner's astrolabes. The book is lavishly illustrated with photographs showing the front, the back, and additional details (such as the maker's signature) of each instrument. Introductory essays by the Websters and former Adler curator Sara Schechner Genuth explain the use of the astrolabe and its role in cultural and social history. For more information, to read a sample entry, or to obtain an order form, please go to the web site http://astro.uchicago.edu/adler/historybooks/. You may also request a brochure/order form to be sent via regular mail by contacting us at the Email address historybooks@adlernet.org. Future volumes currently underway include: Eastern Astrolabes, Sundials (2 volumes), Star Charts (2 volumes), and Optical Instruments. Other volumes will include: Clocks and Watches, Globes and Armillary Spheres, Navigational Instruments, and more. (Contributed by Bruce Stephenson, Chicago, IL) ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/aa.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 32
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 32, October 13, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Eric S. Hutton: Meteors and Meteorites: A Historic Archive of Articles, Books and Catalogues on CD-ROM 2. Silke Ackermann: Humphrey Cole: Mint, Measurement and Maps in Elizabethan England 3. Jean-Pierre Luminet: History of Astronomy Exhibition in Paris 4. IAU Colloquium 178: "Polar Motion: Historical and Scientific Problems" 5. Conferences 1998/99 Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 32, Oct. 13, 1998 ........................................................................... Meteors and Meteorites: A Historic Archive of Articles, Books ------------------------------------------------------------- and Catalogues on CD-ROM ------------------------ By Eric S. Hutton, Hitchin, England This privately funded project collected together old articles, books and catalogues under the subject of Meteors and Meteorites. Over 2500 pages have been scanned in, and are viewable on a CD-ROM as 'photocopies' of the original pages. The CD-ROM contains many influential and historically important publications about meteorites and meteors. Highlights include the following four books: * A Chapter in the History of Meteorites (1887) by W. Flight * The Meteoritic Hypothesis (1890) by Norman Lockyer * Die Meteoriten in Sammlungen und ihre Literatur (1897) by E. A. Wufling * The Ward-Coonley collection of Meteorites (1904 edition) by H. A. Ward. The CD is viewable on any computer using Netscape or Internet Explorer Web browser. The cost is US$ 20, or GBP 12, plus shipping/handling charge. Distribution: U.S, Canada, South America: by Martin Horejsi, Meteorite Books, email: martinh@isu.edu UK, Europe, Australisia: from Eric Hutton, email: bookman@rmplc.co.uk Martin Horejsi has also set up a web page giving more details plus sample pages and contents. See http://www.isu.edu/~martinh ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 32, Oct. 13, 1998 ........................................................................... Humphrey Cole: Mint, Measurement and Maps in Elizabethan England ---------------------------------------------------------------- By Silke Ackermann, London (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 34, 9. Oktober 1998, Item 1.) For the first time in its long history the British Museum in London mounted an exhibition on scientific instruments - appropriately focussing on Humphrey Cole, the first English born and most renowned scientific instrument maker of Elizabethan England. Cole produced a wide variety of mathematical instruments in metal, 26 of which have survived. Twenty-three of them were brought together for this exhibition (16 of them were astronomical instruments) and were displayed alongside the map of Palestine he engraved for Richard Jugge's Bishop's Bible in 1572, together with coins produced during his tenure at the Mint and a most unusual standard weight with the Tower mark. The exhibition was displayed from 3 March to 6 May 1998. In the accompanying fully illustrated catalogue all the surviving 26 spectacular instruments are described alongside with all the other objects in the exhibition. Four essays on instrument-making and map-making in Elizabethan England, as well as on Cole's work at the Mint and his involvement with Frobisher's expeditions provide extensive background information. Catalogue: Humphrey Cole, Mint, Measurement and Maps in Elizabethan England, edited by Silke Ackermann. (Occasional Papers No. 126, published by British Museum Press, London, March 1998; VI + 106 pages, 12 colour + 36 black and white illustrations; ISBN 0-86159-126-7, ISSN 0142-4815.) Contents: Gerard Turner, Queen Elizabeth's Instrument Makers; Peter Barber, Mapmaking in Humphrey Cole's England; James McDermott, Humphrey Cole and the Frobisher Voyages; B.J.Cook, Humphrey Cole at the Mint; Catalogue of the exhibition by Silke Ackermann, Peter Barber, B.J. Cook and Allen Simpson. (15.00 Pounds Sterling + p&p. (1 copy add 2.50, 2-3 copies add 3.50, 4 copies and above add 5.00, Overseas - add 15% to order value) Order from: British Museum Press, 46 Bloomsbury Street, London WC1B 3QQ, Tel. 0171 323 1234, Fax 0171 436 7315. Please make cheques payable to British Museum Press' or quote credit card number and expiry date. Or use the following form to be sent to the above address: Name: Address: Number of copies: Cheque enclosed for ........ Pounds Sterling Please charge my credit card: (Access, American Express, Diners Club, Eurocard, Visa) Number: Expiry Date: Signature: Author's address: Dr. Silke Ackermann, e-mail: sackermann@british-museum.ac.uk ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 32, Oct. 13, 1998 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy Exhibition in Paris ---------------------------------------- By Jean-Pierre Luminet, Paris (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 34, 9. Oktober 1998, Item 2.) The exhibition "Figures du Ciel" [Figures of the Sky] is running at the new French National Library in Paris, from 10 October 1998 to 10 January 1999. From old illuminated manuscripts to Hubble Space Telescope photographs, more than 200 documents depict questions, conceptions and representations of all times about the universe, its creation, its structure, its evolution and its meaning, from scientific, historical, philosophical and artistic points of view. The five major themes of the exhibition are: "Uranometria" (history of celestial maps, from Ptolemy to the Digitized Sky Survey), "Harmony" (from Pythagora to superstrings), "Systems of the World" (from Presocratics to quantum gravity), "Heptameron" (tales of creation, from Genesis to big bang) and Sky's Inhabitants (from gods and angels to cosmonauts and aliens). An unique opportunity to discover original editions and/or manuscripts of all the masterpieces of the history of astronomy, mainly from departments of the Bibliotheque nationale de France. Among those depicted are Aristotle, Plato, Aristarchus, Ptolemy, Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Galilei, Kepler, Descartes, Newton, Herschel, Einstein, Friedmann, Lemaitre. Very rare documents, such as a never shown illuminated manuscript by Velho (XVIth), medieval manuscripts about creation, the first celestial maps engraved by Durer, two editions of Apianus' Astromicum Caesareum, Tycho Brahe's original manuscripts, are compared to modern astronomical pictures taken from telescopes and satellites, computer simulations on black holes and chaotic inflation, musical pieces using pulsar rhythms, or meteorite fragments older than the solar system itself. Some of the last developments in cosmology (topology of the universe, self-reproducing spacetimes, extrasolar planets...) are also depicted. The exhibit also shows the most beautiful "popular" astronomical atlases such as Cellarius's Harmonia Macrocosmica (several editions), Doppelmayr's Atlas coelestis, Lubienetski's Theatrum Cometicum, .... New perpectives are presented by comparing modern speculations about the nature of space and time and old interrogations coming from other fields such as poetry (Hesiod, Aratus, Lucretius, Queneau, Cendrars), philosophy (Swedenborg, Wright), litterature (Poe, Swift, Cyrano de Bergerac), religion (Bible, Guillaume of Auvergne, Scheuchzler, ...) Exhibition "Figures du Ciel" Scientific direction: Marc Lachieze-Rey, Jean-Pierre Luminet 10 october 1998 - 10 janvier 1999 Bibliotheque nationale de France site Francois Mitterand Grande Galerie Hall Est Quai Francois Mauriac Paris 13e (France) Opening times: 10:00-19:00 hours daily except Monday. Sunday: 12h-19h. Enquiries: Arnaud Laborderie, Bibliotheque nationale de France, Paris. Tel: +33 (0)1 53 79 59 59 URL of the BnF: http://www.bnf.fr Accompanying book: Marc Lachieze-Rey and Jean-Pierre Luminet: "Figures du Ciel", Ed. du Seuil/Bibliotheque nationale de France, Paris, 1998. 26,5 x 36 cm. 208 pages, 400 color pictures, ISBN 2-7177-2001-4. (Price : 299 FF - 45 euros) [In French. This science/art book depicts celestial iconography through ages. Four themes are developed: Harmony of the World, Uranometria, Heptameron, Sky's Inhabitants. With full page color pictures, folded maps, index, bibliography. More information and abstracts on-line (available mid-october) at http://www.bnf.fr] Author's address: Jean-Pierre Luminet Departement d'Astrophysique Relativiste et Cosmologie (DARC) Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, 92195 Meudon cedex, France Tel: (33) 01 45 07 74 23, fax: (33) 01 45 07 79 71 E-mail: Jean-Pierre.Luminet@obspm.fr URL: http://darc.obspm.fr/~luminet ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 32, Oct. 13, 1998 ........................................................................... IAU Colloquium 178: "Polar Motion: Historical and Scientific Problems" ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Cagliari University, Sardinia, Italy, 27-30 September 1999 (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 34, 9. Oktober 1998, Item 5.) FIRST CIRCULAR GENERAL INFORMATION The latest observations of the motion of the Earth's rotation pole with respect to the terrestrial reference frame have achieved not only remarkable accuracy, but these data are now being obtained with subdaily frequency, a situation which was unexpected only a few years ago. These circumstances call into question the very definition of the celestial ephemeris pole. The astronomical observations available from tracking the satellites of the Global Positioning System, laser ranging to geodetic satellites, and very long baseline interferometry, together with ocean and meteorological data of unprecedented accuracy and frequency, may permit new understanding of the excitation of polar motion. These new data, combined with a century of past observations, provide further information on the secular motion of the pole which, in turn, contributes to improved understanding of models for the Earth's interior. The year 1999 marks the centennial of the first observations of the International Latitude Service (ILS). The ILS was organized in 1895 by the forerunner of the International Association of Geodesy and was composed of observing sites on the parallel of 39d 88' North. The goal was to make astronomical observations to describe the motion of the Earth's rotation pole. In 1962 the ILS was renamed the International Polar Motion Service (IPMS) and in 1988 the IPMS was discontinued when the International Earth Rotation Service commenced. During its history the ILS/IPMS provided valuable observations of polar motion which continue to be analyzed today. Many of the questions which the ILS was organized to address still remain, including the enigmatic nature of the excitation and damping of polar motion. The definition of the international celestial and terrestrial reference systems are based on the ILS definition of the pole. Today's precise astronomical and geodetic observations now require a re-definition of that pole to correspond with modern levels of measurement. It is fitting to take the opportunity to mark the centennial of the first ILS observations at one of the original observatories. SCIENTIFIC TOPICS AND CALL FOR PAPERS The Colloquium will include the following topics: - History of early polar motion research - History of the monitoring service organizations - Evolution of astronomical observations - Mechanisms for excitation of polar motion - Secular polar motion - Chandler motion - Daily and subdaily polar motion - Modern definition of the celestial ephemeris pole - Outstanding problems in polar motion research Invited, contributed, and poster papers will be considered. The collected proceedings will be published. Abstracts should be submitted by 10 April 1999 to the chairperson of the SOC, Dr. Steven J. Dick, via e-mail (dick@ariel.usno.navy.mil). Authors will be notified of acceptance by 30 May 1999. SCIENTIFIC ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: S. Dick (USA), chair Address: U.S. Naval Observatory 3450 Massachusetts Ave., NW Washington, D.C. 20392-5420 U.S.A. G. Beutler (Switzerland) D. McCarthy (USA) N. Capitaine (France) E. Proverbio (Italy) T. Fukushima (Japan) J. Vondrak (Czech Republic) D. Gambis (France) Ya. Yatskiv (Ukraine) The Colloquium is sponsored by IAU Commission 41 (History of Astronomy) with support from Commission 19 (Earth Rotation) and 31 (Time). It is co-sponsored by the International Association of Geodesy, the International Earth Rotation Service, and the International GPS Service. LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE: F. Fusi Pecci, co-chair E. Proverbio, co-chair A. Poma P. Calledda C. Pili S. Uras T. Zanzu LOCATION The Conference will be held at the "Cittadella Universitaria", the new settlement of the Cagliari University in the immediate outskirts of the city, from Monday, 28 September through Thursday, 30 September 1999. There will be an organized excursion to the original site of the ILS station at Carloforte, on the little island of S.Pietro, about 90 km from Cagliari. Cagliari, situated on the southern coast at the center of the gulf of the Angels, is the capital of the autonomous region of Sardinia and offers many attractions in the fields of archeology, art, landscape and climate. During the latter part of September the weather is normally warm and sunny (the average temperature is around 24 deg C). The Cagliari-Elmas airport is 7 km from downtown. All the main Italian airports have frequent direct daily flights to Cagliari. In addition several ferry-lines connect Italian ports (Genova, Livorno, Civitavecchia) with Sardinia (Cagliari, Olbia, PortoTorres) daily. A certain number of rooms are reserved at hotels located in the town center. The approximate daily hotel rate is 50-110 US$ per person, including breakfast. The Conference fee will be 140 US$. FURTHER INFORMATION AND DEADLINES The second circular, which will be distributed in February 1999, will contain details concerning submittal of abstracts and logistics. Abstracts will be due no later than 10 April 1999. A limited number of travel grants will be available. Those wishing to apply for such a support are requested to complete and return the attached form to the Chairperson of the SOC to arrive not later than 10 April 1999. In the meantime, the latest information on the colloquium will be posted at the Web site http://www.ca.astro.it/iau178. CONTACT ADDRESS: Local Organizing Committee IAU Colloquium 178 Stazione Astronomica Loc. Poggio dei Pini, Str. 54 09012 Capoterra (Cagliari) ITALY Telephone: ++39.070.725246 Telefax: ++39.070.725425 e-mail : iauco178@ca.astro.it To express interest in attending please fill in and return the enclosed form to the contact address before 10 April 1999. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- IAU Colloquium 178 POLAR MOTION: HISTORICAL AND SCIENTIFIC PROBLEMS Cagliari University, Sardinia, Italy 27-30 September 1999 PRELIMINARY REGISTRATION FORM (To be returned before 10 April 1999) To: Local Organizing Committee IAU Colloquium 178 Stazione Astronomica Loc. Poggio dei Pini, Str. 54 O9012 Capoterra (Cagliari) ITALY Telefax: ++ 39.070.725246 E-Mail:iauco178@ca.astro.it FAMILY NAME:......................................................... GIVEN NAME:.......................................................... INSTITUTE:........................................................... MAILING ADDRESS...................................................... ...................................................... TELEPHONE: .......................................................... FAX:................................................................. E-MAIL:.............................................................. I plan to attend the Conference ( ) yes ( ) no I intend to contribute an oral talk ( ) yes ( ) no I intend to present a poster ( ) yes ( ) no --------------------------------------------------------------------------- IAU Colloquium 178 POLAR MOTION: HISTORICAL AND SCIENTIFIC PROBLEMS Cagliari University, Sardinia, Italy 27-30 September 1999 APPLICATION FOR TRAVEL GRANT (To be returned before 10 April 1999) To: Dr. Steven J. Dick U.S. Naval Observatory 3450 Massachusetts Ave.,NW Washington D.C. 20392-5420 U.S.A. Telefax: ++ 202.762.1516 E-Mail:dick@ariel.usno.navy.mil Name of applicant:.................................................... Nationality: ..........................Position:...................... Mailing Address:...................................................... ...................................................... Telephone:.......................Telefax:............................. E-mail:............................................................... Starting point of journey:............................................ (if different from home address): Type of contribution:................................................. (e.g. review talk, thesis presentation, ...) Title of contribution:................................................ ................................................ Total amount of IAU support applied for (in CHF)...................... Subtotal for travel (max.: economy air fare or equivalent):........... Subtotal for subsistence (if no other funds available):............... Other sources of support applied to:.................................. Amount requested/granted:............................................. Signature of applicant: ................Date and place:............... For Ph.D. students: Signature of Thesis Director/Supervisor:......................... Institution:..................................................... ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 32, Oct. 13, 1998 ........................................................................... Conferences 1998/99 ------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 34, 9. Oktober 1998, Item 6. Partially translated by the editor.) Further conferences in the years 1998 and 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html November 7, 1998, Muenster, Germany "Historical connections between the measurement of time and units of angles and length". Seminar of the Fachgruppe Geschichte des Vermessungswesens [Division for the History of Surveying] in the Bildungswerk des Verbandes Deutscher Vermessungsingenieure [Education Foundation of the Association of German Surveying Engineers]. The programme includes: 'Harmony of the World'. Kepler's astronomy between war and peace. Fee: 70 DM Information: Dipl.-Ing. Heinz Juergen Lagoda, Westfaelische Str. 30, D-47169 Duisburg, Germany, Tel. 0203 - 59 82 47 January 5-9, 1999, Austin, TX, USA 193rd Meeting of the American Astronomical Society Wednesday, 6 January 1999, 10:00-11:30am: Tools and Techniques of Data Collection and Reduction in Archaeoastronomy. There will also be a poster session. Organized by David G. Iadevaia, Ph.D., A P I Airbourne Precision Imaging, 2968 W. Ina Rd. Ste 275, Tucson, AZ 85741, USA, phone: 520-544-7896, e-mail: api@api-az.com URLs: http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas193/prelim/prelim.html http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas193/prelim/archaeo.html February 22-26, 1999, Mumbai, India International Workshop on the History of Science: Implications for Science Education Contacts: WHOS Secretariat, Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education, V.N. Purav Marg, Mankhurd, Mumbai 400088, India, Phones: 5567711, 5554712, 5555242, Fax: 91-022-5566803, email: whos@hbcse.tifr.res.in For more details see: http://www.tifr.res.in/~hbcse/workshop.html March 18-19, 1999, Heidelberg, Germany VIIIth History of Physics Conference about "Physics and physicists in Germany after World War II (1945/55)" Deadline for abstracts: Nov. 1, 1998. Information and registration: Dr. Dieter Hoffmann, MPI fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte, Wilhelmstr. 44, D-10117 Berlin, Germany, tel. 030/22667-117, fax: 22667-299, e-mail: dh@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Steven J. Dick (Washington, DC), Dieter Hoffmann (Berlin), Heinz Juergen Lagoda (Duisburg). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 33
