TheAstronomical Society of the Pacific(ASP) is an American scientific and educational organization, founded inSan Franciscoon February 7, 1889, immediately following thesolar eclipse of January 1, 1889.[2]Its name derives from its origins on the Pacific Coast, but today it has members all over the country and the world. It has the legal status of a nonprofit organization.
Abbreviation | ASP |
---|---|
Formation | 1889 |
Legal status | Non-profit organization |
Purpose | An international non-profit scientific and educational organization that works to increase understanding and appreciation of astronomy. |
Location |
|
Region served | Worldwide |
CEO | Linda Shore[1] |
Affiliations | American Association for the Advancement of Science |
Website | www |
It is the largest generalastronomyeducation society in the world,[3]with members from over 40 countries.
Education and outreach programs
editThe ASP's mission is to promote public interest in and awareness of astronomy (and increasescientific literacy) through its publications, web site, and many educational and outreach programs.[4]
- The NASA Night Sky Network– a community of more than 450 astronomy clubs across the U.S. that share their time and telescopes to engage the public with unique astronomy experiences. The ASP provides training and materials to enhance clubs outreach activities, and inspires more than four million people through their participation in 30,000+ plus events.
- Eclipse Ambassadors Off the Pathis a NASA partner program to prepare 500 communities off the path of the 2024 Total Eclipse with the awe and science of solar eclipses. Partnering eclipse enthusiasts and undergraduate students create new partnerships with underserved audiences in their community.
- Reaching for the Stars: NASA Science forGirl Scouts– The ASP is partnered on a NASA project to create new astronomy badges for Girl Scouts, connect them with their local astronomy clubs, and train amateur astronomers to make their outreach more girl-friendly. The ASP also connects adult Girl Scout volunteers to NASA's Night Sky Network (NSN).
- My Sky Tonight – a set of research-based, science-rich astronomy activities that engage pre-kindergarten aged children, and trained hundreds of educators at museums, parks, and libraries across the U.S. on how to effectively engage their youngest visitors (ages 3–5) in astronomy.
- The AAS Astronomy Ambassadors Program – provides mentoring and training experiences for young astronomers just starting their careers.The American Astronomical Society,in partnership with the ASP, members of the Center for Astronomy Education (CAE), and other organizations active in science education and public outreach, has created the program, which involves a series of professional-development workshops and a community of practice designed to help improve participants communication skills and effectiveness in doing outreach to students and the public.
- On-the-Spot Assessment – a research-to-practice initiative led by the ASP (in collaboration withOregon State University,the Portal to the Public Network via the Institute for Learning Innovation, and theNational Radio Astronomy Observatory) to develop a set of embedded assessment strategies and professional development to support research scientists in effectively communicating science to the public.
- The Galileoscope Project – Developed in 2009 for theInternational Year of Astronomy,theGalileoscopehas become the centerpiece for teaching about telescopes in many programs. As a key component of the Galileo Teacher Training Program, the Astronomical Society of the Pacific engaged hundreds of educators in professional development related to telescopes and the Galileoscope.
- Project PLANET – Leveraging resources developed as a part of the My Sky Tonight project to explore their usefulness in a formal, classroom setting.
- Project ASTRO – a national program that improves the teaching of astronomy and physical science (using hands-on inquiry-based activities) by pairing amateur and professional astronomers with 4th through 9th grade teachers and classes.
- Family ASTRO – a project that develops kits and games to help families enjoy astronomy in their leisure time and trains astronomers, educators, and community leaders.
- Astronomy from the Ground Up (AFGU) – Providing informal science educators and interpreters with new and innovative ways to communicate astronomy. AFGU is a growing community of hundreds of educators from museums, science centers, nature centers, and parks around the U.S., who are actively enhancing and expanding their capacity to address astronomy topics for their visitors.
- Classroom activities, videos, and resources in astronomy (many developed by the Society's educational staff) are sold through their online AstroShop or made available free through the website.
