Discipline | Astronomy, astrophysics |
---|---|
Language | English |
Edited by | K. G. Strassmeier |
Publication details | |
History | 1821–present |
Publisher | |
Frequency | 10/year |
0.676 (2020) | |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | Astron. Nachr. |
Indexing | |
CODEN | ASNAAN |
ISSN | 0004-6337 (print) 1521-3994 (web) |
LCCN | 13011169 |
OCLC no. | 76516376 |
Links | |
Astronomische Nachrichten (Astronomical Notes), one of the first international journals in the field of astronomy, [1] was established in 1821 by the German astronomer Heinrich Christian Schumacher. It claims to be the oldest astronomical journal in the world that is still being published. [2] The publication today specializes in articles on solar physics, extragalactic astronomy, cosmology, geophysics, and instrumentation for these fields. All articles are subject to peer review.
The journal was founded in 1821 by Heinrich Christian Schumacher, [3] under the patronage of Christian VIII of Denmark, and quickly became the world's leading professional publication for the field of astronomy. [4] Schumacher edited the journal at the Altona Observatory, then under the administration of Denmark, later part of Prussia, and today part of the German city of Hamburg.
Schumacher edited the first 31 issues of the journal, from its founding in 1821 until his death in 1850. [5] These early issues ran to hundreds of pages, and consisted mostly of letters sent by astronomers to Schumacher, reporting their observations. [1] The journal proved to be a great success, and over the years Schumacher received thousands of letters from hundreds of contributors. [6] The letters were published in the language in which they were submitted, mostly German, but also English, Italian and other languages. [7]
The journal's renown was acknowledged by the British astronomer John Herschel (then secretary to the Royal Astronomical Society) in a letter to the Danish King in 1840, writing that Astronomische Nachrichten was:
...one of the most remarkable and influential astronomical works, which have ever appeared and which, while operating more beneficially on the progress of its Science than any similar work of modern times [has] made your Majesty's city of Altona ... the astronomical centre of the civilised world.
Other astronomical journals were also founded around this time, such as the British Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society , which was founded in 1827. It was the importance of Astronomische Nachrichten, however, that led the American astronomer Benjamin A. Gould in 1850 to found The Astronomical Journal in the United States. [8]
Following Schumacher's death, the interim director of the observatory and editor of the journal was Adolph Cornelius Petersen , who had worked at the observatory with Schumacher for 24 years from around 1825. Petersen, who died in 1854, was later aided as editor by the Danish astronomer Thomas Clausen, who had also previously worked at the observatory.
The editor from 1854 was the German astronomer Christian August Friedrich Peters, [3] who had taken over as director of the observatory at Altona. In 1872, the observatory moved from Altona to Kiel, from where Peters continued to publish the journal until his death in 1880, aided in his final years by his son Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Peters. The journal would continue to be published in Kiel until 1938.
Following Peters's death, Adalbert Krueger served as the new director of the observatory and editor of the journal from 1881 until he died in 1896. [3] [9] At this time the journal was the organ of the Astronomische Gesellschaft. [3] The editor from 1896 until his death in 1907 was the German astronomer Heinrich Kreutz, who had previously assisted Krueger. Kreutz edited volumes 140 to 175. [10] Other staff members during the period from 1880 to 1907 included the astronomers Richard Schorr and Elis Strömgren.
The editor from 1907 to 1938 was the German astronomer Hermann Kobold.