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 33, December 11, 1998 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Peter D. Hingley: The Royal Astronomical Society's Library and Archives 2. Michael Oates: Uranographia Britannica 3. Julio Gonzalez Cabillon: HISTORIA MATEMATICA - a new mailing list 4. Fifth International Conference on the History and Foundations of General Relativity 5. Conferences 1999-2001 Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 33, December 11, 1998 ........................................................................... The Royal Astronomical Society's Library and Archives ----------------------------------------------------- By Peter D. Hingley, London (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, October 1998, Issue # 3. See http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/iaucomm41/news/c41_news_03.html . Slightly edited by the author for this reprint.) The Royal Astronomical Society has been accumulating books, manuscripts, pictures, instruments and miscellaneous relics since its foundation in 1820 February. Originally only a `box of books', the Library has grown to occupy quite a large proportion of the Society's premises in Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, and has an open shelf stock of about 12,000 `modern' books (i.e. post 1850), about 4,000 books and pamphlets before 1850, and the remaining 16,000 volumes are bound periodicals, some of them of great age. The Library is primarily a research library dealing with modern astronomy and geophysics and seeks to maintain a balanced, if not fully comprehensive, stock of books in those subjects. The majority of serious journals in astronomy are held from volume 1. Many journals are held dealing with the more theoretical aspects of geophysics but the monographs stocks in this field are less complete. It also has extensive collections for the history of astronomy, and some on that of geophysics. The creme de la creme of the Rare Books is the collection bequeathed by the late Colonel E H Grove-Hills on his death in 1923. The Library has also subsumed the very interesting Library of the Spitalfields Mathematical Society (1717 - 1846) though alas quite a lot of their books were subsequently disposed of; we probably have about 800 left including journal volumes. The RAS Archives were catalogued by Dr J A Bennett whose catalogue was published as the last issue of the Society's Memoirs in 1978 (Volume 85). Printed copies of this are still available. They include both the administrative papers of the Society, and its correspondence with its members, from the first days of its existence onwards, (and although there are many famous names in those pages sadly this material can induce a certain ennui in the researcher as much of it is purely administrative). These are referred to as `RAS PAPERS' and `RAS LETTERS'. Much more varied and interesting are the `RAS MSS', which is a wide ranging collection of deposits of papers from individuals and a few observatories. They include material from such interesting people as Sir James South, Francis Baily, William Lassell, the complete run of Heinrich Schwabe's sunspot observing books from which he derived his original results about periodicity, Madras Observatory, and many more. Overwhelmingly the most important group of manuscript material owned by the RAS is its manuscripts of Sir William, Miss Caroline, and Sir John Herschel. A microfilm of this is available (24 reels !) but until very recently it has been stored in the archives strongroom of Churchill College, Cambridge; it has just been returned to Burlington House. The `ADD MSS' are an even more varied collection, including material in many formats and types. Due to constraints of time and finance Dr Bennett's catalogue was selective - generally the names listed of correspondents are only those important enough to be in `Poggendorff's Biographisch-Literarisches Handwoerterbuch...', and, alas, there is no subject index. The latter problem has been partly (and laboriously) addressed by having a scanned file made of the catalogue which has been proof-read by myself and the corrections inserted - though inevitably there are still some errors - so that simple searches can be done by names or subjects. As time has gone on more material has come to light, and a supplementary list is slowly being compiled, again in WORD so simple searches are possible, though alas due to time constraints progress has been painfully slow. Numerous small manuscript items were discovered by searching through the Library's `Tract' collection and things get found or are donated. Interesting deposits of material added since Dr Bennett's catalogue have included proof and MS versions of George Bishop's `Charts of the Ecliptic', additional papers of James Glaisher, and observing material of the Revd T E R Phillips, the Revd T W Webb, F J M Stratton, and A G Shrimpton. Some work has also been done on the RAS's photographic holdings; the collection is strong in portraits and photographs of telescopes and eclipse expeditions. The collection of astronomical photographs is only now being explored; there are varying numbers of prints by A A Common, Isaac Roberts, Max Wolff and Paul et Prosper Henry while there are several thousand glass plates in many varying formats some dating back to the 1860s. At long last conservation enclosures and space are available for the sorting out of these but again time is very limited. One of the most frequent types of enquiry is for bio-bibliography of former scientists and to assist with this type of enquiry a 9 page handout is available on request, `Biographical and Portrait Sources for Astronomers' (Bio-Paws for short !) which, although inevitably British orientated, lists quite a lot of the sources for such study as well as acting as a guide to RAS holdings. The Library is not actually a public one and is maintained for and financed by the Society. With a staff of only two it is difficult to deal with the many public enquiries from people wanting to name stars after their Granny (!) or see the next eclipse. We do however welcome many overseas researchers each year and as far as possible answer incoming research enquiries from non Fellows. It is really essential however that any non-members wishing to use the Library should make contact in advance by e-mail, telephone, or letter, especially if they wish to use special collections material. They should also be prepared to prove their identity with a University staff card or the like. RAS Library's Web page: http://www.ras.org.uk/ras/library/library.htm Author's address: Peter D. Hingley, Librarian Royal Astronomical Society Burlington House Piccadilly London W1V 0NL England Tel.: 0171 734 4582 / 3307 Fax: 0171 494 0166 e-mails: Librarian: pdh@ras.org.uk Assistant Librarian: mic@ras.org.uk General Enquiries: info@ras.org.uk ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 33, December 11, 1998 ........................................................................... Uranographia Britannica ----------------------- By Michael Oates, Manchester (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 35, 7. Dezember 1998, Item 4.) The Manchester Astronomical Society are proud to announce that a CD-ROM version of an extremely rare Star Atlas compiled by John Bevis, in the eighteenth century, can now be ordered online from http://www.u-net.com/ph/mas/bevis/cd-rom.htm Or you can visit the Bevis Uranographia Britannica home page at http://www.u-net.com/ph/mas/bevis/ An article on the Discovery of the Atlas appeared in Astronomy Now, June 98 edition. Plus a 4 page article on the November 98 issue of Sky & Telescope. The CD-ROM was also featured in the September 98 issue of Sky & Telescope. Brief Description of the Atlas This is an extremely rare atlas, and little known. The Manchester Astronomical Society discovered, nearly one year ago, that it was in possession of a very good copy, one of only 16 known to exist! It comprises of 51 Star charts covering the whole sky, a Cover page, Frontispiece and Index page. John Bevis, an eighteenth century physician - turned astronomer, whose other claim to fame is as the discoverer of the Crab Nebula compiled this atlas during the years 1745 - 1750. But the atlas was never published as the publisher was declared bankrupt in 1750. The quality of the engravings far surpass any other star atlas of the day, including those from Bayer, and Flamsteed. See http://www.u-net.com/ph/mas/bevis/press.htm for a Press release. Brief Description of the CD-ROM The whole atlas has been reproduced and put on to CD-ROM. Not only are all the charts and plates on the CD-ROM, but there is also a wealth of information about the atlas, John Bevis, how it was produced and why it was never published. The CD-ROM also includes an article about a pre-discovery observation of Uranus. A separate image directory has all the plates in .bmp format, and a selection of very high resolution images in .jpg format. The CD-ROM works with all versions of Windows from 3.1 upwards including Windows95/98 Windows NT3.5x - NT4 and the Macintosh. See http://www.u-net.com/ph/mas/bevis/cd-rom.htm for more information and online ordering by RegNet, or pay by cheque. Prices from GBP 12 plus postage. Author's address: Michael Oates, F.R.A.S. Manchester Astronomical Society http://www.u-net.com/ph/mas/ Email: mike@ph.u-net.com ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 33, December 11, 1998 ........................................................................... HISTORIA MATEMATICA - a new mailing list ---------------------------------------- By Julio Gonzalez Cabillon, Montevideo, Uruguay (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 35, 7. Dezember 1998, Item 5.) HISTORIA MATEMATICA [HM] is a new discussion list on the history of mathematics. 1. Description of HM 1.1 Purpose and standards The purpose of this list is to provide a virtual forum for scholarly discussion of the history of mathematics (in a broad sense), amongst professionals and non-professionals with an earnest interest in the field. Postings are to be highly relevant to the purpose of this list. All traditional and scholarly aspects of the history of mathematics are expected to be heavily discussed here. Additionally, - History of _history of mathematics_ - Current trends in the history of mathematics - History of _mathematics outside Europe_ - Ethnomathematics - Pedagogical issues - Origin of mathematical terms/symbols - Biographies and obituaries - Bibliographical references (databases) - Announcements and reviews of new books, articles, preprints, websites, ... - Advertisements of conferences, meetings, jobs, ... Contributors should strive to submit posts containing interesting, worthwhile or new information about substantive topics on the history of mathematics in a conscious effort to keep the signal-to-noise ratio as high as possible. Pertinent comments, queries, replies ... should be written with the same standards of thoughtfulness and care that apply to other scholarly activities; not necessarily at the level of writing a book or an article for a journal, but at least at the level of the informal printed material (e.g. photocopies) used at courses. 1.2 Languages ENGLISH, Portuguese and Spanish are the official languages of the list. Postings in other languages (e.g. French, German, Italian, ...) are also welcome. But, in this case, whenever a long posting is sent out, an abstract in English (say) would be highly appreciated. Although I do not think one should encourage too many languages on the forum (since many listmembers might just be monoglots), the list is to be *open* to those contributors who wish to communicate in their mother tongue, and do not feel confident enough in other languages. If you are *not* familiar with the language of a post, but you suspect that the topic discussed is, for instance, relevant to your own field of study (some key-words in the email may suggest that), a solution somehow will be found - at least, I hope so. If you are not sufficiently interested in that thread, you may simply hit the 'delete' key. This list is intended to provide a vehicle of communication for people of different nationalities, and it is unreasonable - in my opinion - to ask *everyone* to write in a specific language in order to communicate. 1.3 Configuration This is a CLOSED forum; that is to say, subscriptions MUST be approved by the list owner. Those who subscribe to HM are encouraged to identify themselves by name, profession, institutional affiliation, and research interest. 'Ego trips' will mean trips outside the list. Whereas freedom of speech is wonderful, and the discussion of controversial matters on the history of mathematics is to be expected (and welcome!), personal invective cannot take place on this forum. It must be said very emphatically: abuse or misuse of the list in one way or another will cause instant cancellation of the subscription by the list owner. 2. How to sign on You can join the HISTORIA MATEMATICA mailing list sending your subscription (which has to be APPROVED) to with the following command in the body of your message: subscribe historia-matematica [Please mind that there is no 'h' in 'matematica'] You can also request your subscription (for APPROVAL) to HM sending mail to with the following command in the body of your message: subscribe Author's address: Professor Julio Gonzalez Cabillon Emilio Frugoni 860 / apto 002 11200 Montevideo Uruguay Phones: +598 2 409 1977, +598 2 401 2951 Emails: owner-historia-matematica@chasque.apc.org, jgc@chasque.apc.org ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 33, December 11, 1998 ........................................................................... Fifth International Conference on the History and Foundations of ---------------------------------------------------------------- General Relativity ------------------ (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 35, 7. Dezember 1998, Item 6.) July 8-11, 1999 University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana Announcement and Call for Papers The organizers invite proposals for papers in all areas of the history and foundations of general relativity. Suitable topics include but are not limited to: * historical analysis of the origins of general relativity up to 1915, its precursors, competitors, and related developments in physics and mathematics; * historical analysis of the later development of the theory, including: relativistic astrophysics and cosmology, unified field theories, empirical tests, the equations of motion, energy conservation, gravitational collapse, gravitational waves, black holes, and singularity theorems, relativistic continuum mechanics, quantization of general relativity, alternative theories of gravitation; * critical analysis of foundational problems in general relativity, including: relationalism versus substantivalism, singularities, energy conservation, black hole information loss, quantum field theory in curved spacetime, quantum gravity, reduction of Newtonian gravitational theory and special relativity to general relativity, axiomatizations of general relativity, cosmology; * general relativity in context, including the scientific, institutional, philosophical, cultural and popular reception of the theory in diverse communities and countries, anti-relativity movements. Organizing Committee: Jean Eisenstaedt, CNRS Paris Hubert Goenner, Physics, University of Goettingen Don Howard, Philosophy, University of Notre Dame Michel Janssen, Philosophy, Boston University A.J. Kox, Physics, University of Amsterdam John Norton, History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh Juergen Renn, Max Planck Institute for History of Science, Berlin Sahotra Sarkar, Philosophy, University of Texas=96Austin Tilman Sauer, History of Science, University of G=F6ttingen John Stachel, Physics, Boston University C.V. Vishveshwara, Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Bangalore Sponsoring organizations: Reilly Center for Science, Technology, and Values, and the Graduate Program in History and Philosophy of Science, University of Notre Dame Center for Einstein Studies, Boston University If your center would like to cosponsor this or future meetings, write for further information. If you are interested in attending, please return the form below for further mailings. If you would like to propose a paper, please return the form below with a title and abstract of the proposed paper as soon as possible, at the latest by January 30, 1999. Decisions of the organizing committee will be announced no later than March 15, 1999. You can mail the form to: Don Howard Program in History and Philosophy of Science 346 O'Shaughnessy University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, Indiana 46556 Or email the form to: Don.A.Howard.43@nd.edu For further information, write to either of the above addresses; you may also telephone at 219-631-7547 or fax at 219-631-3985. ------------------------------------------------------ Please send me further mailings on the Fifth International Conference on the History and Foundations of General Relativity. Title: Name: Institution: Address: Telephone: Fax: E-Mail: I do / do not wish to offer a paper. (If yes, please enclose title and abstract.) ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 33, December 11, 1998 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999-2001 --------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 36, 11. Dezember 1998, Items 3 [excerpt only] and 4. Partially translated by the editor.) Further conferences in the year 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html February 27, 1999, Oakland, CA, USA 48th meeting of the Northern California Luncheon and Discussion Association (NCHALADA XLVIII) for historical astronomy discussions Place: Chabot Observatory, 4917 Mountain Blvd., Oakland, CA 94619. 9:30 AM: refreshments and greetings. 10 AM: "Climate Changes on Earth", chaired by Betty Neall, Eastbay Astronomical Society. 2:30 PM: "Asteroids", chaired by Bill Stepka, San Francisco Amateur Astronomers. Contact: Norman Sperling, Everything in the Universe, 185 John Street, Oakland, CA 94611. Phone & fax: +510-547-6523. e-mail: nsperling@california.com. March 20, 1999, Jena, Germany Colloquium on the occassion of the 300th birthday of Erhard Weigel. Information: Dr. Klaus-Dieter Herbst, Braendstroemstrasse 17, D-07749 Jena, Germany; or Dr. Reinhard E. Schielicke, e-mail: schie@astro.uni-jena.de URL: http://www.astro.uni-jena.de/Astron_Ges/weigel.html May 13-16, 1999, Ilmenau/Thuringia, Germany 28th Annual Meeting of the Arbeitskreis Sonnenuhren [Sundial Working Group] in the Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer Chronometrie [German Chronometric Society] On May 14 papers will be presented, on May 15 a one-day excursion will take place. Fee: Non-members DM 55.00 Deadline for registration: January 31, 1999 Information and registration: Arnold Zenkert, Seestr. 17, D-14467 Potsdam, Germany, Phone/Fax 0331-2700468 May 29-30, 1999, Munich, Germany Between Physics and Biology: Chemical Sciences in the Twentieth Century Joint Conference of the IUHPS/DHS Commissions on the History of Modern Chemistry / on the History of Modern Physics The programme includes: Session II. From Radiochemistry to Nuclear Chemistry and Cosmochemistry with a paper by Helge Kragh (Aarhus): Geo-, Astro- and Cosmochemistry: Chemical Approaches to the Study of the Heavens Registration deadline: 15 April 1999. Registration fee: DM 40 Inquiries and registration: Prof. Christoph Meinel, Wissenschaftsgeschichte, University of Regenburg, D-93040 Regensburg, Germany, e-mail: christoph.meinel@psk.uni-regenburg.de September 15-19, 1999, Lake Como and Pavia, Italy "Science as Culture": 5th International History, Philosophy and Science Teaching Conference and 8th European Physical Society History and Physics Teaching Conference For details and paper submissions contact: Dr Enrico Antonio Giannetto, Dipartimento di Fisica 'A.Volta', Universita di Pavia, Via A. Bassi 6, 27100 Pavia, Italy, email: volta99@pv.infn.it URLs: http://www.cilea.it/volta99/ , http://opus.cilea.it/cgi-bin/fisicasite/webdriver?MIval=qp_paviam&pg=PV July 6-9, 2000, Vienna, Austria Third International History of Philosophy of Science Conference (HOPOS 2000) Submissions may be in English, German or French. Address inquiries to: Institute Vienna Circle, Museumstrasse 5/2/17, A-1070 Wien, Austria. Phone/Fax.: +431-526-1005. Email: i_v_c@ping.at (please refer to "HOPOS 2000" in the subject line) URL: http://hhobel.phl.univie.ac.at/wk/hop2000.html August 7-19, 2000, Manchester, UK XXIVth General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union Comm. 41 "History of Astronomy" Business meeting Proposed Joint Discussion: "Applied Historical Astronomy" Proposed Invited Discourse: "The History of Astronomy in the 20th Century" Details will be announced later. Contacts: Dr Steven J. Dick, U.S. Naval Observatory, 3450 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. 20392-5420, USA, e-mail: dick@ariel.usno.navy.mil September 4-8, 2000, Oxford, UK XIX Scientific Instrument Symposium organised by the Scientific Instrument Commission of the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science Contacts: Dr. James A. Bennett, Museum of the History of Science, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3AZ, Great Britain, e-mail: jim.bennett@History-of-Science.oxford.ac.uk July 8-14, 2001, Mexico City, Mexico XXIst International Congress of History of Science Theme: Science and Cultural Diversity If you are interested in receiving the Call for Papers and other information on the congress, please contact: Prof. Juan Jose Saldana, Chairman of the Organizing Committee, of the XXIst ICHS, Apartado postal 21-873, 04000 Mexico D. F., Mexico, e-mail: xxiichs@servidor.unam.mx URL: http://www.cilea.it/history/DHS/mexico.htm ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Klaus-Dieter Herbst (Jena), Reinhard E. Schielicke (Jena), Norman Sperling (Oakland, CA), Arnold Zenkert (Potsdam). ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 34