The ASP assists with astronomy education and outreach by partnering with other organizations both in the United States and internationally, and organizes an annual meeting to promote the appreciation and understanding of astronomy.
Publications
editThe society promotes astronomy education through several publications.The Universe in the Classroom,a free electronic educational newsletter for teachers and other educators around the world who help students of all ages learn more about the wonders of the universe through astronomy.
Mercury,the ASP's quarterly on-line membership magazine, covers a wide range of astronomy topics, from history andarchaeoastronomyto cutting-edge developments. First published in 1925 as theLeaflets of the ASP,Mercuryis now disseminated to thousands of ASP members and schools, universities, libraries, observatories, and institutions around the world.[5]Mercury Online,a publicly accessible companion blog forMercury,was established in 2019 "to showcase articles by our expert columnists after they've been published in Mercury magazine."[6]
The ASP also publishes the journalPublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific(PASP)aimed at professional astronomers. ThePASPis a technical journal of refereed papers on astronomical research covering all wavelengths and distance scales as well as papers on the latest innovations in astronomical instrumentation and software, and has been publishing journals since 1889.
TheAstronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series (ASPCS)is a series of over 400 volumes of professional astronomy conference proceedings. Started in 1988, the Conference Series has grown to become a prominent publication series in the world of professional astronomy publications, and has published over 500 volumes. Volumes are sold to the attendees of the conferences of which the proceedings are published, as well as being offered through the Astronomical Society of the Pacific's AstroShop, and can be found in the libraries of major universities and research institutions worldwide. In 2004, the ASPCS stepped into electronic publishing, offering electronic access subscriptions for libraries and institutions, as well as individual access to volumes which they have purchased in hard copy form.
AstroBeatis an on-line ASP-membership column, which comes out every other week, and features a behind-the-scenes report on some aspect of astronomical discovery, astronomy education, or astronomy as a hobby, written by a key participant. Authors have included:
- Clyde Tombaugh,retelling the story of his discovery of the (dwarf) planetPluto
- Michael E. Brown,discussing the naming of thedwarf planetMakemake
- Notedastronomical photographerDavid Malindescribing the transition fromchemicaltodigital photography
- Virginia Louise Trimbleexplaining how she selected her list of the top ten astronomical discoveries of the last thousand years.
Awards
editThe ASP makes several different awards annually:
- TheBruce Medalfor lifetime contribution to astronomy research. The medal is named afterCatherine Wolfe Bruce.[7]
- TheKlumpke-Roberts Awardfor outstanding contributions to the public understanding and appreciation of astronomy, named forDorothea Klumpke-Roberts.[8]
- The Gordon Myers Amateur Achievement Awards (formerly theAmateur Achievement Award), in recognition of significant contributions to astronomy by one not employed in the field of astronomy in a professional capacity.[9]
- The Bart Bok Award, named in honor ofastronomerBart Bok,awarded jointly with theAmerican Astronomical Societyto outstanding student projects in astronomy at theInternational Science and Engineering Fair.
- The Thomas Brennan Award for exceptional achievement related to the teaching of astronomy at the high school level.[10]
- The Maria and Eric Muhlmann Award for recent significant observational results made possible by innovative advances in astronomical instrumentation, software, or observational infrastructure.[11]
- TheRobert J. Trumpler Award,named in honor ofastronomerRobert J. Trumpler,given to a recent recipient of a Ph.D degree with a particularly notable thesis.[12]
- TheRichard Emmons Awardis given for a lifetime of contributions to the teaching of astronomy to college non-science majors.[13]
- The Las Cumbres Amateur Outreach Award, established byWayne Rosingand Dorothy Largay, seeks to honor outstanding educational outreach by an amateur astronomer to K-12 children and the interested lay public.[14]
- TheArthur B.C. Walker IIAward, first announced in 2016, for research and teaching with a substantial commitment to students from underrepresented groups.[15]
Defunct awards
edit- The Donohoe Comet Medal (1890–1950). In July 1889 the ASP announced that a bronze medal for "the actual discovery of any unexpected comet" would be awarded on the basis of a $500 gift by Joseph A. Donohoe of San Francisco. The first award was made in March 1890 toW. R. Brooks[16]for the discovery of the comet now known as16P/Brooks.After the 250th medal had been awarded in 1950 the award was discontinued because photography had enabled the discovery of too many comets.[17]
- The Comet Medal (1969–1974). In 1968 the ASP Board voted to create a new Comet Medal to be awarded once yearly to recognize "an outstanding nonprofessional astronomer" for "past contributions to the study of comets." The first award was made in 1969 toReginald L. Waterfield.After 1974, the Comet Medal was discontinued.[17]
Affiliations
editThe Astronomical Society of the Pacific is an affiliate of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science.
