the contribution of amateurs to astronomy : Colloquium on the contribution of amateurs to astronomy : Papers.
First Statement of Responsibility
Storm Dunlop
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
Berlin
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Springer
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
1988
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
I Historical.- Amateur Astronomy from Its Origins to Camille Flammarion.- Camille Flammarion (1842-1925): Founder of the Societe Astronomique de France.- The Historical Contribution of Amateurs to the Study of Double Stars.- Twentieth-Century Amateur Astronomy.- Criteria for Identifying an Astronomer as an Amateur.- Johannes Hevelius: Polish Seventeenth-Century Brewer and Astronomer.- Eugene Antoniadi (1870-1944) and Planetary Observation.- Investigating Astronomy's History.- Charles Boyer and the Rotation of Venus.- The Amateur and Eclipsing Binary Stars.- Amateur Astronomy in Poland: Past and Present.- Giovanni Battista Lacchini: An Amateur Astronomer from Italy.- The Instruments of H.E. Dall.- Roberts of Lovedale and Eclipsing Binary Stars.- Seventeenth-Century Solar Observations: Fundamental Results with Amateur Instruments.- Sailors and Astronomy.- The Map of the Heavens at the Chateau de Saint-Jean-de-Chepy.- Amateur Astronomy in France, 1789-1830: Two Examples.- Some French Amateurs of the 2nd Half of the 19th Century.- Comet Halley in 1910 in Franche-Comte: or Collective Memory at Fault.- A Renowned, Yet Forgotten Astronomer: Marcel de Kerolyr.- Historical Session: The Contribution of Amateurs to Astronomy, Yesterday and Today.- II Observational Methods.- Amateur Astronomers and the IAU Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams and Minor Planet Center.- Contributions of Amateur Astronomers to Variable-Star Observing.- Observations of Comets, Minor Planets and Meteors in Japan.- Amateur Astronomers' Contribution to the HIPPARCHOS Programme.- The S. A. F. Double Star Section's Contribution to the INCA-HIPPARCHOS Programme.- Working with Amateur Astronomers.- Amateur Astronomers and the Hubble Space Telescope.- The T.60 Operation at Pic du Midi.- The Effects of Light Pollution on Amateur Astronomy.- An Amateur CCD Camera.- A Spectrograph for the T.60 at Pic du Midi.- Using an Image-Intensifier in Astronomy.- Amateur Polarimetric Research.- Searching for Variables, and Constructing a Slit-less Spectroscope.- Solar Spectroscopy with a CCD.- Obtaining Extraterrestrial Dust by Balloon Probes.- Making a Telescope Mirror.- Searching for Comets.- Achievements in Astronomical Video Data Collection.- Video Grazing Occultations.- An Improved Method of Photographic Measures of Double Stars.- The Scientific Merit of Amateur Astrophotography.- Reduction of Variable-Star Observations Using Basicode.- Image Digitizer.- "Comet" Software.- Refining the Orbit of Visual Double Stars.- Reliability and Accuracy of Astronomical Observations by Amateurs.- Trying to Reduce Errors in Visual Estimates of Variable Star Magnitudes.- III Observations and Results.- Photographic Observation of Stellar Occultations.- Studying "Luna Incognita": The Region Near the South Pole.- Asteroid and Cometary Occultations.- Astrometric Measurements of Rarely-Observed Minor Planets.- Video Recordings of Asteroidal Occultations.- Space Exploration of Comets and the Evolution of Amateur-Professional Cooperation.- The Contribution of Amateur Astronomers to Cometary Observation.- New Method of Statistical Analysis of Cometary Light-Curves Applied to P/Halley.- P/Halley: The Disconnection Event of 1986 April 11.- A Study of Disconnection Velocities in the Plasma Tail of P/Halley.- Analysis of the Light-Curve of Comet P/Halley in 1985-1986.- New Trends in the Discovery of Comets by Amateurs.- Amateur Astronomers and the Recovery of Periodic Comets.- Shape and Frequency of Outbursts of P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1.- Astrometry of Comet Halley.- Observation and Analysis of Comet Tails.- Photometric Analysis of the Solar Corona on 1984 November 22/23.- Chromospheric Eruptions Observed with a Wide Slit.- Amateur/Professional Cooperation in 2 Solar Studies.- The IOTA Expedition Results from the Total-Annular Eclipse in Gabon, 1987.- Meteor Studies.- The "Sonate" Campaign.- Two Solar Observation Programmes.- Long-term Monitoring of Solar Activity by Amateur Astronomers.- The Moonwatch Program: A Model for Amateur Contributions to the ISY.- Study of Variable Stars.- The Contribution of Amateur Astronomers to the Study of Variable Stars.- Professional/Amateur Cooperation in the Study of Variable Stars as Illustrated by the Fourth Edition of the GCVS.- Amateurs and the Search for Supenovae.- The U.K. Nova/Supernova Search Programme.- GEOS - Groupe Europeen d'Observations Stellaires.- GEOS Results for PX Cephei.- The French Network for Observing Comets and Small Solar-System Bodies.- Amateurs' Contribution to the PHEMU85 Campaign Observing Mutual Phenomena of Jupiter's Satellites.- Wanted: An International Jovian-Satellite-Phenomenon Centre.- The European Section of IOTA: Scientific Programme Coordination and Results.- The Role of the Amateur in Modern Astronomy.- IV Popularization.- Meeting the Public: Popular Observatories.- Comet Halley: A Media Event.- A Planetarium for Astronomy.- Astronomical Publications.- Problems in Publishing a Popular Journal in a Small Country.- Methods of Popularizing Astronomy in Various Countries.- Opening the Sky to Everyone.- Interesting Business in Astronomy.- Preparing Astronomical Videotapes.- Transmission of Astronomical Data and Information by the A.F.A. Videotext System.- The Solar System Promenade.- The Open Sky Underground.- Teaching Astronomy in Schools.- Teaching Astronomy and the Vital Role of the True Amateur.- Astronomical Education in Poland.- Astronomy and Computing in Spanish (Aragon) High Schools.- The Planetarium at the Palais de la Decouverte.- The Starlab Mobile Planetarium in the Mid-Pyrenees.- The Planetarium at a School in Nice.- The Planetarium as a Medium for Teaching Astronomy.- Twenty Years of the Japan Amateur Astronomers' Convention.- Astronomy in the Big Apple.- The Activities of Astronomical Clubs.- The Flammarion Astronomical Society of Montpellier.- A Decade of Organized Work in Venezuela.- The Bochum Observatory.- The Triel Observatory.- The Bruno-H.-Burgel Observatory.- The Strasbourg Observatory.- Feeding the Five Thousand.- Efforts by the Instituto de Astrophisica de Canarias to Publicise Astronomy.- Tailor-Made Messages: Astronomical Information for Diverse Audiences.- The Role of the Observatoire de Paris, Meudon in Providing Astronomical Information.- Observations - Concluding Remarks.- International Astronomical Union - Colloquium 98 General Session.- List of Participants.