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 34, March 8, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Steve McCluskey: Archaeoastronomy: the Journal of Astronomy in Culture 2. 150th Anniversary of the Founding of the U.S Nautical Almanac Office 3. Symposium announcement: The Legacy of J. C. Kapteyn 4. Workshop announcement: One Hundred Years of Observational Astronomy and Astrophysics 5. XVIII International Scientific Instrument Symposium Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 34, March 8, 1999 ........................................................................... Archaeoastronomy: the Journal of Astronomy in Culture ----------------------------------------------------- By Steve McCluskey, Morgantown, WV The first edition (vol. 14, number 1) of Archaeoastronomy: the Journal of Astronomy in Culture (formerly Archaeoastronomy: the Journal of the Center of Archaeoastronomy) will appear in June, 1999 under an expanded editorial board and a new publisher (The University of Texas Press). Since its inception in 1977, Archaeoastronomy has always been a refereed journal and its editors have sought to maintain a high standard for publication. This has not changed. The editors welcome the submission of articles reporting substantial research in the general areas covered by the terms Archaeoastronomy, Ethnoastronomy, and Astronomy in Culture. The acceptance of papers for publication has never been influenced by membership in any organization nor in degrees held by the author but by the extent to which the submission promotes further understanding of the questions arising in the study of astronomies in cultures and demonstrates the formal rigor necessary for academic recognition. The Journal's style guide and further details on submission can be found at: http://www.wam.umd.edu/~tlaloc/archastro/style.html Please note, the journal Archaeoastronomy: the Supplement to the Journal for the History of Astronomy, continues to appear under the editorship of Michael Hoskin. Author's address: Dr. Steve McCluskey, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA, e-mail: scmcc@wvnvm.wvnet.edu ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 34, March 8, 1999 ........................................................................... 150th Anniversary of the Founding of the U.S Nautical Almanac Office -------------------------------------------------------------------- March 3, 1999 marked the 150th anniversary of the establishment of the U.S. Nautical Almanac Office (NAO) by Congress. Since its founding, the NAO and the U.S. Naval Observatory (its modern-day parent organization) have compiled a distinguished record of service to the U.S. Navy, the other armed services, the international scientific community, and the public by providing reliable, practical astronomical data. These data are used for a wide variety of purposes including navigation, surveying, scientific research, mission planning, and everyday activities. To commemorate this special event, the U.S. Naval Observatory hosted the Nautical Almanac Office Sesquicentennial Symposium on 3-5 March 1999 in Washington, DC. The symposium covered a broad spectrum of topics including the history of the office, its mission, the users of its products, the underlying science, and a look toward the future. The attendees, all invited, came from diverse backgrounds, both military and civilian, and were international in scope. In addition to papers presented by the Nautical Almanac Office staff, invited speakers included scientists and historians from a variety of institutions. Program information for the Symposium may be found on the Astronomical Applications Department web site at URL: http://aa.usno.navy.mil/NAO150/ In 1849 Congress established the Nautical Almanac Office to prepare and publish an official national almanac. Up to that time American scientists and seamen relied on foreign almanacs - particularly those of Great Britain - for astronomical and navigational data. Privately published almanacs, such as Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanac, were generally not adequate for scientific use. The Office was placed under the direction of Lieutenant Charles Henry Davis, an experienced naval officer with a scientific background and personal associations with prominent American scientists. Davis established the Office in Cambridge, Massachusetts, independent of the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington. In Cambridge the Office had access to Harvard University and Professor Benjamin Peirce, the leading American mathematician of the time. The Office would remain in Cambridge until 1866, when it was moved to Washington, DC. In 1893, the Nautical Almanac Office moved into office space at the U.S. Naval Observatory's new home north of Georgetown. In 1852, the Office published its first volume, The American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac for 1855. An extract of this, The American Nautical Almanac for 1855, was issued for mariners. The American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac provided data needed by astronomers and surveyors. In addition to its practical purpose, it served as a source of national pride. The volume was regarded as an important demonstration of the developing scientific prowess in the United States. The American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac and its successors, The Astronomical Almanac and The Nautical Almanac, have been published continuously ever since. The Air Almanac, a publication geared towards aviation navigation, has been published continuously since 1941. Over the years, the Nautical Almanac Office has employed several of the nation's most able astronomers and mathematicians, including Simon Newcomb and G. W. Hill, whose 19th Century theories on the motions of the planets remained in use until the 1980's. In the 1940's, the first mechanical computers dramatically improved the accuracy and streamlined the production of the Almanacs. In the 1960's, the Office established a close and lasting relationship with Her Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office in Great Britain and with scientists at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The Astronomical Almanac (a new, joint publication of the British and American Offices) was introduced in 1984. Today, the Nautical Almanac Office is a part of the USNO's Astronomical Applications Department. It continues to provide annual printed almanacs for air and marine navigation, and for use by astronomers worldwide. In addition, it continues to develop and refine computer-based almanacs, such as the Multiyear Interactive Computer Almanac (MICA), and to provide a wide range of free, interactive almanac data via the USNO's World Wide Web site. In addition to providing critical astronomical data, the Astronomical Applications Department also carries out a modest research program in diverse areas, including celestial mechanics, positional astronomy, and navigation, to enable it to meet future needs. (Based on a press release of the Public Affairs Office, U.S. Naval Observatory. Information Contact: John Bangert, bangert@aa.usno.navy.mil . Press Contact: Geoff Chester, grc@spica.usno.navy.mil) ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 34, March 8, 1999 ........................................................................... Symposium announcement ---------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 37, 22. Januar 1999, Item 3.) THE LEGACY OF J.C. KAPTEYN An overview of Kapteyn's influence on astronomy Groningen, The Netherlands, June 9 - 11, 1999 AIMS ---- The University of Groningen was founded in 1614 and consequently will be celebrating in 1999 its 385th anniversary. In this year we are less than 2 years away from the end of the twentieth century and the beginning of the third millennium. When the twentieth century started, Kapteyn had just completed publication (between 1896 and 1900) of the "Cape Photographic Durchmusterung", a work that established his international fame and leadership. Kapteyn's influence on astronomy in the Netherlands is still alive; in fact it may be safely stated that the success of Dutch astronomy in this century has for a major part been derived from Kapteyn through his work, his students and his strong commitment to international collaboration. As part of the University's celebration of its lustrum a symposium will be held which is organized by both the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute and the History Department. The primary aim is to concentrate on issues related to the sociology of Kapteyn's influence. It would be of interest to try to trace the continuation of Kapteyn's initiatives in research, campaigns and organizations by concentrating on both persons and themes. The symposium will last three days with six half-day sessions, mainly made up of invited contributions. Speakers include W.E. Krul, W.T. Sullivan, W.R. de Sitter, M. Schmidt, D. DeVorkin, R. Smith, G. Gilmore, M.A.C. Perryman, L. Woltjer and various members of the Scientific Organizing Committee. The final program will leave ample time for discussion. The symposium should be attended by an international audience consisting of both astronomers with a historical interest and historians of astronomy and natural science. More information about this symposium and how to register can be obtained by visiting the symposium's web-page or sending an e-mail or letter to the LOC. ORGANIZATION ------------ Scientific Organizing Committee: Chairpersons: Prof. P.C. van der Kruit, Prof. K. van Berkel Other members: Prof. A. Blaauw, Prof. M.W. Feast, Prof. O. Gingerich, Dr. K.H. Kuijken, Prof. J.D. North, Prof. D.E. Osterbrock, Dr. P.R. Wesselius Local Organizing Committee: Chairperson: D.H.N. Staal Other members: Prof. T.S. van Albada, T.A. Jurriens, J.P. Terlouw, H.P. Zondervan-Kimsma E-mail: jck99@astro.rug.nl WWW page: http://www.astro.rug.nl/~jck99/ Post address: Kapteyn Institute, LOC Kapteyn Symposium P.O. Box 800 NL-9700 AV Groningen The Netherlands ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 34, March 8, 1999 ........................................................................... Workshop announcement --------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 37, 22. Januar 1999, Item 4.) ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF OBSERVATIONAL ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS Homage to MIKLOS KONKOLY THEGE (1842-1916) Tihany (Hungary), 13--15 August 1999 FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT PURPOSE ------- The purpose of this workshop is to mark the centenary of the founding of the Konkoly Observatory in 1899 as a research institution of the Hungarian state. The workshop will bring together international experts in the history of observational astronomy and astrophysics to present papers on various topics. These topics will relate to observational astrophysics in the era when Konkoly himself was active. TOPICS COVERED -------------- The main topics to be covered will be: - Solar, stellar and solar-system astrophysics - Instrumentation, telescopes and observatories - Scientific results and concepts in astrophysics - The interaction between astronomy and fundamental physics, and the consequent birth of astrophysics - The relationships between astronomers in the time of Konkoly and his contemporaries - International programmes in observational astronomy (such as Carte du Ciel and CPD) and catalogues (Harvard photometry and HD Catalogue, etc.) - The formation of international organisations (International Solar Union, and later of IAU from the Astrographic Congress, etc.) The workshop will explore topics such as these as they were in the half century 1870-1920, which includes all the years when Konkoly himself was active, from the time of his early interest in astronomy, the founding of his private observatory in 1871, through to the time of his death in 1916 and to the building of the National Observatory at Svabhegy in Budapest in the 1920s. The workshop will not be devoted just to the life and work of Konkoly himself, but will explore themes in international astronomy and astrophysics current at the time of Konkoly and especially those which he himself espoused. DATES ----- Friday August 13 to Sunday August 15, 1999. The workshop follows on immediately after the conclusion of IAU Symposium 176. VENUE ----- The venue is a Conference Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences at Tihany, Lake Balaton, Hungary. Group transport from Budapest will be organized on August 13 (Friday afternoon), busses will bring participants back to Budapest on Sunday August 15. ACCOMMODATION ------------- Guesthouse-type accommodation on the premises of the same Conference Center. We have booked a number of rooms with double and triple occupancy for the nights of August 13 and 14. The cost for a double room (single or double occupancy) is about DM 50 per night, a room for three persons is about DM 75 per night. These prices do not include breakfast. PARTICIPATION ------------- The number of participants is restricted to 25, and participation is by invitation only. REGISTRATION ------------ Interested participants are invited to register with the enclosed registration form (which is also available at our website http://www.vub.ac.be/STER/KONKOLY/tihany.html). The registration fee is DM 120 and will cover one copy of the proceedings, the group transport from Budapest to Tihany and back, the rent of the conference room, and simple breakfast (catered by ourselves) on the days of August 14 and 15. Cash payment is accepted at the moment of registration. ACCOMPANYING PERSONS -------------------- We welcome accompanying persons, and there is no charge for registered guests. FINANCIAL SUPPORT ----------------- We try to run the Workshop with almost no financial sponsoring. Therefore, WE CANNOT OFFER TRAVEL SUPPORT TO ANY OF THE PARTICIPANTS. Partial waving of the registration fee can exceptionally be granted to young participants who are not supported by a home institute. Applications for such support should be made well in advance of the meeting. PROCEEDINGS ----------- All oral papers will be included in the Proceedings, which will be edited by C. Sterken and J. Hearnshaw. PRELIMINARY LIST OF SPEAKERS ---------------------------- Lajos Balazs Hilmar Duerbeck John Hearnshaw Istvan Jankovics James Caplan Dimitar Sasselov Anneliese Schnell Klaus Staubermann Chris Sterken Endre Zsoldos Mine Takeuti Magda Vargha Brian Warner Gudrun Wolfschmidt ________________________________________________________________________ Scientific Organizing Committee: | Local Organizing Committee: | Chris Sterken | Magda Vargha University of Brussels | Laszlo Szabados Brussels, Belgium | Endre Zsoldos (csterken@vub.ac.be) | (vargha@buda.konkoly.hu) | (szabados@buda.konkoly.hu) John Hearnshaw | (zsoldos@buda.konkoly.hu) University of Canterbury | Christchurch, New Zealand | Konkoly Observatory (j.hearnshaw@phys.canterbury.ac.nz) | Budapest, Hungary ________________________________________|_______________________________ ======================================================================= = = = REGISTRATION FORM = = = ======================================================================= ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF OBSERVATIONAL ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS Homage to MIKLOS KONKOLY THEGE (1842-1916) Tihany (Hungary), 13--15 August 1999 Family Name: First Name: Postal address: FAX: E-mail address: Number of accompanying persons (with numbers): Please complete if you wish to present a paper: Title: Authors: Duration of talk: Abstract: Accommodation: please indicate your choice: 0 I prefer single occupancy 0 I wish to share a double room with: 0 I wish to share a triple room with: Return to: Chris Sterken, University of Brussels, Pleinlaan 2, 1050 Brussels, Belgium, e-mail: csterken@vub.ac.be, fax: 32 93623976 AN UP-TO-DATE VERSION OF THE ANNOUNCEMENTS IS AVAILABLE AT: http://www.vub.ac.be/STER/KONKOLY/tihany.html ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 34, March 8, 1999 ........................................................................... Symposium announcement ---------------------- XVIII International Scientific Instrument Symposium Moscow - St. Petersburg, Russia 20-25 September 1999 The International Scientific Instrument Symposium will be for the first time held in Russia in 1999. The Organizers of the Symposium in the Russian Federation are The Institute of the History of Science and Technology of Russian Academy of Sciences, and The Union of Scientific and Engineering Associations. The Symposium includes sessions with papers in Moscow (20-22 September 1999) and a two-day post-conference tour to St.Petersburg for visiting museums and institutes (23-24 September 1999). The Symposium will be held in the year of the 275th anniversary of the foundation of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Creation of the Academy was based on the establishment of close connections with scholars and scientific institutions of other countries. With this in mind, the main theme of the symposium is: Historical relations between Russia and other countries in the field of scientific instruments. Although this theme will be given priority, papers on other problems will be included as well. Abstracts with not more than 300 words are to be sent by mail to the Conference Office before April 30, 1999. Speakers will have 20 minutes for their reports; an additional 5 minutes will be given to answer questions. Poster papers will be allowed also. Address of the Conference Office: XVIII International Scientific Instrument Symposium Institute of the History of Science and Technology, RAS Staropanski per., 1/5, Moscow, 103012, Russia. Telephone: (095) 921 8061 Fax: (095) 925 9911 E-mail: borisov@history.ihst.ru Location and Fees The Symposium will be held in the Conference Hall at the Presidium of Russian Academy of Sciences. Accommodations for participants will be at the nearby hotel Sputnik except for students (those paying the reduced students fee) who will be offered accommodations at a students hostel. The address of the hotel is: Hotel Sputnik Leninsky prospekt 38, Moscow (from metro station Leninsky prospect the hotel is 7 min. walk away). The registration fee includes: hotel accommodation, lunches and coffee-breaks during the sessions, documents (book of abstracts, notebook, postcards, etc.), receptions and conference dinner, excursions to museums and bus service. The standard registration fee is: $500 if payment is made before 1st June. $550 if payment is made on or after 1st June. A reduced registration fee for students is $420. Participants who wish to go to St. Petersburg should make additional payment for this trip. Payment for the trip to St. Petersburg (23rd-24th September) includes: railway ticket to St. Petersburg (and back if necessary), hotel accommodation, meals, excursions to museums and bus service. The cost of the trip to St. Petersburg is: $275 for those who leave Russia from St. Petersburg. $350 for those who return to Moscow. Preliminary Programme Arrival - Moscow Sunday September 19 Arrival of the symposium participants Check in at the Hotel Sputnik or student Hostel Moscow Conference Monday September 20 Opening Session Papers Excursion to the Kremlin with visit to the Armoury Opening Reception Tuesday September 21 Papers Excursion to the State Polytechnical Museum Reception in the Museum Wednesday September 22 Papers Plenary Session of the Scientific Instrument Commission Excursions to Moscow museums (by choice): - Museum of the Astronomical Institute named after P.K. Sternberg - Exhibition devoted to the modern aspects of instrument development held in Bauman Moscow State Technical University - Museum of Moscow State University of Geodesy and Cartography - The Faculty of Physics of Moscow State University - Museum of History of Moscow Medical Academy named after I. Sechenov - The State Historical Museum Memorial Museum of P.L. Kapitza Departure to St. Petersburg for a two-day excursion. St. Petersburg Trip Thursday September 23 Excursion to the Museum "The State Hermitage" Lecture delivered by V. Matveev: "Scientific instruments and watches in the Hermitage Collection" Visits to St. Petersburg museums (by choice): - D.I. Mendeleev Archival Museum in St. Petersburg University - Museum of the Radium Institute named after V.P. Khlopin - Central Museum of Communications named after A.S. Popov Friday September 24 Visit to the Lomonosov Museum and the Observatory named after A. Voieikov Lecture delivered by N. Nevskaya: "Instruments of the St. Petersburg Observatory" Visits to St. Petersburg area museums (by choice): - Central Navy Museum - Museum of the Research Institute of the HF currents named after V.P. Vologdin - Museum-laboratory named after A.S. Popov in Kronstadt Closing Reception For more information, please contact the Conference Office, or visit the Symposium's Web site at http://www.sic.iuhps.org/conf1999/ ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 35