Recent presidents
editPresidents of the ASP have included such notable astronomers asEdwin Hubble,George O. Abell,andFrank Drake.George Pardee,who later became Governor of the State of California, served as president in 1899.
- 2019– Kelsey Johnson (University of Virginia, National Radio Astronomy Observatory)
- 2017–2019 Chris Ford (Pixar Animation Studios, ret.)
- 2015–2017 Connie Walker (National Optical Astronomy Observatory)
- 2013–2015 Gordon Myers (IBM, ret.)
- 2011–2013 William A. Gutsch (St Peters College, Jersey City)
- 2009–2011 Bruce Partridge (Haverford College)
- 2007–2009James B. Kaler(U. of Illinois)
- 2005–2007 Dennis Schatz (Pacific Science Center, Seattle)
- 2003–2005Catharine Garmany(U. of Colorado; National Optical Astronomy Observatories)
- 2001–2003Alexei Filippenko(U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1999–2001 Frank N. Bash (U. of Texas)
Past presidents
edit- 1997–1999 John R. Percy (U. of Toronto)
- 1995–1997 Bruce Carney (U. of North Carolina)
- 1993–1995Russell Merle Genet(Fairborn Observatory)
- 1991–1993Julie Lutz(Washington State U.)
- 1989–1991Frank Drake(U. of California, Santa Cruz)
- 1987–1989 James Hesser (Dominion Astrophysical Observatory)
- 1985–1987 Sidney Wolff (U. of Hawaii, NOAO)
- 1983–1985David Morrison(U. of Hawaii & NASA Ames)
- 1981–1983Halton Arp(Hale Observatories)
- 1979–1981 Leonard Kuhi (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1977–1979Ann Boesgaard(U. of Hawaii)
- 1975–1977Geoffrey Burbidge(U. of California, San Diego)
- 1973–1975 Ray Weymann (U. of Arizona)
- 1971–1973 Harold Weaver (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1969–1971George O. Abell(U. of California, Los Angeles)
- 1967–1969Helmut Abt(Kitt Peak National Observatory)
- 1965–1967Louis G. Henyey(U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1962–1965Robert Petrie(Dominion Astrophysical Observatory)
- 1960–1962Seth Barnes Nicholson(Mt. Wilson-Palomar Observatories; 2nd term)
- 1958–1959Nicholas Mayall(Lick Observatory; 2nd term)
- 1956–1957Andrew McKellar(Dominion Astrophysical Observatory)
- 1954–1955Olin Chaddock Wilson(Mt. Wilson & Palomar Observatories)
- 1952–1953Gerald Kron(Lick Observatory)
- 1951Otto Struve(U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1950Dinsmore Alter(Griffith Observatory)
- 1949Robert Julius Trumpler(U. of California, Berkeley; 2nd term)
- 1948Ira Sprague Bowen(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1947C. Donald Shane(Lick Observatory; 2nd term)
- 1946Ralph Elmer Wilson(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1945 Ferdinand Neubauer (Lick Observatory)
- 1944Roscoe Frank Sanford(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1943Armin Otto Leuschner(University of California, Berkeley; 3rd term)
- 1942Nicholas Mayall(Lick Observatory)
- 1941Arthur Scott King(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1940C. Donald Shane(University of California, Berkeley)
- 1939Alfred Harrison Joy(Mt. Wilson Observatory; 2nd term)
- 1938Hamilton Jeffers(Lick Observatory)
- 1937Harold D. Babcock(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1936Armin Otto Leuschner(U. of California, Berkeley; 2nd term)
- 1935Seth Barnes Nicholson(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1934 Sturla Einarsson (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1933Edwin Hubble(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1932Robert Julius Trumpler(Lick Observatory)
- 1931Alfred Harrison Joy(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1930 William Meyer (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1929Frederick Hanley Seares(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1928Joseph Haines Moore(Lick Observatory; 2nd term)
