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February 18, 2008

2008 AAS Election - New Officers and Councilors

Congratulations to the new officers and councilors of the American Astronomical Society. Terms will being after the Annual Business Meeting on 4 June 2008 at the St. Louis Meeting.

Christine Jones
Vice-President (2008-2011)

Hervey Stockman
Treasurer (2008-2011)

C. Megan Urry
Charles E. Woodward
Nancy D. Morrison

Councilors (2008-2011)

Sara R. Heap
USNC-IAU, Cat. I (2009-2011)

Bruce W. Carney
Nominating Committee (2008-2011)

AAS Solar Physics Division Prize Winners

The 2008 Hale Prize is awarded to Hugh S. Hudson, UC Berkeley, for his fundamental contributions to many aspect of solar and heliospheric physics, in particular his studies of magnetic reconnection and particle acceleration in solar flares, the initiation of coronal mass ejections, nanoflare coronal heating, and the variability of the solar irradiance. He is also recognized for his leadership and contributions to the solar physics community, especially his untiring support for international research collaborations.


The 2008 Karen Harvey Prize is awarded to Mark G. Linton , NRL, for his major contributions to studies of kink-instabilities in delta spots, the interactions of magnetic flux tubes, and patchy reconnection in solar flares.

Marcos Huerta Named 2008 AAS Bahcall Public Policy Fellow

Dr. Marcos Huerta was named the 2008 John Bahcall Public Policy Fellow for the American Astronomical Society. Marcos comes to the AAS from the University of Florida, where he was working as a postdoctoral associate with Elizabeth Lada. Marcos received his Ph.D. from Rice University in 2007. His doctoral research was centered around spectroscopic observations and modeling of weak line T Tauri stars to determine their effective temperature independent of spectral type.  

Marcos has a background in policy areas having served as the vice president for internal affairs in the Rice University Graduate Student Association and also working in his community as an advocate for mass transit. He will begin as the John Bahcall Public Policy Fellow in mid-February and lead the annual Congressional Visits Day program on 4-5 March 2008.

The Bahcall Fellowship is a one year renewable position working in Washington, DC as the leader of the AAS Government Relations and Public Policy program. The Fellow works closely with the Committee on Astronomy and Public Policy, the AAS President and the Executive Officer to implement a coherent public policy program targeted at enhancing support for astronomy at the federal level.

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2008 American Astronomical Society Prize Winners

The 2008 Henry Norris Russell Lectureship is awarded to Rashid Sunyaev of the Russian Space Research and Max Planck Institutes for his seminal contributions to high energy astrophysics and cosmology. His theoretical insights defined the modern paradigm for gravitational accretion, provided interpretations for a host of high energy processes in the Galaxy and beyond, and laid the foundation for the current era of precision cosmology.


The 2008 AAS Education Prize is awarded to James B. Kaler (University of Illinois) for significant contributions to many aspects of astronomy education throughout his entire career; for his inspired teaching and mentorship of graduate and undergraduate students, many of whom have gone on to noteworthy careers in the field; for his wider contributions to introductory astronomy education through his textbooks and many engaging astronomy books; for maintaining a popular website with a wealth of useful material regularly consulted by astronomy teachers and students; and for his contributions to the public understanding of astronomy through his prodigious number of public lectures, his work with planetarium, television, and radio programs, and for his numerous books and articles for amateur astronomers as well as the general public.


The 2008 Helen B. Warner Prize is awarded to Eliot Quataert (University of California, Berkley) for his contributions to plasma astrophysics and accretion processes, the theory of low luminosity galactic nuclei, and an extraordinary range of other topics in theoretical astrophysics.


The 2008 George Van Biesbroeck Prize, honoring an individual for long-term extraordinary or unselfish service to astronomy, is awarded to Peter B. Stetson of the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics’ Dominion Astrophysical Observatory in recognition of his life-long efforts to enable, counsel, and help others do effective research with the tools that he has developed, specifically the DAOPHOT family of reduction programs for the analysis of astronomical images. These programs have been incorporated into—and have served as the working base for—the community reduction programs used at major institutions around the world. He has been described as the undisputed world-wide master of digital photometric techniques for measuring stellar fluxes in every conceivable astronomical situation. His fine physical insight allows him to make continuous advancement in crowded field photometry, with steadily improved and ever more automated algorithms. Astronomers across the globe will continue to benefit from his contributions for many years to come.