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 35, March 25, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Steven J. Dick: Commission 41 2000 and 2001 Time Ball Initiative 2. History of Astronomy Discussions in California 3. History of Astronomy Colloquium in Goettingen 4. The Fifth Annual Conference of The North American Sundial Society 5. Colloquium Announcement: 400 Years of Astronomy on Merseyside 6. Conferences 1999 7. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... Commission 41 2000 and 2001 Time Ball Initiative ------------------------------------------------ By Steven J. Dick, Washington, D.C. (From: IAU Comm. 41 Newsletter, 1997-2000 Triennium, October 1998, Issue # 3. See http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/iaucomm41/news/c41_news_03.html . Also published in "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 37, 22. Januar 1999, Item 2.) In conjunction with the arrival of the years 2000 and 2001, the U. S. Naval Observatory and IAU Commission 41 "History of Astronomy" are coordinating a worldwide time ball drop on New Year's Eve. The concept is that as the new year sweeps around the world, time balls will be dropped at midnight local time beginning in New Zealand, then Australia, South Africa, Sweden, UK, and the Naval Observatory in Washington. These are the currently active time balls that we are aware of. If you are aware of any others, please let me know. As you know, time balls were historically an important means of time dissemination, and therefore an important part of the history of practical astronomy. At the beginning of the century, 19 were being dropped in the United States alone. We believe that this worldwide coordinated effort will not only draw attention to the historical importance of time balls and also to a small part of the history of astronomy, but also to the modern means of time dissemination via the Global Positioning System. Each site will be responsible for any associated celebratory activities. At the Naval Observatory in Washington, we plan to invite the public to celebrate the beginning of 2000 and 2001 by watching the time ball drop from a mast near the dome of one of our telescopes. In conjunction with this we will offer tours of the Observatory and views through the telescope. These celebratory events will undoubtedly draw a good deal of publicity; in the United States a consortium of broadcast media is planning 25 hours of continuous coverage worldwide for the new Millennium. Information on the first time balls, erected in Portsmouth and Greenwich, is found in Ian R. Bartky and Steven J. Dick, "The First Time Balls," Journal for the History of Astronomy, 12 (1981), 155-74. On the first North American time balls see Ian R. Bartky and Steven J. Dick, "The First North American Time Ball," Journal for the History of Astronomy, 13 (1982), 50-54; For the spread of time balls in the United States see Ian R. Bartky, "Naval Observatory Time Dissemination Before the Wireless," in Sky with Ocean Joined, Steven J. Dick and LeRoy Doggett, eds. (Washington, 1983), 1-28. The latter contains numerous illustrations of time balls, as does Bartky's article "The Bygone Era of Time Balls," Sky and Telescope (January, 1987), 32-35. ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy Discussions in California ---------------------------------------------- March 27, 1999, Van Nuys, California: Society for the History of Astronomy, 83rd meeting. 8:30 AM: coffee, doughnuts, conversation. 9 AM: "From the Tears of St. Lawrence to Falling Rubies and Tourmalines: Meteors Past and Present (and a Bit of the Future)", led by Steve Edberg, Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Then: "No Small Dreams: Designing the Hale 200-inch Telescope", led by Tony Cook, Griffith Observatory. Then a late, leisurely lunch. Meet at Los Angeles Valley College Planetarium, 5800 Fulton, Van Nuys. For SHA information, contact Margot Wood, President, 210 S. Guadalupe Ave., Redondo Beach, CA 90277 USA. +1 310-379-8339. June 5, 1999, Oakland, California: Northern California Historical Astronomy Luncheon and Discussion Association, 49th meeting. 9:30 AM: refreshments and conversation. 10 AM: "Prehistory and History of Calculus", led by Alan R. Fisher, Chabot Observatory. Then lunch at a local restaurant. 2 PM: "Lunar Probes", led by Nancy Cox, San Francisco Amateur Astronomers. Meet at Chabot Observatory, 4917 Mountain Blvd., Oakland, CA 94619. For NCHALADA information, contact Norman Sperling, Everything in the Universe, 185 John Street, Oakland, CA 94611. Phone & fax: +1 510-547-6523. e-mail: nsperling@california.com . Starting March 31: www.everythingintheuniv.com . Both SHA and NCHALADA are informal, with participants pointing out perspectives from many disciplines, sometimes wittily. Neither group has formal officers, by-laws or dues. Contributions are appreciated to offset refreshments and postage. People who bring munchies are very popular. (Provided by Norman Sperling) ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy Colloquium in Goettingen --------------------------------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 38, 17. Maerz 1999, Item 2. Translation provided by the authors.) The annual convention of the Astronomische Gesellschaft will be taking place in Goettingen this year under the rubric "New Astrophysical Horizons". At this occasion there will be a Colloquium of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy on Monday, September 20, 1999, starting at about 10 am. The Local Organizing Committee has approved the following general theme: The history and function of nonverbal representations in astronomical and astrophysical research practice This primarily involves images or other forms of pictorial registration (e.g., photographs, video tapes) of observational data. For more details please see below. The recommended conference language is English. Participants who want to attend the AK meeting only, but not the (rest of) the AG meeting, will have to pay a reduced conference fee of 30,- DEM. Please direct any questions about the content, offers to deliver brief talks together with a one-page English abstract, typed by typewriter, or as a text file in ASCII, or as an rtf file in Word95/97, or a TeX file, if possible no later than 31 May 1999 to: Dr. habil. Klaus Hentschel Institute for History of Science University of Goettingen Humboldtallee 11 D-37073 Goettingen Phone +(49)-551-398412 E-mail: khentsc@gwdg.de Organisational questions, technical requests, etc. may be directed to: Dr. Axel D. Wittmann Universitaets-Sternwarte Geismarlandstr. 11 D-37083 Goettingen Phone +(49)-551-395045 Fax +(49)-551-395043 E-mail: wittmann@uni-sw.gwdg.de The history and function of nonverbal representations in astronomical and astrophysical research practice Colloquium of the Working Group for the History of Astronomy (Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte), in Goettingen, on Monday, 20 September 1999 Pictorial or graphical records form an integral part of the history of astronomy, from its very beginnings down to modern-day electronically manipulable CCD-imaging. Examples include: star-position charts, lunar maps, sunspot sketches and photographs, spectral atlases, graphical data representations (such as the Hertzsprung-Russell or the Maunder diagrams), spectroheliograms, planet drawings, images from satellites and outer space, photometer curves, and many more. How direct is this graphic conversion by man or machine of the subject of observation or registration? What problems emerge in the translation process? How does the constant search for improvements in the representational form develop? One instance is the rise of photography, which was welcomed with the hope that henceforth "Nature herself" would become the recorder, thus doing away with the problems of human bias and artistic deficiency (Fox Talbot's "The Pencil of Nature", 1844). In practice, though, the retouching of photographic prints was as inescapable as the necessity of the observer to select the 'best' (also aesthetically speaking) among the available images. Well into the 1890s, lithography remained the preferred means in spectroscopy of depicting the optical spectrum, despite its high production costs. When does such a change in preference occur? What are the repercussions in the research practice? What influence do external technological developments have? How did and how do astronomers and astrophysicists interact with illustrators, engravers, lithographers, photographers, and other specialists in the graphic arts involved in the drafting or finishing of their figures for publication or teaching? What criteria are used in such reworking - are they really unassailable? What heuristics are used to discriminate between facts and artefacts? What specifically happened in controversies over illustrations (like the one about the notorious Martian channels), and what technical alternatives for representations existed at the various times? Aside from documenting observational results, images have other functions as well: they must convince the reader or viewer, clarify complicated processes by means of simplified illustration, or be a mnemonic aid to the beginner in visualizing specific patterns. How are and were the classes of stellar spectra or solar spots learned? What role did pictures have in teaching? Historical studies of astronomical and astrophysical representations are our main emphasis, but scientists in the field are also invited to think about the current functions of imaging (e.g., unsharp masking, speckle deconvolution, or image compression) and the ever changing techniques used, which inevitably will soon become part of history as well. Klaus Hentschel, Axel Wittmann Editors's note: Links to the Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft and to history of astronomy as well as general information on Goettingen may be found at http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/aa/goett1999/ . Later, the programme of the colloquium will be published there. ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... The Fifth Annual Conference of The North American Sundial Society ----------------------------------------------------------------- Set aside the weekend of October 8-10, 1999 to be in Hartford, Connecticut (USA) for an entertaining, informative, social conference! Meet fellow dialists, share your experiences and enthusiasm, and come away with new bits of knowledge relating to one of humanity's oldest inventions! We will begin early on Friday October 8 (you can register the night before) and will go through midday on Sunday the 10th. Each year our conference features several stimulating presentations on dialing - covering such areas as history, art, technology, instruments, theory and current practice. Presenters include scholars and hobbyists, longtime dialists and newly emerging novices. In addition to these presentations, we also encourage members to bring items for a show-and-tell session or for display during the meeting. The conference also includes a Saturday bus tour which this year will take us through Hartford and its suburbs to visit 7 interesting dials (including 3 by NASS members) and will conclude with a visit to the Albert Waugh collection of rare books on dialing at the University of Connecticut. This collection includes 162 titles covering 423 years of dialing practice. Hartford is readily accessible by air, train, bus or car. The city is served by Bradley International Airport. Amtrak trains run regularly from New York. The Trailways and Greyhound bus terminals are within a few blocks of the conference hotel. And Hartford is at the intersection of two major Interstates: 91 and 84. The dates of the conference this year have been selected to give attendees an opportunity to view the beautiful Fall Foliage in New England. A drive north along Interstate 91 into Vermont in the week following the conference would take you right into the peak viewing region. The gorgeous colors usually reach their peak in Connecticut around October 15. Other attractions in Hartford include The Mark Twain House - which Twain designed and lived in while he wrote his most famous novels; and the Wadsworth Atheneum - the oldest public art museum in the country. Other sites within driving distance include The American Watch and Clock Museum (Bristol), Old Mystic Seaport (Mystic) and Sturbridge Village (Sturbridge MA). Final registration details will be included with the June issue of The Compendium. (If you would like to receive registration information as soon as it becomes available, send a note to Fred Sawyer and I will put you on the notification list.) CALL FOR PAPERS Papers on topics related to sundials, dialing or dialists - whether dealing with history, art, technology, instruments, theory or current practice, are welcome! Presentations should be 15-25 minutes in length and may be published in The Compendium, the society's quarterly journal. Please submit title, time requirements, and an abstract of not more than 200 words to Frederick W. Sawyer III, 8 Sachem Drive, Glastonbury CT 06033 USA (fax: 860-403-5295, email: frederick.sawyer.es.72@aya.yale.edu) no later than June 15, 1999. If you have items for show-and-tell or for display, please provide details so that appropriate time and space can be allocated. For information on the conference, address inquiries to NASS at the above address. (Provided by Frederick W. Sawyer III) ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... Colloquium Announcement: 400 Years of Astronomy on Merseyside ------------------------------------------------------------- Merseyside Maritime Museum, NMGM Saturday 16th October 1999 Programme: 09.30 Registration 09.45 The Telescopes of William Lassell (Jeff Hall, University of Liverpool) 10.10 Isaac Roberts (Philip Pennington, University of Liverpool) 10.35 Solar Eclipse Observations (Dr Eric Jones, Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory) 11.00 Coffee 11.30 The Mars Observations of Dawes and Lassell (Dr Patrick Moore) 12.30 Lunch 13.40 Astronomy at Bidston Observatory (Martin Suggett, NMGM) 14.05 George Higgs and the Solar Spectrum (Alan Bowden, NMGM) 14.30 Liverpool to Leeds and Preston to Chester: The English Corridor of Astronomical Innovation, 1630 to the present day'. (Dr Allan Chapman, University of Oxford) 15.30 Tea 15.50 The Astrophysics Research Institute, the Liverpool Telescope and modern Astronomy on Merseyside (Prof. Mike Bode, John Moores University) 16.50 Plenary discussion and concluding remarks 17.30 End of Conference The cost is pounds 15 per delegate, payable in advance, including lunch and tea / coffee Contacts are Phil Pennington (tel.: 01744 739959) or e-mail: ggastro@liverpool.ac.uk ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999 ---------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 38, 17. Maerz 1999, Item 4.) Further conferences in the year 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html April 23-25, 1999, Palma de Mallorca, Mallorca, Spain Mallorca Gnomonic Meeting Further information: J.M. Vallhonrat, c/. Atenes, 3, 08006 Barcelona, Spain, Phone: 34-93-2017578, Fax: 34-93-2040212, e-mail: scg@troc.es June 21-29, 1999, La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain Oxford VI International Conference on Archaeoastronomy and Astronomy in Culture and the S.E.A.C. 1999 Annual Meeting Registration and further information: Dr. Juan Antonio Belmonte, Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias, C/ Via Lactea S.N., 38200 La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain, Phone: 34-922-605265 or 34-922-263454, Fax: 34-922-605210 or 34-922-263295, e-mail: jba@iac.es URL: http://www.iac.es/oxford6/oxford6.htm October 15-16, 1999, Leiden, The Netherlands Symposium of the Anton Mensing Scientific Instrument Project Further information: Peter de Clercq, Museum Boerhaave, Lange St. Agnietenstraat 10, Postbox 11280, 2301 EG Leiden, The Netherlands, e-mail: declercq@xs4all.nl URL: http://www.sic.iuhps.org/mtle1999/ ........................................................................... Item 7 ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 13, Dez. 1998, p. 3. Also published in "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 38, 17. Maerz 1999, Item 6. Partial translations by the editor.) 100 Jahre Landessternwarte Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl, 1898-1998 [100 years Observatory Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl, 1898-1998. - In German]. Heidelberg 1998. 48 pp., numerous illus., Paperback DM 5.00 + postage [Distribution: Landessternwarte Heidelberg-Koenigstuhl, attn. Dr. Holger Mandel, Koenigstuhl 12, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany, Tel.: +49 (0) 6221 509-0, Fax: +49 (0) 6221 509-202] Geomagnetism and aeronomy (with special historical case studies). Proceedings of the session during the IAGA General Assembly in Uppsala/Sweden, August 1997. Bremen-Roennebeck, 1998. ca. 450 p., ill., DM 40.00, US$ 25.00 [Contains also contributions on history of astronomy. Distribution: W.Schroeder, Science Edition, Hechelstr. 8, D-28777 Bremen-Roennebeck, Germany] Kepler, Johannes: Gesammelte Werke. Band 20,2 [Collected works. Vol 20,2]. Manuscripta astronomica (II). Commentaria in Theoriam Martis. Bearbeitet von [Edited by] Volker Bialas. Unter Mitwirkung von [With support by] Friederike Boockmann, Johanna Kuric, Inge Noeggerath. Munich: Beck, 1998. 651 pp., ISBN 3-406-40592-4, Semi-parchment DM 198.00; ISBN 3-406-40593-2, Paperback DM 168.00 [Contains previously unpublished notes by Kepler on his "Astronomia Nova" (calculations, derivations, demonstrations, summaries, preliminary thoughts and conclusions). Text in Latin, comments by the editor in German.] Orchiston, Wayne: Nautical astronomy in New Zealand : the voyages of James Cook. Wellington, New Zealand: Carter Observatory, 1998. 131 p., 31 fig., 22 tabl., ref., 21 x 29,5 cm, ISBN 0-473-05303-9, pb. (Occasional papers ; No. 1) [Distribution: Carter Observatory, P.O. Box 2909, Wellington, New Zealand. Prices: Asia, Canada & USA: $NZ 38.00; UK & Europe: $NZ 39.00; Please pay by cheque or bank draft in New Zealand Dollars. Prices include airmail postage.] Schroeder, Wilfried (Ed.): From Newton to Einstein. (A Festschrift in honour of the 70th birthday of Hans-Juergen Treder). Bremen-Roennebeck, 1998. 450 p., illus., DM 40.00, US$ 30.00 (pb). [Distribution: W.Schroeder, see above] ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Volker Bialas, Gerard Gilligan, Carlos Jaschek, Holger Mandel, Wayne Orchiston, Wilfried Schroeder. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 36
