Carlos Jaschek | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1926-03-02)March 2, 1926 |
| Died | April 12, 1999(1999-04-12) (aged 73) |
| Alma mater | National University of La Plata,Argentina |
| Known for | stellar spectroscopy,photometry (astronomy) and classification, astronomicalstatistics,nomenclature anddatabases, andcultural astronomy; leading theCDS in its early years. |
| Spouse | Mercedes Jaschek(April 13, 1926 – November 21, 1995; her death) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | astrophysicist,astronomer, data analyst |
| Institutions | National University of La Plata, Perkins Observatory, Yerkes Observatory, Cordoba Observatory, Ohio State University, University of Geneva, Louis Pasteur University |
Carlos Jaschek (March 2, 1926 – April 12, 1999) was aGerman-bornArgentine astrophysicist[1] who spent time in theUnited States, lived inSwitzerland, settled inFrance, became a French citizen[3] and worked to make astronomicaldata accessible to all nations. As the second Director of a new center inStrasbourg, France, designed to be a computerized repository for data about the stars, he was part of its early team who were determined, clearsighted decision-makers when its resources were limited.[4]
Jaschek began inastronomy at La Plata, inSouth America, later directing itsAstrophysics Department.[3] He travelled and conducted research at many observatories[2] along with his wife, thestellar astronomer and spectroscopist Mercedes Jaschek, with whom he spent a lifetime collaborating in research.[5] They lived in Argentina from 1937 to 1973. With his wife and his other colleagues, Jaschek was involved with both stellarspectroscopy andphotometry,[3] the newly-accessibleinfrared(IR) andultraviolet (UV) as well as visible light,[5] astronomical statistics[3] andguidelines for designating stars,[6] and with thechemically peculiar stars[1]
In addition to his research discoveries, he co-created atlases andcatalogues and published them.[5] He was President of theInternational Astronomical Union's Commission 45 Stellar Classification.[7] and was an early proponent of creating astronomical databases.[8]
He founded an organization to encourage research on the impact ofastronomy on society, the SEAC.[9] The Jaschek's retired in 1993 and moved toSpain, continuing to be active in scientific endeavors.[5] Mercedes Jaschek died in 1995, and Carlos Jaschek in 1999.[1]
Jaschek was born on March 2, 1926, in Brieg, Germany, (nowBrzeg, Poland). His family moved toArgentina[2] inSouth America when he was 11. In 1947, he was hired atLa Plata Observatory.[2] His wife, Mercedes Isabel Corvalán de Jaschek, was an Argentine stellar spectroscopist,[1] who also began at theNational University of La Plata in 1947.[5] The pair collaborated throughout their lives.[3][5] Carlos Jaschek received his Ph.D. in astronomy in 1952.[2]
After a year in theUnited States, he becameprofessor inastrophysics atLa Plata University and the director of the Astrophysical Department in 1957.[2] Jaschek's initial research at La Plata involved observingminor planets. He began programs in stellar spectroscopy and worked to develop equipment particularly in photoelectric photometry. He was also involved with Argentina's fledglingradio astronomy and space program. In 1972, he organized the first astrophysics conference inLatin America.[10]
From 1957 to 1973, Jaschek made contacts with other spectroscopists, creating lifelong collaborations with astronomers in other nations when he travelled toobservatories and astronomy departments includingYerkes Observatory,Perkins Observatory,Ohio State University, theUniversity of Michigan and elsewhere.[2] He was Invited Professor at Perkins Observatory in 1964 and 1967, and also at theUniversity of Chicago (Yerkes) as a research associate in 1967. He was invited professor at theArgentine National Observatory atCórdoba in 1968. In 1970, he was invited professor at Cordoba, Ohio State University, and atGeneva University.[3] Mercedes Jaschek also conducted research at Cordoba, Perkins, Yerkes, Michigan and Geneva.[5]

From 1970 to 1973, Jaschek was the vice president of theInternational Astronomical Union's (IAU) Commission 45 Stellar Classification, and he became president of that commission in 1973.[7] He moved from La Plata to Europe in 1973 due to the political situation.[11] There was political instability atthat time in Argentina.[12]
In 1973, Jaschek was again at Geneva University as invited professor. He was then hired as an associate professor atStrasbourg University. He was at Strasbourg from 1974 to 1993, and he became a French citizen,[3] as did his wife.[1] He later became full professor, and supervised many students.[2]
Jaschek encouraged the development of automated methods forstellar classification classifying stars.[2] He also encouraged the development of astronomical data bases. He was "a force behind the development of the C.D.S,"[3] theCenter de Données Stellaires (Center of Stellar Data). In 1968, Jaschek had described the problem of the increasing volume of astronomical data without adequate means of collecting and distributing it:
The main conclusion of this paper is that it is unavoidable that astronomers must change procedures for collecting data. The best procedure is probably the creation of one or several data centers which would store information continuously and distribute it at convenient intervals to the scientific community.[8]
After a year at Geneva, Jaschek became Director of theCenter de Données Stellaires(CDS) in Strasbourg.[2] The CDS, begun in 1972, was an innovative but challenging project to create a central repository for astronomical data, an idea "even questioned by many French astronomers". In 1974, its first director, Jean Jung, changed careers. Carlos Jaschek officially began as Director in 1975, and Mercedes Jaschek strengthened the Center's limited scientific staff.[4] In 1977, Jaschek summarized the strengths and weakness of the world's astronomical data bases and noted that, with the exception of peculiar stars, considerable advances were being made. Jaschek noted:
We could all be very satisfied with this state of affairs, were it not for the disturbing fact that few of our colleagues use the information stocked at these centers. Astronomy in a certain sense is still a science with a nineteenth-century mentality so that novelties are only slowly accepted.[13]
Jaschek directed the Center of Stellar Data (CDS) from 1975 to 1990,[3] As Director, he was "instrumental in organizing world-wide access to astronomical data with special sensitivity tothird-world countries.[2] As the second director of CDS, Jaschek's 15-year term was said to have brought "spectacular progress for CDS" by increasing its international reputation as it was established as the leading astronomical data base. When it expanded its focus from stars to include other non-solar system astronomical objects, it changed its name fromCenter de Données Stellaires to theCentre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg (The Center of astronomical Data of Strasbourg).[4]
As Director, Jaschek was concerned with improvingastronomical naming conventions. In 1979 at anIAU meeting inCanada, over 100 astronomers from 15 Commissions met regarding the designation of objects, and beforeWilliam P. Bidelman gave the report on their suggested reforms, Carlos Jaschek began to introduce the need for them by saying:
I think there is no need to emphasize the reason for a meeting on designations. I hope you are all convinced that the present way of baptizing new objects, or renaming old friends, is just a patchwork of responses to different needs at different times. I hope also that you are convinced that we should do something now, rather than leave the task to the future. And, finally, I hope you are optimistic that something can be done.[14]
In 1986, he listed the 10 different factors for which a star may be named, noting that the variety was for historical reasons and "It is certainly not very rational to have 10 different practices for the same operation", before suggesting some guidelines.[6]
Jaschek was also interested in the Set of Identifications, Measurements and Bibliography for Astronomical Data (SIMBAD).[3] SIMBAD became operational in 1990.[15] In addition to working to make the CDS the world's largest astronomical database, Jaschek helped with the creation of astronomical data centers inChina,Japan,India, Argentina and theU.S.S.R.[10]