- 1927Paul W. Merrill(Mt. Wilson Observatory)
- 1926 Bernard Benfield (2nd term)
- 1925 Bernard Benfield (San Francisco engineer)
- 1924 Arthur Black (San Francisco banker)
- 1923Walter Sydney Adams(U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1922 Exum Lewis (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1921Charles Cushing(San Francisco attorney, 2nd term)
- 1920Joseph Haines Moore(Lick Observatory)
- 1919Beverly L. Hodghead(San Francisco, attorney)
- 1918William Wallace Campbell(Lick Observatory, 3rd term)
- 1917 Frank Cornish (San Francisco)
- 1916Sidney Dean Townley(Stanford U., 2nd term)
- 1915Robert Grant Aitken(Lick Observatory; 2nd term)
- 1914 Russell Crawford (U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1913Alexander George McAdie(U.S. Weather Bureau)
- 1912Heber Curtis(Lick Observatory)
- 1912 John Galloway (Berkeley)
- 1911 Fremont Morse (U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey)
- 1910William Wallace Campbell(Lick Observatory, 2nd term)
- 1909Charles Burckhalter(Chabot Observatory, 2nd term)
- 1908 Charles Cushing (San Francisco attorney)
- 1907Armin Otto Leuschner(U. of California, Berkeley)
- 1906Sidney Dean Townley(Latitude Observatory, Ukiah)
- 1905 George Edwards (University of California, Berkeley)
- 1904 Otto von Geldern (San Francisco)
- 1903Charles Dillon Perrine(Lick Observatory)
- 1902John Dolbeer(San Francisco lumber businessman)
- 1901James Edward Keeler(Lick Observatory)
- 1900George Pardee(eye doctor and Governor of California)
- 1899Robert Grant Aitken(Lick Observatory)
- 1898William Alvord(San Francisco merchant/banker; Bank of California president; 14th mayor of San Francisco)
- 1897William Hussey(Lick Observatory) and William Alvord (San Francisco bank president)
- 1896 Charles Burckhalter (Chabot Observatory; Co-founder)
- 1895William Wallace Campbell(Lick Observatory)
- 1894 Eusebius Molera (San Francisco civil engineer)
- 1893John Martin Schaeberle(Lick Observatory)
- 1892 William Montgomery Pierson (San Francisco attorney; drew up Society's articles of incorporation)
- 1889–1891Edward Singleton Holden(Lick Observatory; Founder)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^"ASP CEO Linda Shore".
- ^Bracher, Katherin (1989),The Stars for All: A Centennial History of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific,San Francisco, California: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, p. 18,retrieved2023-05-07.
- ^"The First National Astronomy Organization in the U.S."CosmoQuest. 6 February 2009.
- ^"ASP Education and Outreach Programs".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Mercury magazine".astrosociety.org.Astronomical Society.
- ^"Mercury Online".astrosociety.org.Astronomical Society.
- ^"Catherine Wolfe Bruce Gold Medal".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Klumpke-Roberts Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Gordon Myers Amateur Achievement Awards".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Thomas Brennan Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Maria and Eric Muhlmann Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Robert J. Trumpler Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Richard Emmons Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Las Cumbres Amateur Outreach Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Arthur B.C. Walker II Award".astrosociety.org.ASP.
- ^"Awards of the Comet-Medal of the ASP (1890–1896)".Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.9.San Francisco: 99. 1897.JSTOR40671005.
- ^ab"History".astrosociety.org.Astronomical Society.