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 36, May 5, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Gerhard Scholz: The Great Refractor on the Telegrafenberg - 100 years old 2. Michael J. Crowe: History of Astronomy Meetings at Notre Dame 3. Joseph S. Tenn: History of Astronomy Meeting in Toronto 4. Symposium announcement: Scientific Instruments: Originals and Imitations 5. Symposium announcement: Portraiture and Scientific Identity 6. Conferences 1999/2000 Erratum: ENHA 12, Item 9 (New Books) Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... The Great Refractor on the Telegrafenberg - 100 years old --------------------------------------------------------- By Gerhard Scholz, Potsdam Foundation and scientific purposes One of the most renowned scientific achievements in the first years of the Astrophysical Observatory Potsdam was the introduction, encouraged by the first Director, H.C. Vogel, of the photographic plate for the determination of radial velocities of stars. Observations in those days were carried out with a 30-cm refractor, which rather limited the application to bright stars; in order to include fainter stars in this prestigious programme, more powerful telescopes were required. The idea to construct what in those days was considered to be a huge astronomical telescope had already been discussed shortly after the founding of the Observatory in 1874. In 1889 a double refractor, with apertures of 32.5 and 23.5 cm and a focal length of 3.4 m, had just been mounted in the "Photokuppel" (Photo-dome) to the west of the main Observatory building; it was used mainly for cartography of northern- hemisphere stars as part of the Observatory's contribution towards the Carte du Ciel which had been planned by the Paris congress of astronomers in 1887. Although this instrument was very practical and successful for taking photographic records of star fields, it was too small to take over the spectroscopic observations of radial velocities. Plans for a new and larger double refractor had been proposed by Vogel in 1890. The preference for a refractor rather than a reflector was due to the relatively primitive technology of the latter at that time, whereas the necessary technical experiments with large lenses could be carried out in the Observatory's own laboratories. The dimensions of the lenses were carefully calculated according to the laboratory tests of the properties of the different kinds of glass. The large telescope, called the Great Refractor, was completed just before the turn of the century, and was inaugurated in the presence of Emperor Wilhelm II on August 26, 1899. Architecture The buildings of the Observatory, founded 25 years previously, already comprised a main building with three domes, the Photo-dome, a Director's private house, three houses for observers, and a machine shop. The dome of the Great Refractor was added in a manner that preserved the harmony and uniform style of the architecture originally created by the Court Councillor P. Spieker. The whole ensemble, including the building and the instrument, are now officially protected monuments. The erection of the building for the Great Refractor was accompanied by that of two more houses, (i) the Beamtenwohnhaus for the castle warden, the telescope mechanic and other auxiliary staff and guests of the Observatory, and (ii) the engine house for a gas-driven generator. Dome, mechanical details, mounting The mechanical parts of the telescope, in particular the German mounting, were constructed in Hamburg by Repsold & Soehne and installed in a dome having an inner diameter of 21 m and a height of 18 m. The moving parts of the telescope weighed 7 tons. The dome, whose total weight was 200 tons, was manufactured by Bretschneider & Kruegner in Pankow. The moving mechanism of the dome and the observer's lift, which is technically unique, were made in Berlin by Hoppe. The electrical work, including the driving motors, was carried out by Siemens & Halske. Optical equipment The Great Refractor has two objectives: objective diameter focal length wavelength of correction 1. 80 cm 12.2 m 425 nm 2. 50 cm 12.5 m 600 nm Both objectives are doublets of crown and flint glass, and were made by the optics firm Steinheil (Munich). The blocks of raw optical glass were supplied by Schott (Jena). With its diameter of 80 cm for the larger objective, the Great Refractor is the world's fourth largest, whereas its colour correction optimized for photographic plates is unique. The tube of the 50 cm objective, fixed parallel to that of the main tube and corrected for the visual colour range, was initially used as a guiding telescope. The two objectives possessed different qualities: 1. The 80 cm objective revealed zonal chromatic errors and an irregular astigmatism which could not be removed even after several retouches. After the final retouch in 1942 the quality of the lens was considered good, and useable for many observational projects. 2. The 50 cm objective was rather good from the start, and has been improved even further by re-touches carried out personally (in 1911 and 1914) by the famous optician Bernhard Schmidt, making it one of the best (and most valuable) refractor objectives of this size in the world. Research When the 80 cm lens was first brought into service, its condition required the invention of methods for testing astronomical optics. Several methods of them, such as the Hartmann test, are still in use today. The astronomical observations concentrated especially on spectroscopy of close binaries. From these observations the existence of interstellar matter could be inferred. Unfortunately, the efficiency of the spectroscopic observations made with that telescope was affected by the length of the tube and by size and weight of the spectrograph which the telescope could carry. So, the use for the investigation of spectroscopic binaries was quite limited. However, for observations of visual double stars the long focal length of the telescope proved to be an asset, thus making it particularly suitable for the absolute determination of stellar masses. In 1968 the scientific profile of the institute was changed and the observations were stopped. Preservation In order to save the Great Refractor in Potsdam as an important scientific monument of the astronomical history and taking its 100th birthday as an occasion, a reconstruction of the instrument has just going on. The government of Brandenburg, the Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam, and the "Foerderverein Grosser Refraktor Potsdam e.V." support this task. Author's address: Dr. Gerhard Scholz Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam Sonnenobservatorium Einsteinturm Telegrafenberg A31 D 14473 Potsdam Germany Tel.: +49-331-288-2309, Fax: +49-331-288-2310 E-Mail: GScholz@aip.de ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy Meetings at Notre Dame ------------------------------------------- By Michael J. Crowe, Notre Dame, IN All persons attending the Fourth Biennial History of Astronomy Workshop to be held at the University of Notre Dame on July 1 to July 4, 1999 (cf. ENHA No. 31, Item 2) are invited to participate in a free one-day conference at Notre Dame on July 1 (9am to 5:15pm) entitled: "Perspectives on the Question of Extraterrestrial Intelligent Life." The presentations in this short conference should be of interest to many historians of astronomy. For more information, including the program for this mini-conference, see http://www.nd.edu/~histast4/minicon.html For those wishing to arrive one day early so as to attend this one-day conference, the same low cost housing as for the History of Astronomy Conference will be available. We will also be able to provide free transportation from the South Bend Airport for those wishing this. The program for the History of Astronomy Workshop is now available. It features ca. 50 presentations, including some by internationally prominent historians of astronomy. Ten speakers are coming from abroad. To see the program and to secure other information about the workshop and to register, see the workshop website: http://www.nd.edu/~histast4 The program itself can be seen at http://www.nd.edu/~histast4/schedule.html Author's address: Professor Michael J. Crowe Program of Liberal Studies University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA Phone: 219-631-6212 E-mail: Michael.J.Crowe.1@nd.edu ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... History of Astronomy Meeting in Toronto --------------------------------------- By Joseph S. Tenn, Rohnert Park, CA, USA The Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) will hold its "111th Annual Meeting" jointly with the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada (RASC) and the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) in Toronto, Canada on 1-7 July 1999. Three history sessions will be presented by the ASP history committee: I. Amateur Contributions to Astronomy - Invited lectures for the general public: Sunday morning, 4 July. II. General History of Astronomy - invited lectures for the general public: Sunday afternoon, 4 July. III. General History of Astronomy - contributed papers for those particularly interested in the history of astronomy: Monday, 5 July. The programs for sessions I and II are available at http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/people/faculty/tenn/ASPHistory/ 1999long.html along with the papers contributed to date for session III. Both oral and poster papers are solicited for the third session. Poster papers will be displayed Sunday as well as Monday. ***DEADLINE FOR RECEIPT OF TITLES AND ABSTRACTS IS 14 MAY 1999*** The nonhistory portions of the meeting, other than the weekend, will consist mostly of lectures of interest to amateur astronomers. The weekend sessions are for the interested public and will include many talks on current developments in astronomy as well as on history. There will be a tour of the historic David Dunlap Observatory Monday evening. For further information regarding the overall ASP-RASC-AAVSO meeting see http://www.aspsky.org/subpages/mtng.html The ASP History Committee and sessions at this and previous meetings may be found at http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/people/faculty/tenn/ASPHistory/ If you wish to contribute a paper, please contact the author. Author's address: Joseph S. Tenn, Chair, ASP History Committee Dept. of Physics & Astronomy Sonoma State University Rohnert Park, CA 94928-3609 USA e-mail: joe.tenn@sonoma.edu Phone: +1 707 664-2594, fax: +1 707 664-2505 URL: http://www.phys-astro.sonoma.edu/people/faculty/tenn/ ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... Symposium announcement ---------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 40, 30. April 1999, Item 1.) Scientific Instruments: Originals and Imitations. The Mensing Connection Museum Boerhaave, Leiden, The Netherlands October 15-16, 1999 This symposium is part of the Anton Mensing Scientific Instrument Project, a joint venture of the Museum Boerhaave, Leiden, the Nederlands Scheepvaartmuseum, Amsterdam, the Utrecht University Museum and the Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum, Chicago. It aims to trace, catalogue and research the instruments owned by Anton W.M. Mensing (1866-1936), director and owner of Frederik Muller & Co., auctioneers in Amsterdam. Ever since they were dispersed, there have been doubts on the authenticity of a section of the Mensing instruments; indeed, several have been proved to be forgeries. The symposium will address the problem of authenticity and historic scientific instruments. Programme Details Friday 15 October 10.00-10.45 Introductions P.R. de Clercq, London, United Kingdom W.F.J. Morzer Bruyns, Amsterdam, The Netherlands 10.45-11.30 Paris, Amsterdam, London: the Collecting, Trade and Display of Early Scientific Instruments, 1830-1930 A.J.Turner, Le Mesnil-le-Roi, France 11.30-12.00 Coffee 12.00-12.45 Recognizing Imitation Instruments G.L'E. Turner, Oxford, United Kingdom 12.45-14.30 Lunch 14.30-15.15 Why Make Fakes? O. Gingerich, Harvard Smithsonian , USA 15.15-16.00 Twenty Years of Scientific Instruments at Auction J. Collins, London, United Kingdom 16.00-16.30 Scientific and Technical Examination of Metal Objects P. Hallebeek, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Reception Saturday 16 October 10.00-10.45 A Chapter in Silver Faking: the Feeterse Clan K.A. Citroen, Aerdenhout, The Netherlands 10.45-11.30 Fakes among the Mensing Instruments J.C. Deiman, Utrecht, The Netherlands 11.30-12.00 Coffee 12.00-12.30 The Tale of a Forger of Scientific Instruments written by S.A. Bedini, Washington D.C., USA, and read by A.J. Turner 12.30-13.00 Replicating Instruments: Some Practical Aspects M. Brunold, Abtwil, Switserland 13.00-14.00 Lunch 14.00-15.30 Examination of imitation instruments 15.30-17.00 Final discussion Chair: R.G.W. Anderson, London, United Kingdom The registration fee is f 200 (approximately $95), and includes lunches and drinks as well as a copy of the proceedings, which will be edited by Peter de Clercq and published in the series of Museum Boerhaave Communications. For further details and registration, contact the local organizer: Agnes Rappard Museum Boerhaave Postbox 11280 2301 EG Leiden The Netherlands tel. +31 (0)71 5214 224 extension 602 fax +31 (0)71 5120 344 [Source: http://www.sic.iuhps.org/mtle1999/ . Reprinted with permission.] ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... Symposium announcement ---------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 40, 30. April 1999, Item 2.) Portraiture and Scientific Identity National Portrait Gallery, London 23-24 June 2000 Announcement and Call for Papers (and Portraits) This conference is being organised by the National Portrait Gallery and the British Society for the History of Science. The likely pattern of conference will be four plenary sessions and a number of shorter sessions with papers of 25 minutes. Professor Ludmilla Jordanova is responsible for the programme, and offers of short papers can be made to her at any time between now and 1 November 1999. This should take the form of a brief abstract of no more than one page, together with any supporting material thought appropriate, for example, a list of items already published on the topic. The final programme will be drawn up by Christmas 1999 and it will be circulated in the new year. A copy of the final programme can be sent to those who provide the Education Department of the National Portrait Gallery (St Martin's Place, London, WC2H 0HE) with a stamped addressed envelop marked 'BSHS conference'. The meeting is being held in association with a small exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, which will explore portraiture in relation to practitioners of science, medicine and technology since the seventeenth century in Britain. The exhibition will open in late March or early April and will close at the end of June 2000. It will contain works in all media, and suggestions of unusual, visually interesting items that might be included can be made to Professor Jordanova, who would be particularly interested to hear of relevant self-portraits and of portraits made within domestic settings. The practice of portraiture is one of the main themes of the exhibition, so preparatory sketches are of particular relevance. Professor Ludmilla Jordanova can be contacted at School of World Art Studies and Museology, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk, NR4 7TJ, e-mail: l.jordanova@uea.ac.uk The BSHS website is at: http://www.man.ac.uk/Science_Engineering/CHSTM/bshs/ [Provided by Jon Agar] ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 36, May 5, 1999 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999/2000 --------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 39, 8. April 1999, Item 7.) Further conferences in the years 1999 and 2000 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html April 16-18, 1999, Brussels, Belgium Reflections on XXth Century Sciences International Symposium held by the Academie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Fondation Ochs-Lefebvre. Eminent scientists will reflect on great advances in scientific knowledge in this century and will endeavour to relate the major achievements to one another across the specialization barriers. Reserved to professional scientists. Since attendance will be strictly limited to 220 participants, early registration is strongly recommended. Among the areas covered: Astrophysics and Cosmology Further information: Isabelle Schievekamp, Physics Dept., FUNDP, Tel.: +32 81 72 47 16, Fax: +32 81 72 47 07, e-mail: ochs@fundp.ac.be URL: http://www.scf.fundp.ac.be/~ischieve/ochs/ July 18-30, 1999, Birmingham, UK 22nd General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics International Association for Geomagnetism and Aeronomy Symposia: GA 6.01 Long and Short Term Variability in Sun's History and Global Change Papers should consider the historical records of long and short term solar variability. Lead Convener: Dr. Wilfried Schroeder, Hechelstrasse 8, D-28777 Bremen-Roennebeck, Germany. GA 6.02 400 Years of Geomagnetism The aim of this symposium is to commemorate the 400 years of "The Magnete" of William Gilbert. Lead Convenor: A. Orozco, Instituto de Geofisica UNAM, Circuito Exterior, Ciudad Universitaria Mexico, 20 DF CP 04510, Mexico, fax: 52 5 550 2486, e-mail: adolfo@tonatiuh.igeofcu.unam.mx URL: http://www.bham.ac.uk/IUGG99/ich.htm See also: http://weber.u.washington.edu/~hssexec/meetings/hss_meetings_iaga.html September 10-12, 1999, Cambridge, UK Women in the History of Science: biography, autobiography, tasks, results, problems. Open Conference/Workshop held by the Women's Commission of the DHS/IUHPS. Place: Newnham College To join the email list to receive further information, write to jm148@cam.ac.uk . URL: http://www.cilea.it/history/DHS/womenDHS.htm September 18-19, 1999, Oxford, UK Medieval Mathematics Place: Kellogg College, Oxford Further Information: Raymond Flood (e-mail: raymond.flood@conted.ox.ac.uk) and Eleanor Robson (e-mail: eleanor.robson@wolfson.ox.ac.uk) March 2000, Munich, Germany History of Geophysics and Space Physics. One day session during the Annual Meeting of the German Geophysical Society. Further information: Dr. Wilfried Schroeder, Hechelstrasse 8, D-28777 Bremen-Roennebeck, Germany. Announcement: http://weber.u.washington.edu/~hssexec/meetings/ hss_meetings_geophysics2.html April 10 - 12, 2000, Leeds, UK Science in the Nineteenth-Century Periodical - an interdisciplinary Conference Place: University of Leeds Deadlines: 1 June 1999 Further Information: Dr. J. R. Topham, School of Philosophy, University of Leeds, LS2 9JT, UK, e-mail: j.r.topham@leeds.ac.uk (no file attachments please), tel: 0114-2228484 or 0113-2333280, fax: 0114-2228481 or 0113-2333265 Announcement: http://weber.u.washington.edu/~hssexec/meetings/19thcper.html ........................................................................... Erratum: ENHA 12, Item 9 (New Books) ------------------------------------ In ENHA No. 12, November 17, 1995, Item 9 (New Books), the author of a book was omitted by mistake. The entry should read correctly: DeVorkin, David H.: Science with a vengeance: How the military created the US space sciences after World War II. New York: Springer-Verlag, 1993. Pp. xxii, 404, ISBN 0-387-94137-1, $ 39.95 (pb) [paperbound edition of 1992 hardcover] ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition Jon Agar and Peter de Clercq. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 37
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 37, July 13, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Bart Fried: Antique Telescope Society Mailing List and Newsgroup 2. The LeRoy E. Doggett Prize 3. Conference Announcement: Giordano Bruno and our Epoch 4. Conferences 1999 5. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 37, July 13, 1999 ........................................................................... Antique Telescope Society Mailing List and Newsgroup ---------------------------------------------------- By Bart Fried, Plymouth Meeting, PA The Antique Telescope Society has instituted a topical mailing list including a web page of threads. Usual topics include sharing information on telescope history and makers; restoration information; authentication pointers; astronomical history and observatory history as well as ATS related business. It is a closed discussion group available via subscription. To subscribe, enter the following URL: http://www1.tecs.com/oldScope/, then click on "Our new email list" and then input your email address. Author's address: Bart Fried ATS Web Editor E-mail: astral@iname.com Phone: 610-825-6600 Fax: 610-825-7905 ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 37, July 13, 1999 ........................................................................... The LeRoy E. Doggett Prize -------------------------- Nominations are requested for the second LeRoy E. Doggett Prize for Historical Astronomy, to be awarded in January 2000. The prize is awarded biennially either for a publication (within the past 6 years) that significantly illuminates the history of astronomy, or for a long-term contribution that has significantly influenced the field of the history of astronomy. Nominations are not limited to HAD or AAS members. Nominations for the first cycle two years ago are automatically carried over to this second cycle. Send new nominations to David.DeVorkin@nasm.si.edu - nominations should include a cover letter of not more than two to three pages, as well as appropriate supporting materials (CV of nominee, supporting letters by co-nominators, book reviews, etc.). Nomination deadline: August 15, 1999. The HAD Prize Committee (David DeVorkin, Chair) ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 37, July 13, 1999 ........................................................................... Conference Announcement: Giordano Bruno and our Epoch ----------------------------------------------------- Preliminary Announcement International conference Giordano Bruno and our Epoch Moscow, Moscow State University February, 2000 (The exact dates will be given in the First Announcement.) Co-organizers: Sternberg Astronomical Institute of Moscow State University (SAI MSU) Institute for Philosophy of the Russian Academy of Science Euro-Asian Astronomical Society (EAAS) Scientific and Cultural Center "SETI" The conference will be held at SAI MSU. Main topics to be considered: 1. G.Bruno and scientific revolution of XVI-XVII centuries 2. G.Bruno and modern astronomy 3. G.Bruno and the SETI problem 4. G.Bruno and modern culture Contact addresses: lmg@sai.msu.ru (Dr. Lev M. Gindilis, SAI MSU) boch@sai.msu.ru (EAAS) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Preregistration Form Expression of Interest: Name: Title: Institute: Postal Address: E-mail: FAX/Telephone: Please indicate if your attendance is: Highly probable/Probable/Possible I wish to make poster oral contribution Title of Proposed Poster or Oral Contribution: Please, send the filled form to: and/or ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 37, July 13, 1999 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999 ---------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 41, 27. Mai 1999, Item 7.) Further conferences in the year 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html April 30, 1999, Dunchurch, UK 10th Conference of the British Sundial Society Contacts: R.A. Nicholl, 45 Hound Street, Shereborne, DT9 3AB August 16-22, 1999, Odessa, Ukraine The Universe of G.Gamow: Original Ideas in Astrophysics and Cosmology The conference will include a memorial session for G.Gamow. Contacts: Dr. M. Ryabov, Odessa Observatory URAN-4, Radioastronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Pushkinskaya 37 St., 270011 Odessa, Ukraine, Phone: 7 0482 24 71 60, Fax: 7 0482 22 84 42, e-mail: astro@te.net.ua URL: http://www.rssi.ru/gmic99/ September 17-19, 1999, Washington, D.C., USA Joint Atlantic Seminar in the History of the Physical Sciences This seminar will examine the plurality of historiographical methods developed during the last decade. Papers should be concrete historical investigations on any topic in the history of physics, astronomy, chemistry, biophysics or geosciences. Abstracts are due April 30, 1999. Contacts: JASHOPS, Center for History of Physics, American Institute of Physics, One Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3843, USA, e-mail: jashops@gwu.edu URL: http://www.gwu.edu/~recsci/jashops.html 24.