The 2008 Beatrice M. Tinsley Prize is awarded to Mark Reid, Harvard-Smithsonian, Center for Astrophysics, for his precision astrometry experiments with the VLBI and the VLBA and his pioneering use of cosmic masers as astronomical tools. His innovative research in radio astronomy has enhanced our understanding of the processes in star forming regions and has resulted in primary distance measurements throughout the Local Group of galaxies.


The 2008 Annie Jump Cannon Award is given to Jenny E. Greene, Harvard University, for her studies of massive black holes and their relation to galaxy formation. She has conducted important work on galaxies with low-mass (less than 1 million solar masses) central black holes, and the comparison of the black hole mass - bulge mass relation of normal galaxies with those with active galactic nuclei. With techniques and methods that she innovated, she has discovered numerous intermediate-mass black holes with masses of 10,000 - 100,000 solar masses. Her work put a firm lower limit on the space density of intermediate mass black holes.


The 2008 Newton Lacy Pierce Prize is awarded to Lisa Kewley, University of Hawaii, for her influential contributions to both the theoretical and observational fields of galaxy evolution. Dr. Kewley has pioneered new and improved techniques to determine key physical parameters as the star formation rate, chemical compositions, and energy source (massive stars versus AGN), which have brought new insights into the history of star-forming galaxies.


The 2008 Joseph Weber Award for Instrumentation is given to James Houck (Cornell University) for his extraordinary contributions over nearly four decades to major instrumentation for infrared astronomy. From early pioneering rocket experiments and major contributions to IRAS instrumentation to most recently the design and construction of IRS for the Spitzer telescope, Houck's contributions have been seminal to make infrared astronomy among the most exciting in the entire field. Scientifically, Houck's contributions have spanned the range from HII regions to the Galactic Center to extragalactic IR sources.


The Chambliss Writing Award for 2007 is given to Imke de Pater (Univ of California, Berkley) and Jack Lissauer (NASA/Ames Research Center) for their book, “Planetary Astrophysics.” “Planetary Astrophysics” is an ambitious text, which surveys the entire field of planetary astronomy, at the advanced undergraduate or beginning graduate level. In the words of one nominating letter, it “has rapidly become the standard text for teachers of planetary sciences.”


The AAS awards the 2007 Chambliss Amateur Achievement Medal to Ronald H. Bissinger of Racoon Run Observatory, Pleasanton, California, for his many contributions to the photometric study of transiting extrasolar planets. He has been involved with NASA and University of California scientists since 2001, via the transitsearch.org team, recording transits of exoplanets across the disks of their parent stars. These observations require exquisite precision for ground-based observations, often at a level rarely achieved even by professional astronomers. Among his many contributions, Bissinger was codiscoverer of the exoplanet XO-1b; he provided the first external confirmation for several exoplanet discoveries, including HD 149026b, which produces only a 3-millimagnitude dip in its star’s brightness; he discovered anomalies in the transit light-curve shape of TrES-1; and he developed techniques now used by other researchers in their photometric studies of low-amplitude variability.

While this award is made specifically in recognition of contributions to research, we also note Bissinger’s positive service to astronomy in other ways. For example, he has worked as a docent for the National Park Service, explaining astronomy and the night sky to the public; he has advised UCSC undergraduates on observing techniques; and he was an interviewee on the Timothy Ferris PBS special Seeing in the Dark and on an American Institute of Physics video on amateur photometry.

January 3, 2008

United Nations declares 2009 the International Year of Astronomy

The United Nations (UN) 62nd General Assembly proclaimed 2009 the International Year of Astronomy. The Resolution was submitted by Italy, Galileo Galilei's home country. The International Year of Astronomy 2009 is an initiative of the International Astronomical Union and UNESCO.

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July 13, 2006

American Astronomical Society Names New Executive Officer

Kevin B. Marvel, a research astronomer who specializes in stellar radio astronomy, has been named executive officer of the American Astronomical Society. He succeeds Robert Milkey, who will retire in July after 11 years of service.

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AAS Hands Out Eight Awards; Seven Win Division Prizes

Six professors, a researcher, and a staff astronomer are receiving awards from the American Astronomical Society.

AAS and the American Institute of Physics are jointly awarding the 2006 Dannie Heineman Prize for Astrophysics to Marc Davis, a professor of astronomy and physics at the University of California, Berkeley, "for his pioneering work on the large-scale structure in the Universe." The committee choosing the prizewinner recognizes Davis for "his innovative and influential contributions to observations, simulations and instrumentation, and his outstanding mentoring of students, as examples of outstanding work in the field of astrophysics."

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