Jaschek worked in spectroscopy, photometry, and classification of stars and in statistical astronomy.[3] Carlos and Mercedes Jaschek worked on stars, making spectral classification catalogs and atlases of spectral atlases invisible,ultraviolet (UV) andinfrared (IR)wavelengths.[5] They worked on the first classification schemes for the ultraviolet spectrum[1] They collaborated with Yvette Andrillat on stars in thenear-infrared, and Carlos Jaschek had a long-term collaboration with theMarcel Golay group inSwitzerland to make comparisons between photometry and spectroscopy.[2]
The Jascheks collaborated onBe, Ae,shell,Ap, and otherpeculiar stars. They produced a catalogue and bibliography of 2,000 Be stars for the period from 1950 to 1970 based on Mercedes Jaschek's survey of theSouthern Celestial Hemisphere.[5]
They were the first to introduce thegallium stars subgroup[1] and to discover the ApSi4200 stars.[5] They were the first to find the rare CNO stars which areO- orB- B-type stars where some of the elementsC,N andO showspectral lines that are weaker or stronger than would be expected.[16] They also identified the presence ofrare-earth elements in stars ofMn andSrCrEu groups.[1]
Carlos Jaschek helped create theCatalog of Bright Stars[3] (fourth edition). Together the Jascheks wroteThe Classification of Stars,[3] which had 20 editions published,[17]The Behavior of Chemical Elements in Stars (1995), andSpectroscopic Atlas for the Southern Sky Stars[3] and other books. Their reference works were incorporated into the Strasbourg Centre of Stellar Data (CDS).[5]
Jaschek also wroteData in Astronomy in which he noted he became involved with data at La Plata in the early 1960s, when he was compiling a catalogue with a student for their own use and the student suggested publishing it.[18] He authored or co-authored ~250 refereed publications and over 15 books[3] and was noted for "precise observation and careful classification of peculiar stars" using the MK classification system.[2][notes 2]
Jaschek was Invited Speaker at ~15 international meetings. He helped organize 14 scientific meetings, and frequently edited or co-edited the proceedings.[3] In 1992, Jaschek founded theSociété Européenne pour l' Astronomie dans la culture (European Society for Astronomy in Culture), acultural astronomy organization which holds yearly conferences and is open to all nations.[9][notes 3]

In 1993, the Jascheks retired from Strasbourg Observatory.[5] Due to poor health, they moved toSalamanca (Spain) to live with their daughter's family,[3] and continued their scientific activities from their new location.[5] The couple has been described as "inseparable in their life and in their work".[3] Mercedes Jaschek died on November 21, 1995,[1] and he was deeply impacted by the loss.[2]
Jaschek continued making public presentations, and in 1998 he published a book on ethno-astronomy.[2] He was remembered as someone who loved his family, astronomy and its impact onculture, teaching andhistory books, and was regarded as kind, optimistic, upright, and helpful.[3] Carlos Jaschek died April 12, 1999, in Salamanca, Spain.[2][3]
Hoffleit, D.; Jaschek, C. (1982).The Bright Star Catalogue. Fourth revised edition. (Containing data compiled through 1979) Yale University Observatory, New Haven, CT, USA.
Cowley, Anne, Cowley, Charles, Jaschek, Mercedes & Jaschek, Carlos. "A study of the bright A stars. I. A catalogue of spectral classifications".Astronomical Journal, 74(3):375 – 406. April, 1969.
Jaschek, Carlos; Jaschek, Mercedes. (1987).The Classification of stars. Cambridge University Press. 1987.ISBN 978-0521267731.
Jaschek, M.; Jaschek, C.; Hubert-Delplace, A.-M.; Hubert, H. "A classification of Be stars".Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series, 42:103–114. October, 1980.
Jaschek, Carlos; Conde, Horacio; de Sierra, Amelia C. "Catalogue of stellar spectra classified in theMorgan-Keenan system".Serie Astronomica, La Plata: Observatorio Astronomico de la Universidad de la Plata. 1964.