-25. September 1999, Lienz, Osttirol, Austria 10th Meeting of the Working Group for Sundials in the Austrian Astronomical Society (Arbeitsgruppe Sonnenuhren im Oesterreichischen Astronomischen Verein) Information: Hans-Michael Salcher, Andreas-Hofer-Str. 32, A-9900 Lienz, Oesterreich, Tel.: +43-4852-61414, e-mail: hm.salcher@tirol.com ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 37, July 13, 1999 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 40, 30. April 1999, Item 3. Partial translations by the editor.) This list contains books which appeared since 1993 and and have not yet been announced in ENHA. In case we learned that a book was already out of print this was indicated. Other extended lists of books will be included into future issues. 850 Jahre Kloster Reichenbach [800 years Monastery Reichenbach; in German]. Festschrift. Herausgeber [Editor]: Gemeinde Reichenbach, Kath. Kirchenstiftung Reichenbach, Orden der Barmherzigen Brueder Reichenbach. Munich: Johannes von Gott-Verlag, 1993. 130 p., ISBN 3-929849-20-8, paperback DM 15.00 [Partial contents: Wolfgang Kaunzner: Zum Stand von Astronomie und Naturwissenschaften im Kloster Reichenbach [The status of astronomy and science in Monastery Reichenbach]] Appenzeller, Immo (Ed.): Highlights of Astronomy. Vol. 10. As presented at the XXIInd General Assembly of the IAU, 1994. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995. xxiii, 706 p., ISBN 0-7923-3553-8, NLG 420.00, US$ 310.00 (hb); ISBN 0-7923-3554-6, NLG 160.00, US$ 119.00 (pb) [Contains also abstracts from the Joint Discussion "History of Astronomy".] Barbieri, Cesare; Rahe, Juergen H.; Johnson, Torrence V.; Sohus, Anita M. (Eds.): The three Galileos : The man, the spacecraft, the telescope. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997. 480 p., 24.5 x 16.5 cm, ISBN 0-7923-4861-3, NLG 358.00, GBP 143.25, $ 217.50 (hb) (Astrophysics and Space Science Library ; Vol. 220) [Proceedings of an international conference, held in Italy on January 7-10, 1997. 16 pages are devoted to Galileo Galilei, including a paper on Casa Casale and number 3383/3384 via Vignali, the two houses that Galileo Galilei occupied during his twelve-year stay in Padua.] Review: D.W.Hughes: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1146, 313 Bauer, Brian S.; Dearborn, David S.P.: Astronomy and empire in the Ancient Andes. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1995. 220 p., ISBN 0-292-70829-7, $ 37.50 (hb); ISBN 0-292-70837-8, $ 14.95 (pb) Bederson, Benjamin (Ed.): Reviews of Modern Physics. Special Issue in Honor of The Centenary of the American Physical Society. American Physical Society, 1999. 488 p. (Reviews in Modern Physics, Vol. 71, No. 2) ["Our intent was to present a contemporary portrait of physics, based on its past achievements and its current status" (From the preface). Includes two papers dealing with the history of astrophysics: George Field: Astrophysics (p. S33-S.40); Irwin I. Shapiro: A century of relativy (p. S41-S53). Contains also other review articles on astrophysics, but these include no history or only short historical introductions.] Bethe, Hans A.: Selected works of Hans A. Bethe. With commentary. River Edge, NJ: World Scientific, 1997. 605 p., ISBN 981-02-2876-7, $ 68.00 (hb) [Papers from 1929 up to 1996. The last selected paper is "Breakout of the Supernova Shock", published in the Astrophysical Journal in 1996.] Review: K.Gottfried: Phys. Today 51 (1998) 7, 65-66 Bolles, Edmund Blair (Ed.): Galileo's commandment - an anthology of great science writing. New York: W.H.Freeman and Co., 1997. 485 p., 24 x 17 cm, ISBN 0-716-73035-9, $ 26.95 (hb) [Anthology of works in astronomy, biology, chemistry, geology, and psychology, from 444 BC to the present day.] Review: B.Kent: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1143, 113-115 Bradley, Paul A.; Guzik, Joyce A. (Eds.): A half century of stellar pulsation interpretations : A tribute to Arthur N. Cox. Proceedings of a Conference held in Los Alamos, New Mexico, 16-20 June 1997. San Francisco, Ca.: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1998. xxxvi, 511 p., 23.5 x 16 cm, ISBN 1-886733-55-4, $ 52.00 (hb) (Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series ; Vol. 135) Review: M.Barstow: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1146, 309 Budde, Kai: Wirtschaft, Wissenschaft und Technik im Zeitalter der Aufklaerung: Mannheim und die Kurpfalz unter unter Carl Theodor 1743 - 1799 [Economy, science and technology at the time of Enlightenment: Mannheim and the Electoral Pfalz under Carl Theodor 1743 - 1799; in German]. Hrsg. vom [Edited by] Landesmuseum fuer Technik und Arbeit in Mannheim. Ubstadt-Weiher: Verlag Regionalkultur, 1993. 95 p., numerous ill., partially in colour, 17 x 24 cm, ISBN 3-929366-04-5, pb DM 19.00 (Katalog zur staendigen Ausstellung ; 1) [Catalogue of the permanent exhibition in the Mannheim Museum of Technology and Labour, which displays numerous items from the history of astronomy, illustrated and described in the catalogue. The introduction deals also with the history of the Mannheim Observatory.] Caspar, Max: Kepler. Translated and edited by C. Doris Hellman, with bibliographical citations by Owen Gingerich and Alain Segonds. New York: Dover Publications, 1993. 441 p., ISBN 0-486-67605-6, $ 10.95 (pb) [C. Doris Hellmann's 1959 translation from German in a corrected and expanded edition.] Review: G.Holton: J. Hist. Astron. 26 (1995) 2, 174-175 Chandrasekhar, Subrahmanyan: Selected papers. Vol. 7. The non-radial oscillation of stars in general relativity and other writings. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1997. 304 p., 24 x 17 cm, ISBN 0-226-10103-7, GBP 79.25, $ 99.00 (hb); ISBN 0-226-10104-5, GBP 35.95, $ 45.00 (pb) Review: D.O.Gough: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1142, 29-31 Cook, Alan: Edmond Halley : Charting the heavens and the seas. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997. xvi, 540 p., 18 b/w plates, ISBN 0-19-850031-9, GBP 29.50, $ 40.00 (hb) Review: D.Barraclough: Astronomy and Geophysics 39 (1998) 4.35 D.W.Hughes: Sky & Telescope 97 (1999) 3, 71-72 Ehlers, Anita: Liebes Hertz! Physiker und Mathematiker in Anekdoten [Physicists and mathematicians in anecdotes; in German]. With a foreword by Carl Friedrich von Weizsaecker. Basel, Boston, Berlin: Birkhaeuser Verlag, 1994. 216 p., ISBN 3-7643-5038-5, hardbound DM 29.80 [Contains also numerous anecdotes about astronomers (Walter Baade, Ludwig Biermann, Heinz Billing, Goeffrey und Margaret Burbidge, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekar, Otto Heckmann, Reimar and Rhea Luest) as well as physicists and mathematicians who did works in astronomy. Contents: Carl Friedrich von Weizsaecker: Vorwort (p. 7-8), Kapitel 1 bis 12 (S. 9-172), Biographische Stichworte (p. 173-203), Zum 150. Geburtstag der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft (p. 205-208), Nachgedanken (p. 209-211), Namenregister (p. 213-216).] Review: A.Glindemann: Sterne Weltraum 35 (1996) 6, 512 Fellmann, Emil A.: Leonhard Euler. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, 1995. 159 p., ISBN 3-499-50387-5, pb DM 12.90 (rororo Monographie ; 529) [Biography in German] Gavaghan, Helen: Something new under the sun : Satellites and the beginning of the Space Age. New York: Copernicus / Springer-Verlag, 1998. XVIII, 300 p., ISBN 0-387-94914-3, $ 26.00, DM 39.50 (hb) [The early story of the engineering and politics of the satellite effort through 1965. The study is limited to early satellites for navigation, weather forecast and communication.] Review: U.v.Rauchhaupt: Phys. Bl. 55 (1999) 1, 60 Gingerich, Owen: The eye of heaven. Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler. New York: American Institute of Physics, 1993. viii, 442 p., ill., bibl., index, ISBN 0-8831-8863-5, $ 24.95 (Masters of modern physics ; vol. 7) Review: J.D.North: J. Hist. Astron. 25 (1994) 3, 243-244 Haerendel, G.; Grzedzielski, S.; Gavallo, G.; Battrick, B. (Eds.): 40 years of COSPAR. Noordwijk: ESA Publications Division, 1998. vi, 189 p., 14.5 x 21 cm, [no ISBN], Dfl 15.00 (pb) (BR-135) [COSPAR = Committee on Space Research. Contents: Part 1: Some personal recollections. Part 2: Statistical data. Distribution: ESA Publications Divison. c/o ESTEC, PO Box 299, 2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands, Tel. (31) 71 565 3400, Fax (31) 71 565 5433] Hartl, Gerhard; Maerker, Karl; Teichmann, Juergen; Wolfschmidt, Gudrun: Planeten - Sterne - Welteninseln. Astronomie im Deutschen Museum [Planets - Stars - Island Universes. Astronomy in the Deutsches Museum; in German.] Munich: Deutsches Museum, 1993. 248 p., ISBN 3-924183-21-X, DM 29.80 (out of print) Review: [MS:] Sonne 17 (1993) 66, 64 B.Kuhn: Sterne Weltraum 33 (1994) 2, 158-159 Herrmann, Dieter B.: Raetsel um Sirius. Das astronomische Geheimwissen der Dogon [Mysterious Sirius. The secret astronomical knowledge of the Dogon; in German.] Berlin: Paetec, Gesellschaft fuer Bildung und Technik, 1995. 24 p., ISBN 3-89517-305-3, paperback DM 9.20 (out of print) Herrmann, Dieter B.; Hoffmann, Karl-Friedrich (eds.): Die Geschichte der Astronomie in Berlin [The history of astronomy in Berlin; in German]. Berlin: Archenhold-Sternwarte, 1998. 159 p., numerous ill., 17 x 24 cm, ISBN 3-86021-018-1, paperback DM 16.80 [Distribution: Archenhold-Sternwarte, Alt-Treptow 1, D-12435 Berlin; Wilhelm-Foerster-Sternwarte, Munsterdamm 90, D-12169 Berlin.] Herrmann, Dieter B.: 11. August 1999. Die Jahrhundertfinsternis [August 11, 1999. The eclipse of the century; in German]. Berlin: Paetec, Gesellschaft fuer Bildung und Technik, 1999. 48 p., 14.5 x 21 cm, 15 ill., ref., ISBN 3-89517-709-1, pb DM 9.80 [Part II: Beruehmte Sonnenfinsternisse der Geschichte [Famous solar eclipses in history] (p. 21-44).] Review: J.V.Feitzinger: Astron. Raumfahrt 36 (1999) 1, 28 Ichsanova, Vera: Pulkovo / St. Petersburg : Spuren der Sterne und der Zeiten ; Geschichte der russischen Hauptsternwarte [Traces of stars and times ; the history of the Russian Main Observatory [i.e. Pulkovo]; in German]. Frankfurt a.M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien: Peter Lang, Europaeischer Verlag der Wissenschaften, 1995. 236 p., ISBN 3-631-49253-7, paperback DM 69.00 Kolbe, Wilhelm: Der Stern zu Bethlehem. Zur Erinnerung an den 2000sten Jahrestag des Sternstillstandes ueber Bethlehem am 12. November 1994 n.Chr. aus astronomischer Sicht [The Star of Bethlehem. Commemorating the 2000th anniversary of the stellar standstill above Bethlehem on November 12, 1994 A.D., from an astronomical point of view; in German]. Burscheid: Dr. Wilhelm Kolbe, 1995. 20 p., ISBN 3-929760-04-5, paperback DM 15.00 [Author's address: Dr. Wilhelm Kolbe, Maxhan 28, D-51399 Burscheid, Germany; Tel. 02174-1241] Krausse, Joachim; Ropohl, Dietmar; Scheiffele, Walter: Vom Grossen Refraktor zum Einsteinturm - From the Great Refractor to the Einstein Tower. An exhibition on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the Einstein Tower in Potsdam - Eine Ausstellung zum 70. Jahrestag des Einsteinturms in Potsdam. Giessen: Anabas Verlag Guenter Kaempff, 1996. 92 p., zahlr. Abb., ISBN 3-87038-290-2, paperback DM 14.80 [All texts in English and German] Lemcke, Mechthild: Johannes Kepler. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, 1995. 176 p., ISBN 3-499-50529-0, paperback DM 12.90 (rororo Monographie ; 529) [Biography in German] Lindner, Klaus: Taschenbuch der Astronomie [Handbook of astronomy; in German]. Leipzig, Koeln: Fachbuchverlag, 1993. 255 p., ISBN 3-343-00813-3, paperback DM 22,- [Contains also: Zeittafel zur Geschichte der Astronomie 3500 v.Chr. bis 1990 [Time-line of the history of astronomy 3500 B.C. to 1990]] Review: H.Bernhard: Astron. Raumfahrt 30 (1993) 16 (4/93), 46 (402) Luehning, Felix: Der Gottorfer Globus und das Globushaus im 'Newen Werck'. Dokumentation und Rekonstruktion eines fruehbarocken Welttheaters [The Gottorf Globe and the globe building in the 'Newen Werck'. Documentation and reconstruction of a world theater from early Baroque; in German]. Schleswig: Schleswig-Holsteinisches Landesmuseum, 1997. 176 p., 150 ill., 24 x 25.5 cm, hardbound DM 25.00 (Gottorf im Glanz des Barock. Kunst und Kultur am Schleswiger Hof 1544 - 1713. Kataloge der Ausstellungen zum 50-jaehrigen Bestehen des Schleswig-Holsteinischen Landesmuseums auf Schloss Gottorf und zum 400. Geburtstag Herzog Friedrich III. herausgegeben von Heinz Spielmann und Jan Drees. [Band] IV.) [Distribution: Schleswig-Holsteinisches Landesmuseum, Schloss Gottorf, D-24837 Schleswig. This volume is not a catalogue of the exhibition, but an investigation on the basis of printed and archival sources as well as excavations in the palace garden with the aim of reconstructing the appearances of the large terrestrial and celestial globe and the globe building. The globe is now in St. Petersburg. The book deals also with the Sphaera Copernicana and the astronomical environment of the globe.] McCluskey, Stephen C.: Astronomies and cultures in early medieval Europe. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998. xxiv, 235 p., ISBN 0-521-58361-6, $ 54.95, GBP 40.00 (hb) [More information: http://www.cup.org/Titles/58/0521583616.html] Miner, Ellis D.: Uranus, the planet, rings and satellites. 2nd edition. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 1998. xx, 361 p., ISBN 0-471-97398-X, GBP 45.00 (hb) [Traces also Herschel's discovery of Uranus, the discovery of its main satellites and rings, as well as other pre-Voyager observations.] Review: R.Miles: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 108 (1998) 4, 228 Mittelstrass, Juergen: Machina Mundi - Zum astronomischen Weltbild der Renaissance [Machina Mundi - On the astronomical world view of the Renaissance; in German]. Basel: Helbing & Lichtenhahn Verlag, 1995. 31 p., ISBN 3-7190-1407-X, DM 19.00 (Vortr. d. Aeneas-Silvius Stift. an d. Uni Basel ; 31) Moore, Patrick: The planet Neptune: An historical survey before Voyager. 2nd edition. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 1996. 150 p., 30 plates, ISBN 0-471-96015-2, GBP 30.00 (hb) Review: A.Chapman: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 106 (1996) 3, 165 R.J.McKim: The Observatory 116 (1996) 1133, 254 Mueller, Uwe (ed.): 450 Jahre Copernicus "De revolutionibus". Astronomische und mathematische Buecher aus Schweinfurter Bibliotheken [450 years of Copernicus' "De revolutionibus". Astronomical and mathematical books from Schweinfurt libraries; in German]. Exhibition of the Stadtarchiv Schweinfurt in cooperation with the Bibliothek Otto Schaefer. 21 November 1993 - 19 June 1994. Schweinfurt, 1993. 2nd ed. 1998. 437 p., numerous ill., 26 x 20 cm, ISBN 3-926896-08-6, hardbound DM 48.00 (Veroeffentlichungen des Stadtarchivs Schweinfurt ; Nr. 9) [With contributions on the history of astronomy by F.Schmeidler, O.Goetz, U.Lindgren, D.A.King and others. Extended catalogue; the part on astronomy contains 100 descriptions of books of the 15th and 16th centuries, written by W.Kokott, E.Knobloch, F.Schmeidler, M.Folkerts, U.Lindgren, K.Reich, O.Gingerich, J.Hamel, A.Kuehne. Other parts concern mathematics, manuscripts, instruments. Glossary, list of references, extended index of names.] Review: W.R.Dick: Sterne 71 (1995) 1, 56-57 C.Schoener: Naturwiss. Rundschau 48 (1995) 10, 404 Oestmann, Guenther: Die astronomische Uhr des Strassburger Muensters [The astronomical clock of the Strasbourg cathedral; in German]. Stuttgart: Verlag fuer Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften und der Technik, 1993. 326 p., 48 illus., ISBN 3-928186-12-4, DM 80.00 Review: M.Schukowski: Astron. Raumfahrt 31 (1994) 22 (4/94), 46 (668) A.Zenkert: Sterne 70 (1994) 5, 308-309 J.Fried: Sterne Weltraum 34 (1995) 1, 77 Pantin, Isabelle: Johannes Kepler: Discussion avec Le Messager Celeste et Rapport sur l'Observation des Satellites de Jupiter. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1993. cxxvi, 196 p., FF 275.00 Review: C.Wilson: J. Hist. Astron. 26 (1995) 1, 86-87 Raimond, Ernst; Genee, Rene (Eds.): The Westerbork Observatory, Continuing Adventure in Radio Astronomy. Dordrecht, Boston, London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996. viii, 266 p., ISBN 0-7923-4150-3, Dfl 145.00, $ 90.00, GBP 64.00 Review: G.Swarup: Space Science Reviews 83 (1998) 3-4, 523 Schroeder, Wilfried (Ed.): The Earth and the Universe. (A Festschrift in honour of Hans-Juergen Treder). Bremen-Roennebeck, 1993. 498 p., out of print (Newsletters of the Interdivisional commission on history of IAGA ; No. 20) Review: U.Bleyer: Sterne 70 (1994) 1, 58-59 Valls-Gabaud, David; Hendry, Martin A.; Molaro, Paolo; Chamcham, Khalil; (Eds.): From quantum fluctuations to cosmological structures. Proceedings of the First Moroccan School of Astrophysics, Casablanca, Morocco, 1-10 December 1996. San Francisco, Ca.: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1997. xix, 656 p., ISBN 1-886733-46-5, $ 52.00 (hb) (Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series ; Vol. 126) [Contains also: Bernard J. T. Jones: A brief history of cosmology (p. 1-30).] ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Wilhelm Brueggenthies, David DeVorkin, Dieter B. Herrmann, Wolfgang Kaunzner, Wolfgang Kokott, Klaus Lindner, Felix Luehning, Stephen C. McCluskey, Wilfried Schroeder, Vera Staerman, David Valls-Gabaud. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 38
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 38, July 30, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. Sean McGibbon: Birr Castle Demesne 2. Dimitris Sinachopoulos: Telescope named after Aristarchos of Samos 3. Peter D. Hingley: Exhibitions in Britain for the 1999 Total Eclipse 4. Exhibitions 5. Conferences 1999 6. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... Birr Castle Demesne ------------------- By Sean McGibbon, Birr, Ireland History Birr Castle Demesne, situated in the middle of Ireland, holds a unique position in the history of science and technology in both Ireland and indeed the rest of the world. For over three hundred years, the generations of the Parsons family who have lived, and still live, in the castle have made important contributions to the following areas of research. Astronomy William, the Third Earl of Rosse discovered the spiral nature of the galaxies beyond our own with his 36 inch (0.9 m) and 72 inch (1.8 m) reflecting telescopes, in addition to making drawings of features on the Moon and Jupiter. For over 75 years, the 1.8 m telescope remained the largest in the world. Both mirrors and telescopes, as well as the observatories, were designed and constructed by the Third Earl within the grounds of the Birr Castle Demesne. The Fourth Earl used the 0.9 m to discover the heat of the surface of the Moon. The 1.8 m telescope is almost fully restored and is now used on a daily basis for demonstration purposes. Photography Mary, Countess of Rosse, and wife of William, the Third Earl, was a pioneer in the then new technology of photography and the first woman to win the Silver medal award of the Royal Photographic Society of Ireland for her work in the 1850's. She experimented with various early photographic techniques and used them to take excellent photographs of the area and people around Birr Castle. Engineering Charles Parsons, youngest son of the Third Earl, invented and patented the multi-stage steam turbine, in the early 1890's. This revolutionised travel at the turn of the century and provided the power to drive such famous ocean liners such as the Mauritania and the Queen Elizabeth, as well as allowing a new method of generating electricity, which is widely used in power stations throughout the world. Irelands first suspension bridge is also within the grounds of the Castle. Botany Rated with five stars in the official list of Gardens of Outstanding Historic Interest, Birr Castle Demesne is over 100 acres in extent. Among its main features are the formal gardens, designed around a 17th century plan, and the tallest Box Hedges in the world. Birr Castle Demesne has one of the world's greatest collections of trees and shrubs and is particularly strong in species of Chinese and Himalayan origin. Ireland's Historic Science Centre Ireland's Historic Science Centre contains astronomical instruments, cameras, photographs and photographic equipment used by the Third and Fourth Earls and Mary, Countess of Rosse, in the middle and late 1800s. Also on display is electrical and engineering equipment originally belonging to Charles Parsons and used in his experiments as well as a large area devoted to the botanical work carried out in the Demesne. The whole collection is housed in the restored stables of the castle. Details of the work of prominent Irish scientists is also available here. Visiting Birr Castle Demesne and archival research Birr Castle Demesne is open all the year round (0900 to 1800 hours) and enquires regarding guided tours and research projects can be made in by post, e-mail or through an electronic booking form on the Birr Castle Website at http://www.birrcastle.com . Birr Castle's e-mail address for general enquiries is info@birrcastle.com . For enquiries regarding the telescope, please contact the autor at mcgibbon@iol.ie . You can also contact Birr Castle by post or telephone at: Birr Castle Demesne, Birr, Co. Offaly, Ireland Telephone: + 353 509 20336/22154 Fax: +353 509 21583 ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... Telescope named after Aristarchos of Samos ------------------------------------------ By Dimitris Sinachopoulos, Athens (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 41, 27. Mai 1999, Item 3.) The Astronomical Institute of the National Observatory of Athens (AI-NOA) decided to call "Aristarchos" its new 2.3m RC telescope, in honor of the big astronomer Aristarchos of Samos. The new 2.3m telescope has been under construction by Zeiss-Jena since last summer. We intend to install it at a new European site on the top of the mountain Aroaneia (Chelmos) at an altitude of 2350m, north Peloponnesus, southern Greece. Author's address: Dr. Dimitris Sinachopoulos, e-mail: ds@astro.noa.gr ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... Exhibitions in Britain for the 1999 Total Eclipse ------------------------------------------------- By Peter D. Hingley, London (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 42, 21. Juli 1999, Item 3.) Are you visiting Britain / the West Country / the Channel Islands around the time of the Solar Eclipse on 1999 August 11? If so you may like to visit one or more of the following exhibitions which have been put on to coincide with it. All the exhibitions listed contain some material from the RAS collections and I have described this, but of course they all include much material from other sources. If contacting any of the Museums you may like to mention this message. If anyone is producing TV, Radio or Press coverage of the Eclipse, I am sure the museums in question would be very pleased to have a mention to give publicity for their exhibitions. I can provide personal contact details at any of the Museums on request, but thought it better not to put these in a general message. TRURO The Royal Cornwall Museum has mounted an exhibition `The Story of Astronomy in Cornwall', which opened on 10th July. The opening was attended by Professor Tony Hewish, himself born in Fowey, and the exhibition features various aspects of astronomy and of eclipses, the discovery of Pulsars, and the work of other Cornish-born astronomers such as Edwin Dunkin and John Couch Adams. The RAS Library has lent various rare book and archive material, notably the manuscript Autobiography of Edwin Dunkin, an edition of which is to be published by the Royal Institution of Cornwall during the run of the exhibition. The exhibition is open from 10am to 5pm, Monday to Saturday, until 11th September, and the charge for admission to the Museum is pounds 2.50 (with concessions). For further information please telephone the Museum (01872 272205). GUERNSEY The Guernsey Museum and Art Gallery in Candie Gardens, St Peter Port, has an exhibition `Eclipse 99', which was opened on 17th June by Dr Patrick Moore. The exhibition covers both the history of astronomy and of eclipse observation, and includes much modern information on the Sun, including interactive computer displays. The display also includes a piece of Moon rock lent by NASA, and outside the Gallery a coelostat projects a real- time image of the Sun when the latter is visible. (It usually is in Guernsey). The RAS Library has supplied various images for the exhibition and loaned a watercolour of an Eclipse in 1870 by the Guernsey born artist P J Naftel. The exhibition also features prominently the work of the pioneer astrophotographer Warren de la Rue, born in Guernsey in 1815. The exhibition is open daily until 26th September 1999, and admission to the Museum costs pounds 2.50 for adults, 1.25 for senior citizens, children and students free. For further information please telephone the Museum (01481 726518). PLYMOUTH The City of Plymouth Museum and Art Gallery's exhibition `The Dark Side of the Sun', opened on 8th May. It covers a wide range of the history of Astronomy and of navigation, as well as `just' eclipses. A considerable number of significant books and artefacts, not normally on public display, have been lent from the RAS collection, including the first editions of Newton's `Principia' and of Copernicus' `De Revolutionibus', Flamsteed's `Atlas Coelestis', and various other rare books, and several instruments including a sextant said to have been used by Captain Cook. The exhibition has received support from the University of Plymouth, European Space Agency, PPARC, and Orchid Technologies, as well as the RAS. It runs until 23 October and the Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday, and Bank Holiday Mondays, 10.00 - 17.00. Admission is free. For further infomation please telephone the Museum (01752 304774). ST IVES The Tate Gallery, St. Ives, has mounted an exhibition entitled `As Dark as Light', mainly of contemporary works of art by Yuko Shiraishi, Gia Edzveradze, and Garry Fabian Miller. There are also relevant works by Turner and Whistler. There is a small section of older material and items lent by the RAS include diagrams and drawings of eclipses, one of Halley's eclipse maps, and, notably, an album of original photographs of the 1860 eclipse expedition to Spain, probably collected by Warren de la Rue, which contains both the first concerted attempts at eclipse photography and what are probably the earliest photos of the participants in an eclipse expedition. The exhibition is open on Tuesdays to Sundays (and Mondays, including Bank Holiday Mondays, in July and August) from 10.30 to 17.30 , and runs until 30th October. There is a charge for admission, but the Tate Gallery has asked me not to specify how much it is. For further information please telephone the Gallery (01736 796226). There are also two exhibitions outside the area of totality: LONDON The Science Museum, South Kensington, has an exhibition `Eclipse99' which includes artefacts and images on the theme of eclipse observation over the centuries. Further information can be found on their Web site http://www.nmsi.ac.uk. LIVERPOOL The Liverpool Museum, William Brown St., Liverpool has a small exhibition of photographs and other material; mainly of current eclipse information but including some interesting ephemera relating to the 1927 Total Eclipse. The Museum is open daily, 10 am (Sundays 12) to 5 pm. The charge for admission is pounds 3.50 but this gives admission to eight museums for a whole year! Author's address: Peter D. Hingley, Librarian Royal Astronomical Society Burlington House Piccadilly London W1V 0NL England Tel.: 0171 734 4582 / 3307 Fax: 0171 494 0166 e-mail: pdh@ras.org.uk ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... Exhibitions ----------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 42, 21. Juli 1999, Item 4. Partial translations by the editor.) A small exhibition focusing on astrological concepts in Islam, especially the zodiac, constellations, planets and lunar mansions, has just be opened in the Islamic galleries of the British Museum. Stunning objects of every day life with astrological iconography have been displayed next to coins, manuscripts and scientific instruments, including the two Abd al-Karim astrolabes, here shown together for the first time. "Heavenly Houses", British Museum, London, gallery 34, until 3 October 1999. Information: Silke Ackermann, British Museum MLA, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG, e-mail: sackermann@British-museum.ac.uk The special exhibition "Eclipse! The history of eclipse watching to the present day" in the Science Museum, London, uses telescopes, spectroscopes, orreries and other scientific instruments to explain solar eclipses and how they have been viewed past and present. The centrepoint of the display is the Kew Photoheliograph, used in northern Spain at the 1860 eclipse to show that prominences were part of the Sun. 6 May - 3 September 1999, open daily from 10.00 to 18.00 URL: http://www.nmsi.ac.uk/eclipse/exhibition/museum.html The exhibition "Cosmos: From Romanticism to the Avant-garde, 1801 to 2001", presented by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts from June 17 to October 17, 1999, deals with the theme of infinity as expressed by the human imagination. Cosmos reveals its discoveries chronologically, from Romanticism's contemplation of the Moon to NASA's breathtaking photos of Earth taken from beyond the Moon. It is not so much a checklist of scientific discoveries and the conquest of the space as it is an attempt to explore the ever-expanding visual frontiers that artists bring within the grasp of our senses through their visionary creations. Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Jean-Noel Desmarais Pavilion, 1380 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Canada, Tel. (514) 285-1600 Opening hours: Tuesday to Sunday and Holiday Mondays, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. URL: http://www.mbam.qc.ca/en_cours/a-cosmos.html ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999 ---------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 41, 27. Mai 1999, Item 6 [considerably abridged], and Nr. 42, 21. Juli 1999, Item 6.) Further conferences in the year 1999 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html August 6-7, 1999, St. Jakob im Walde, Steiermark, Austria International interdisciplinary scientific Symposium "Lucifer's Rock (Teufelstein), a prehistoric landmark of astronomical background?" Registration: Tourismusbuero, A-8255 St. Jakob im Walde, Austria, Tel. 0049 3336/8212, Fax 0049 3336/8214, email: gde@st-jakob-walde.steiermark.at URLs: http://web.vip.at/calendersign/english/symposion.htm (English) http://web.vip.at/calendersign/deutsch/symposion.htm (German) September 24-25, 1999, Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy National meeting of the Italian Astronomical Society devoted to the history of the Internationa Latitude Service and other initiatives of astronomical cooperation at the end of the 19th century, such as the Carte du Ciel, the AG zone catalogue, and others. Contacts: Prof. Edoardo Proverbio, Osservatorio di Brera, Milano, fax 39 27200 1600, e-mail proverbio@astrco.astro.it ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 38, July 30, 1999 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 42, 21. Juli 1999, Item 7. Partial translations by the editor.) Andrewes, William J.H. (Ed.): The quest for longitude. The proceedings of the Longitude Symposium, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, November 4-6, 1993. Cambridge, Mass.: Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, Harvard University, 1996. 437 p., ill. (some col.), maps (some col.), 29 cm, ISBN 0-9644329-0-0, $ 75.00 [Contributions by historical experts on the history of the determination of longitude. "The Longitude Symposium was organized under the auspices of the Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments in connection with the Fourteenth Annual Seminar of the National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors." World maps on endpapers. Includes bibliographical references (p. 406-421) and index.] Birkmaier, Martin (Hrsg.): Totale Sonnenfinsternis 11. August 1999 The total solar eclipse of 11 August 1999. - In German]. Augsburg: Intercon, 1999. 94 p., 15 x 21 cm, numerous ill., ISBN 3-9805116-1-8, paperback DM 9,80 [p. 9-22: Karl August Keil, Zur Geschichte der Sonnenfinsternisse (mit Schwerpunkt Augsburg) [On the history of solar eclipses (with emphasis on Augsburg)]. Distribution: Intercon GmbH, Gablinger Weg 9, D-8615 Augsburg, Germany, Tel.: 0821-414081, Fax: 0821-414085] Bruno H. Buergel : Zum 50. Todestag des Potsdamer Astronomen und Schriftstellers [Bruno H. Buergel : To the 50th anniversary of the death of the Potsdam astronomer and writer. - In German]. Potsdam: Astronomisches Zentrum "Bruno H. Buergel", Stadt- und Landesbibliothek Potsdam, 1998. 44 p., paperback DM 3.00 + DM 2.00 postage [Appeared on occasion of the Buergel exhibition, 8 July - 1 August 1998, in the "Stadt- und Landesbibliothek Potsdam". With contributions on Buergel and the "Astronomisches Zentrum" by Rolf Koenig and Arnold Zenkert, a Buergel bibliography, as well as excerpts and citations from Buergel's books. Distribution: Astronomisches Zentrum, Im Neuen Garten 6, D-14469 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: 0331/2702724 or 2702721, Fax: 0331/292447.] Helfricht, Juergen: Hexenmeister und Bauernastronomen in Sachsen [Wizards and country astronomers in Saxony. - In German]. [Taucha]: Tauchaer Verlag, 1999. 80 p., 7,6 x 10,7 cm, 19 ill., ISBN 3-910074-97-9, hardbound DM 16.80 (Tatsachen ; Nr. 14) [On Nikolaus Schmidt[-Kuenzel], Christoph Arnold, Johannes Ludewig, Peter Anich, Christian Gaertner and Johann Georg Palitzsch.] Ince, Martin: Dictionary of astronomy. Teddington: Peter Collins Publishing, 1997. ii, 195 p., 21.5 x 13 cm, ISBN 0-948549-43-2, GBP 10.95 (pb) [About 1500 entries, a substantial number of which are biographical notes; "lacks focus and authority" (J. Mitton); "I have the feeling that is has been written by someone who does not have a deep knowledge of astronomy" (R.M.Catchpole).] Review: J.Mitton: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 107 (1997) 5, 289 Review: R.M.Catchpole: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1143, 112-113 Karrow, Robert W.: Mapmakers of the Sixteenth century and their maps. Chicago: Speculum Orbis Press for the Newberry Library, 1993. xxx, 846 p., $ 110.00 [Includes complete annotated bibliographies of all publications (and not just maps) for astronomers such as Peter Apian, Philipp Apian, Oronce Fine, Gemma Frisius and Bartholomaeus Scultetus, and many others.] Keszthelyi, Sandor: Magyarorszag naporai. A rogzitett naporak katalogusa. Budapest: Magyar Csillagaszati Egyesulet, 1998. 128 p., 14.5 x 20 cm, ill., bibliogr. ref., ISBN 963-03-5048-3 [Catalogue of the fixed sundials in Hungary. In Hungarian.] Mazal, Otto: Die Sternenwelt des Mittelalters [The Medieval heavenly world. - In German]. Graz: Akademische Druck- und Verlagsanstalt, 1993. 144 p., ill., 21 x 30 cm, ISBN 3-201-01590-3, hardbound DM 185.00 [On the cultural and Biblical background of astrology. Contents: Ueber kulturelle und biblische Hintergruende der Astrologie. Der Kosmos des Mittelalters. Die Sterne und das Goettliche. Die Sphaerenharmonie der Planeten. Sternbilder und Sternsagen. Die Macht der Sterne. Der Rhythmus des Lebens.] Novikov, Igor D.: The river of time. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 275 p., ISBN 0-521-46177-4, GBP 30.00 (hb); ISBN 0-521-46737-3, GBP 9.95 (pb) ["This book is a popular-level introduction to some of the most exciting recent work in modern physics [and astronomy], and especially developments in the concept of time. ... A particular enjoyable aspect of this book is the large number of personal anecdotes about other leading researchers in the field, especially in the former USSR." (Ian Crawford)] Review: I.Crawford: The Observatory 119 (1999) 1149, 97-98 Pfitzner, Elvira: Die astronomischen Beobachtungen des Geistlichen Georg Samuel Doerffel 1643 - 1688 [The astronomical observations of the clergyman Georg Samuel Doerffel 1643 - 1688. - In German]. Weissbach: Beier & Beran. Archaeologische Fachliteratur, 1998. 55 p., 21 x 29.5 cm, ISBN 3-930036-32-0, paperback DM 15.00 Schenkel, Peter Michael: Johannes Kepler, Gesammelte Werke. Register zu Band XIII, Briefe 1590 - 1599 [Johannes Kepler, Collected works. Index tp Vol. XIII, Letters 1590 - 1599. - In German]. Munich: Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1999. 40 p. (Berichte der Keplerkommission ; Heft 10) Schmeidler, Felix: Kommentar zu "De revolutionibus" [Commentary on "De revolutionibus". - In German]. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1998. X, 209 p., 20.5 x 30 cm, ISBN 3-05-003123-9, hardbound DM 298.00 (Nicolaus Copernicus Gesamtausgabe. Hrsg. von Heribert M. Nobis und Menso Folkerts. Bd. III/1) [Explanations for the modern reader of the main work of Copernicus on its history, editions and contents.] Schroeder, Wilfried: Naturwissenschaft und Religion [Science and religion. - In German]. Bremen-Roennebeck: Science edition, 1999. 68 p., 2 ill., paperback DM 14.00 [About the examples of Max Planck and Werner Heisenberg. Distribution: W.Schroeder, Science Edition, Hechelstr. 8, D-28777 Bremen-Roennebeck, Germany] Schwarz, Oliver; Hopf, Cornelia; Stein, Hans: Quellen zur Astronomie in der Forschungs- und Landesbibliothek Gotha unter besonderer Beruecksichtigung der Gothaer Sternwarten [Sources on astronomy in the Research and State Library Gotha, with special consideration of the Gotha observatories. - In German]. Gotha: Forschungs- und Landesbibliothek, 1998. 119 p., 14.5 x 21 cm, 10 ill., partially in colour, ISBN 3-910027-13-X, paperback DM 18.00 (Veroeffentlichungen der Forschungs- und Landesbibliothek Gotha ; H. 36) [Inventory of the archival holdings of the library on astronomy, including occidental (by Tycho Brahe, Georg von Peuerbach, Johannes Carion, Hevelius and others) and oriental manuscripts. Distribution: Forschungs- und Landesbibliothek Gotha, Postfach 30, D-99851 Gotha, Germany.] Shimony, Abner: Tibaldo and the hole in the calendar. New York: Copernicus / Springer-Verlag, 1998. 165 p., ISBN 0-387-94935-6, $ 21.00 (hb) [Juvenile book on the Gregorian calendar reform. Selected for The Scientific American Young Readers Book Award (1998).] Review: N.D.Mermin: Phys. Today 51 (1998) 6, 63 Review: P.Morrison: Sci. Amer. 279 (1998) 6, 87-88 Solomey, Nickolas: The elusive neutrino - a subatomic detective story. New York: W.H.Freeman and Co., 1997. 206 p., 24 x 22.5 cm, ISBN 0-716-75080-5, $ 34.95 (hb) (Scientific American Library) ["The story of the neutrino is told in a semi-historical way, but with concepts introduced as they are needed rather than waiting for the chronology to be correct ..." (Barry Kent)] Review: B.Kent: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1142, 44-45 Swerdlow, Noel M.: The Babylonian theory of planets. Princeton (New Jersey, USA): Princeton University Press, 1998. xv, 246 p., 24 x 16 cm, ISBN 0-691-01196-6, GBP 27.50 (hb) Review: J.H.Rogers: J. Brit. Astron. Assoc. 108 (1998) 4, 226-227 Review: L.J.Fatoohi: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1147, 383 Willey, R.R.: The Tucson Meteorites: their history from frontier Arizona to the Smithsonian. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1997. 47 p., 28 x 22 cm, ISBN 0-816-51816-5, $ 10.95 (pb) Review: R.Hutchison: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1145, 233-234 Yau, Kevin K.C.; Stephenson, F. Richard; Willis, David M.: A catalogue of auroral observations from China, Korea and Japan (193 B.C. - A.D. 1770). Chilton (UK): Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, 1995. IV, 82 p. (RAL-TR-95-073 (ISSN 1358-6254)) ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Silke Ackermann, Volker Bialas, Juergen Helfricht, Inge and Karl-August Keil, Sandor Keszthelyi, Rolf Koenig, Elvira Pfitzner, Felix Schmeidler, Wilfried Schroeder, Oliver Schwarz, Sepp Rothwangl, Oliver Schwarz. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy - Number 39
*************************************************************************** * * * ELECTRONIC NEWSLETTER FOR THE HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY * * * * Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy * * in the Astronomische Gesellschaft * * * * Number 39, December 21, 1999 * * * * Edited by: Wolfgang R. Dick * * * *************************************************************************** Contents -------- 1. USNO installs newest Washington time ball 2. Klaus Staubermann: Proposal for Observations with a Zoellner Photometer 3. Guenther Oestmann: Exhibition: Clocks and Scientific Instruments of the Hager Family 4. Symposium Announcement: Astronomy of Ancient Civilizations 5. Conferences 1999/2000 6. Peter D. Hingley: Dunkin Autobiography Published 7. New Books Acknowledgements Imprint *************************************************************************** * * * A Happy New Year 2000 to all readers! * * * *************************************************************************** ........................................................................... Item 1 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... USNO installs newest Washington time ball ----------------------------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 45, 3. Oktober 1999, Item 3.) Residents of the Glover Park neighborhood of northwest Washington, DC may notice a subtle change in their skyline beginning today. This morning the U.S. Naval Observatory hoisted a time ball into place on the roof of its main building. This time ball will be the official marker of the beginning of the year 2000 and the beginning of the Third Millennium in 2001. By order of then-Secretary of the Navy John Y. Mason, the Naval Observatory dropped the first time ball in the United States in 1845. This was the primary means for disseminating time to the city of Washington and for ships on the Potomac to set their chronometers for navigation. The ball was dropped every day at noon from the Observatory's Foggy Bottom site until 1885, when it was moved to the State, War and Navy Building (now the old Executive Office Building) next to the White House. It was last dropped there in 1936. The dropping of the time ball to usher in the year 2000, by order of the current Secretary of the Navy the Honorable Mr. Richard Danzig, will therefore commemorate an old tradition for Washington and the U.S. Navy. It will, however, be dropped at midnight EST on New Year's Eve rather than noon. The event will be the local culmination of a "round-the-world time ball drop", in which time balls will mark the beginning of the New Year as it sweeps westward from the International Date Line across New Zealand, Australia, India, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In addition, USNO is coordinating the local observance of the New Year with U.S. Navy installations and ships around the globe. The Observatory is also a partner in the White House Millennium Program. Time balls were used in many cities around the country and around the world during the 19th century. Those in the U.S. were sometimes dropped by a signal from Washington. Beginning in September, 1877 a time ball atop the Western Union Building in New York City was dropped by telegraphic signal from the Naval Observatory. In the era before time zones, the signal for New York was issued 12 minutes before that for Washington to take into account the longitude difference. At the turn of the 20th century dozens of time balls were being dropped around the world. A few are still ceremonially dropped, ranging from New Zealand to the Old Royal Observatory, Greenwich. The Naval Observatory began as the Depot of Charts and Instruments for the Navy in 1830, maintaining and calibrating sextants and chronometers. From 1844 to 1893 it was located in Foggy Bottom, at the site of the current Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery (BUMED). Since 1893, the Naval Observatory has been located at 34th and Massachusetts Avenue, about 2 miles from the Foggy Bottom site and the center of Washington, D.C. Determination and dissemination of time have been an essential part of the Naval Observatory mission since its beginning. During that time clock technology has evolved from precision pendulum clocks to quartz crystal clocks to the present hydrogen maser and cesium-beam atomic clocks. Similarly, time dissemination has evolved from the visual signal represented by the time ball, to the telegraph beginning in the 1860s, to radio signals and finally the Global Positioning System (GPS), for which USNO supplies the time. Clock accuracy has advanced from one-thousandth of a second with the most elaborate pendulum clocks at the beginning of the century, to one billionth of a second per day with the present atomic clocks. Time dissemination, accurate to a few tenths of a second with the time ball, is now accurate to within a few billionths of a second with GPS. Aside from maintaining the Master Clock of the United States, the Observatory produces star catalogs, astronomical and navigational almanacs, and conducts forefront astronomical research. It is building a "cesium fountain" atomic clock to improve time accuracy ten-fold. It has constructed the Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer, which will help improve the celestial reference system and may discover Earth-size planets. The Observatory accurately measures the rotation of the Earth using radio telescopes around the world. And it continues a variety of efforts to improve navigation by land, sea, air and space. For more details on the millennium and USNO millennium activities, visit the USNO Millennium Web site, http://www.usno.navy.mil/millennium/. Time ball-related illustrations are available at this site. The USNO's main Web site also has much information on the Master Clock and other USNO projects. An electronic version of this Release, with digital images of the new time ball, may be found at http://www.usno.navy.mil/ballrel.html Source: USNO press release, August 19, 1999 Press Contacts: Dr. Steven Dick, (202) 762-0379, dick.steve@usno.navy.mil Geoff Chester, (202) 762-1438, grc@usno.navy.mil See also: Steven J. Dick: Commission 41 2000 and 2001 Time Ball Initiative. ENHA No. 35, March 25, 1999, Item 1. ........................................................................... Item 2 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... Proposal for Observations with a Zoellner Photometer ---------------------------------------------------- By Klaus Staubermann, Cambridge, MA During the past four years I have rebuilt a Zoellner astrophotometer and practised with the replica. The original photometer, based on comparison of starlight by means of polarisation, was designed by Karl Friedrich Zoellner in 1858, and became the most popular single astrophysical instrument in 19th century Germany. The reworking of Zoellner's photometer and his observations was done to understand both the success of the instrument and the scientific practice employed by Zoellner. This project has been completed last year, and the rebuilt instrument is now on display at the Dibner Institute (MIT) in Cambridge, Mass. On this year's History of Astrophysics meeting in Tihany, Hungary, a plan was discussed to use the rebuilt photometer for further observations. The idea is to carry out systematic photometric measurements with the intention to analyse, reduce, and complete Zoellner's photometric catalogue from 1861. Such a project would help us to homogenize the existing photometric data, and make it available for contemporary astronomical research, such as long-term variable stars. A project of such nature could be carried out either by a dedicated amateur or become a Masters or PhD Thesis in astronomy. I shall be most happy to make the rebuilt photometer available for the time of such a project - probably in the range of one to two years. I am also prepared to answer any questions concerning the instrument, and Chris Sterken at the Institute of Astronomy of Brussels University (csterken@vub.ac.be) would be most willing to answer any questions regarding the photometric catalogue. Further information can also be found in C. Sterken, K. Staubermann (eds.): Karl Friedrich Zoellner and the Origins of Astrophotometry, Brussels 1999, in print. Author's address: Klaus Staubermann Dibner Institute MIT E56-100 38 Memorial Drive Cambridge, MA 02139 USA Tel.: +1-617-258-0507 Fax.: +1-617-258-7483 e-mail: kstaubermann@dibinst.mit.edu URL: http://www2.crosswinds.net/~kstauber/ ........................................................................... Item 3 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... Exhibition: Clocks and Scientific Instruments of the Hager Family ----------------------------------------------------------------- By Guenther Oestmann, Hamburg On December 10th an exhibition of the works of the Hager dynasty was opened in the Ducal Library in Wolfenbuettel. Duke August was an ardent collector of clocks and scientific instruments and his successor Rudolf August, although not contributing to the cultural blossoming of the small baroque residence, in 1668 appointed Wolfgang and Michael Tobias Hager as clockmakers for the maintenance of the clocks, watches and scientific instruments preserved in the Kunstkammer. Members of the family were active in Wolfenbuettel, Brunswick, Arnstadt and Frankfurt until the end of the 18th century. The exhibition shows a major part of the Hager oeuvre from private and public property and a catalogue will be available at the beginning of December. Catalogue: Guenther Oestmann: Uhren und wissenschaftliche Instrumente der Familie Hager. 253 p., 175 b/w and colour ill., ISBN 3-927288-29-2, DM 29.00. The catalogue can be ordered from the Staedtisches Museum, Am Loewenwall, D-38100 Braunschweig, Germany. Contents: Clock- and instrumentmaking in Brunswick and Wolfenbuettel; Catalogue raisonne of 54 works of the different members of the Hager family; History of the Nocturnal and the Pedometer; Bibliography. Opening times of the exhibition from December 11th, 1999 to February 27th, 2000, Tuesday to Sunday 10.00-17.00. Herzog August Bibliothek P.O. Box 1364 D-38299 Wolfenbuettel Author's address: Dr. Guenther Oestmann Institut fuer Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Mathematik und Technik Bundesstr. 55 D-20146 Hamburg Germany e-mail: oestmann@math.uni-hamburg.de ........................................................................... Item 4 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... Symposium Announcement: Astronomy of Ancient Civilizations ---------------------------------------------------------- JENAM-2000, the 9th Meeting of the European Astronomical Society (EAS) will be held from 29 May to 3 June 2000 in Moscow, Russia, jointly with the 5th Conference of the Euro-Asian Astronomical Society (EAAS). The conference will cover the basic fields of astronomy and astrophysics and is open to all astronomers who would like to interact and exchange their scientific expertise with their European colleagues. Invited reviews of outstanding problems of modern astronomy are expected to be given at plenary sessions. Parallel sessions covering wide fields of astronomy will also be organizes during the Conference. In addition, poster sessions are expected to play an important role in this Conference, addressing recent results, which, in general, cannot be included in the detailed plan of the scheduled sessions. Joint discussions, two colloquia and several associated symposia are also planned. Associated Symposium: Astronomy of ancient civilizations The symposium "Astronomy of ancient civilizations" associated to JENAM-2000 will be held on May 24-29, 2000 in Moscow. The basic topics of the symposium will comprise a range of problems of archaeoastronomy, ethnoastronomy as well as other diversified fields of research relevant to the concept of astronomy in the context of the history of the culture of ancient civilizations. In addition investigations dealing with the problems of existence, survival and the world outlook of ancient societies will be treated. As a final panel discussion "Problems of ancient astronomy" will be anticipated. The main themes and sessions to be considered are: 1. Astronomical research of the oldest civilizations 2. Sun and ancient civilizations 3. Oldest observations of luminaries during the Stone Age 4. Astronomy of ancient societies of the Eurasian Steppe-Forest area 5. Astronomy of Ancient China 6. Astronomy of Ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt 7. Astronomy of Ancient Greece 8. Astronomy of Mesoamerica 9. History of astronomy contact address: E.N.Kaurov, e-mail kaurov@sai.msu.ru More information: http://www.sai.msu.su/jenam/ P R E-R E G I S T R A T I O N F O R M Submit this form by normal post or fax to: JENAM-2000, Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Universitetskij pr. 13, 119899 Moscow, Russia; tel/fax: +7(095)9328844 Deadline for pre-registration: December 20, 1999 Direct questions to: jenam@sai.msu.su == You will receive a confirmation from the LOC as soon as your registration has been processed == Family Name: First name: Initials: Title: Professor Dr. Ph.D. Student Mr. Mrs. Miss Affiliation for Name Badge: E-mail: Phone number: Fax number: Institution: Postal address: City: Zip Code: Country: Accompanying person(s): I am interested in session on: Will you be presenting a paper? (YES/NO) If YES, preliminary title: oral poster Preliminary interest in the type of hotel accommodation University Guest House (<20 USD) Hotel nearby (20-50 USD) Top-class hotel Preliminary interest to long distance excursions (YES/NO) . . . . . If es, which excursion do you select: Date . . . . . . . . . . Signature: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . [Announcement provided by Izold Pustylnik, e-mail: izold@aai.ee; edited for ENHA.] ........................................................................... Item 5 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... Conferences 1999/2000 --------------------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 45, 3. Oktober 1999, Item 5.) Further conferences in the years 1999 and 2000 were reported in previous issues of ENHA. For a complete list of all conferences announced see the following URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/hist_astr/ha_meet.html October 1-4, 1999, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Annual Convention of the Antique Telescope Society Place: Dunsmuir Lodge and the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory Activities: Tours of the 1.8 meter Brashear / Warner & Swasey telescope, keynote address by Albert Van Helden, two invited lectures by Alan Batten, papers sessions, and displays of instruments. Contacts: Peter Abrahams, e-mail: telscope@europa.com November 3-7, 1999, Pittsburg, PA, USA 75th anniversary meeting of the History of Science Society Contacts: Fred Gregory, e-mail: fgregory@ufl.edu, or Edith Sylla, e-mail: Edith_Sylla@ncsu.edu March 31 - April 2, 2000, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England British Sundial Society Conference Place: Royal Agricultural College Contacts: David Young (Secretary BSS), 112, Whitehull Road, London E4 6DW, England, e-mail: davidsun@lineone.net ........................................................................... Item 6 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... Dunkin Autobiography Published ------------------------------ By Peter D. Hingley, London (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 43, 6. August 1999, Item 6.) To mark the Eclipse on 1999 August 11 the Royal Institution of Cornwall is publishing the manuscript autobiography of Edwin Dunkin (1821 - 1898), who was born in Truro in 1821. The title adopted is 'A Far Off Vision; a Cornishman at Greenwich Observatory'. This document found its way to the RAS in 1970 and is now listed as RAS Additional Manuscript 55. The actual launch will be performed by Patrick Moore at Truro on Saturday 7 August. The text has been edited, and the introduction written by myself and Miss Tamsin Daniel, Curator of Art and Exhibitions, Royal Cornwall Museum, Truro. Dr Allan Chapman has kindly written a preface. Dunkin worked at the Greenwich Observatory for over forty years, most of them under Airy, and became Chief Assistant under Christie. He is also famous for his beautiful book 'The Midnight Sky' whose genesis he describes - it derived from what appears to have been the first ever series of articles published in any general circulation magazine with monthly illustrations of the sky. Dunkin's autobiography gives much information and insight into the workings of the Greenwich Observatory in his time, and describes the commissioning of major Greenwich instruments such as the Airy Transit Circle, the Great Altazimuth, the 11 3/4 inch refractor (later 28 inch) and the Reflex Zenith Tube; he was also involved in, and describes, numerous other operations such as the determinations of the longitudes of Paris, Brussels and Valentia, Geomagnetic observations, and Airy's experiments to determine the density of the Earth at Harton Colliery, of which Dunkin was superintendent. Dunkin also gives detailed descriptions of many Cornish antiquities and customs, of visits to Cornish copper mines, and the changes in modes of transport during the nineteenth century. Several appendices have been added, including the unpublished description of Airy's earlier Gravity experiments in Dolcoath copper mine, Cornwall, and his lengthy lecture on the Harton Colliery experiments. The publication is being sold by the Royal Cornwall Museum and, characteristically of the publications of local societies, is being printed in quite a small edition. Could I therefore suggest that you should apply as soon as possible if you want to obtain a copy; it is highly unlikely that the volume will be reprinted. The volume has 218 pages, spiral bound, and the price is GB Pounds 20. Orders may be sent by post to: The Director Royal Cornwall Museum River Street Truro Cornwall TR1 2SJ or, perhaps, preferably, FAXed to the RCM at 01872 240514. They can send you a pro-forma invoice or you can use a credit card. If ordering direct please give the following information: Name Address Number of copies required Your address Delivery address (if different) Telephone Number Type of Card (VISA, etc) Card Number Expiry date Signature. Please mention this message if ordering direct. Alternatively you can order through a bookseller, the ISBN being 1 898166 73 0. I hope you will find the book interesting and worthwhile. Author's address: Peter D. Hingley, Librarian Royal Astronomical Society Burlington House Piccadilly London W1V 0NL England Tel.: 0171 734 4582 / 3307 Fax: 0171 494 0166 e-mail: pdh@ras.org.uk ........................................................................... Item 7 ENHA No. 39, Dec. 21, 1999 ........................................................................... New Books --------- (From: "Elektronische Mitteilungen zur Astronomiegeschichte" Nr. 43, 6. August 1999, Item 7. Partial translations by the editor.) Birkmaier, Martin (Hrsg.): Totale Sonnenfinsternis 11. August 1999 [Total eclipse, 11 August 1999. - In German]. Augsburg: Intercon, 1999. 94 p., 15 x 21 cm, numerous ill., ISBN 3-9805116-1-8, DM 9.80 (pb) [p. 9-22: Karl-August Keil, Zur Geschichte der Sonnenfinsternisse (on the history of eclipses, with emphasis on Augsburg). Distribution: Intercon GmbH, Gablinger Weg 9k, D-86154 Augsburg, Germany, Tel.: 0821-414081, Fax: 0821-414085; URL: http://www.intercon-spacetec.de/] Einsteinturm [Einstein Tower. - In German]. Texts: Christine Hoh-Slodczyk, Juergen Staude. Berlin: Pitz & Hoh; Ludwigsburg: Wuestenrot Stiftung, 1999. 32 p., 12 x 23 cm, numerous ill., part. in colour, DM 7.50 (pb) + shipping, DM 3.50 for students [Appeared on the occasion of the restauration of 1997-1999, which is described in detail after the history and dscription of the solar observatory. Distribution: Astrophysikalisches Institut Potsdam, Sonnenobservatorium Einsteinturm, Sekretariat, Telegrafenberg, D-14473 Potsdam, Tel.: (0331) 288 2331, Fax: 288 2310, e-mail: soe@aip.de] Krauss, Rolf: Astronomische Konzepte und Jenseitsvorstellungen in den Pyramidentexten [Astronomical concepts and ideas about the hereafter in the texts of the pyramids. - In German]. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1997. XVI, 297 p., 34 ill., ISBN 3-447-03979-5, DM 128.00 (pb) (Aegyptologische Abhandlungen ; 59) [Also: Hamburg, Universitaet, Habilitations-Schrift, 1992] Stern, Alan; Mitton, Jaqueline: Pluto and Charon. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, 1997. 216 p., 23.5 x 16 cm, ISBN 0-471-15297-8, $ 27.95, GBP 22.50 (hb) [From the discovery of Pluto in 1930 to the current understanding of the ninth planet and its moon, Charon. "Throughout the book, the authors bring to life for the reader the personalities who, in some cases, have devoted their careers to understanding this seductive and wonderfully complex planetary system. In addition to Lowell, Slipher, and Tombaugh ... we learn here of Hardie, Cruikshank, Christy, Andersson, Tholen, Buie, Elliot, McKinnon, Jewitt, Luu, and others less well known outside the realm of contemporary planetary astronomy." (Robert Millis)] Rezension: R.Millis: Sky & Telescope 95 (1998) 6, 73-74 Rezension: P.Moore: The Observatory 118 (1998) 1144, 175 Wattenberg, Diedrich; Brosche, Peter: Archivalische Quellen zum Leben und Werk von Franz Xaver von Zach [Archival sources on the live and works of Franz Xaver von Zach. - In German]. Goettingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1993. 89 p., facsim., ISBN 3-525-82122-0, DM 40.00 (pb) (Abhandlungen der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Goettingen. Mathematisch-Physikalische Klasse. Dritte Folge ; Nr. 45) ........................................................................... Acknowledgements ---------------- For information we thank all authors and in addition: Inge and Karl-August Keil, Izold Pustylnik, and Juergen Staude. ........................................................................... Imprint ------- Electronic Newsletter for the History of Astronomy (ENHA) Published by the Working Group for the History of Astronomy in the Astronomische Gesellschaft Editor: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick All items without an author's name are editorial contributions. Articles as well as information for the several sections are appreciated. Subscription for ENHA is free. Readers and subscribers are asked for occasional voluntary donations to the working group. Copyright Statement: The Electronic Newsletters for the History of Astronomy may be freely re-distributed in the case that no charge is imposed. Public offer in WWW servers, BBS etc. is allowed after the editor has been informed. Non-commercial reproduction of single items in electronic or printed media is possible only with the editor's permission. Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte / Working Group for the History of Astronomy: URL: http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~pbrosche/astoria.html Chairman: Prof. Dr. Peter Brosche, Observatorium Hoher List der Sternwarte der Universitaet Bonn, D-54550 Daun, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)6592 2150, Fax: +49(0)6592 985140 Secretary: Dr. Wolfgang R. Dick, Bundesamt fuer Kartographie und Geodaesie, Aussenstelle Potsdam, Postfach 60 08 08, D-14408 Potsdam, Germany, Tel.: +49(0)331 316 618, E-mail: wdi@potsdam.ifag.de Bank Acct. of the Working Group of the Astronomische Gesellschaft: Acct # 333 410 41, Sparkasse Bochum (BLZ 430 500 01) Contributions from foreign countries: acct # 162 18-203, Postgiroamt Hamburg, BLZ 200 400 20 Please sign with: "Fuer Arbeitskreis Astronomiegeschichte" ***************************************************************************
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