After Kobold retired in 1938, the journal's editorial office moved from Kiel to Berlin, and during the Second World War the journal was published by the Astronomical Calculation Institute (Heidelberg University) (Astronomisches Recheninstitut) in Berlin-Dahlem. In 1945, the institute was relocated to Heidelberg, but the journal remained in the Berlin region. [11]
After the war, Astronomische Nachrichten was edited by Hans Kienle, director of the Astrophysical Observatory of Potsdam. The observatory was in Potsdam, on the outskirts of Berlin, and from 1948 the journal was published by the publishing company Akademie-Verlag, under the auspices of the German Academy of Sciences Berlin. One of Kienle's students, Johann Wempe (1906–1980) succeeded him as editor in 1951 and held the post for 22 years. [12]
From 1949, and officially from the 1950s until the reunification of Germany in 1990, the journal was published in the German Democratic Republic, behind the Iron Curtain. From 1974 onwards, the journal issues list a chief editor and an editorial board, and the journal was bilingual, with the same material published in German and English. Akademie-Verlag was taken over by VCH in 1990. [13]
From 1996 to the present day (from volume 317), the journal has been published by Wiley-VCH. This company was formed in 1996 when the German publishing company Verlag Chemie (founded 1921) joined John Wiley and Sons. The journal's editorial offices remain in Potsdam, at the Astrophysical Institute Potsdam, and the current editor (2007) is K. G. Strassmeier. [14]
The back catalogue of the journal includes 43,899 articles in 99,565 pages in 328 volumes, published over a period of over 180 years. [15]
Although the journal was founded in 1821, the first volume was dated 1823. Volume 1 (1823) consisted of 33 issues and a total of 516 pages. The next year, volume 2 (1824), saw 34 issues and 497 pages. Apart from the years 1830–1832, when two volumes were published in 1831 and none in 1830 or 1832, single volumes of around 20–30 issues were published each year until 1846. Then it was mostly two volumes a year until 1884. There were a record number of five volumes published in 1884. Most years from 1884 to 1914 had three or more volumes. The years 1915–1919 (coinciding with World War I) saw a dip in publication, with 1916 and 1919 only featuring one volume. From 1920 to 1940, most years saw three volumes published. Only one volume per year was published from 1941 to 1943, and the journal was not published at all from 1944 to 1946 (Berlin suffered heavy damage in the closing years of World War II). From 1947 to the present, the journal has published a volume per year in most years, but did not publish at all in some years in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. [16] From 1974 to 1996, the journal was published as 6 issues a year, with each volume being 300–400 pages. [17]
Under the new publishers, Wiley, this pattern continued until 2003, at which point the number of issues per year increased to 9 due to the publication of supplementary issues. Since 2004 there have been 10 issues a year. In 2006, volume 327, there were 10 issues and 1100 pages. [18]
Volume | Year | Editor |
---|---|---|
1–31 | 1821–1851 | Heinrich Christian Schumacher |
32 | 1851 | Adolph Cornelius Petersen |
33–37 | 1852–1854 | Adolph Cornelius Petersen and Peter Andreas Hansen |
38 | 1854 | Peter Andreas Hansen |
39 | 1855 | n/a |
40–96 | 1855–1880 | Christian August Friedrich Peters |
97 | 1880 | Christian August Friedrich Peters, Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Peters |
98–99 | 1881 | Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Peters |
100–139 | 1881–1896 | Adalbert Krueger |
140 | 1896 | Adalbert Krueger, Heinrich Kreutz |
141–174 | 1896–1907 | Heinrich Kreutz |
175 | 1907 | Heinrich Kreutz, Hermann Kobold |
176–266 | 1908–1938 | Hermann Kobold |
267 | 1938 | Hermann Kobold, Astronomical Calculation Institute (Heidelberg University) (Astronomisches Recheninstitut) |
268–274 | 1939–1943 | Astronomisches Recheninstitut (Name 1939–1944: Kopernikus-Institut) |
275–279 | 1947–1951 | Hans Kienle |
280–294 | 1951–1972 | Johann Wempe |
[Astronomische Nachrichten] is the oldest astronomical journal of the world that is still being published
Gould had decided to use his own funds to help start a new journal, to be modeled explicitly on the prestigious German Astronomische Nachrichten, then in its 28th volume.
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel was a German astronomer, mathematician, physicist, and geodesist. He was the first astronomer who determined reliable values for the distance from the sun to another star by the method of parallax. Certain important mathematical functions were named Bessel functions after Bessel's death, though they had originally been discovered by Daniel Bernoulli before being generalised by Bessel.
Peter Andreas Hansen was a Danish-born German astronomer.
Prof Heinrich Christian Schumacher FRS(For) FRSE was a German-Danish astronomer and mathematician.
Astronomical symbols are abstract pictorial symbols used to represent astronomical objects, theoretical constructs and observational events in European astronomy. The earliest forms of these symbols appear in Greek papyrus texts of late antiquity. The Byzantine codices in which many Greek papyrus texts were preserved continued and extended the inventory of astronomical symbols. New symbols have been invented to represent many planets and minor planets discovered in the 18th to the 21st centuries.
Karl Ludwig Harding was a German astronomer, who discovered Juno, the third asteroid of the main-belt in 1804.
Christian August Friedrich Peters was a German astronomer. He was the father of astronomer Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Peters. He was born in Hamburg and died in Kiel.
The Berlin Observatory is a German astronomical institution with a series of observatories and related organizations in and around the city of Berlin in Germany, starting from the 18th century. It has its origins in 1700 when Gottfried Leibniz initiated the "Brandenburg Society of Science″ which would later (1744) become the Prussian Academy of Sciences. The Society had no observatory but nevertheless an astronomer, Gottfried Kirch, who observed from a private observatory in Berlin. A first small observatory was furnished in 1711, financing itself by calendrical computations.
Friedrich Wilhelm Hans Ludendorff was a German astronomer and astrophysicist. He was the younger brother of General Erich Ludendorff.
Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) is a German research institute. It is the successor of the Berlin Observatory founded in 1700 and of the Astrophysical Observatory Potsdam (AOP) founded in 1874. The latter was the world's first observatory to emphasize explicitly the research area of astrophysics. The AIP was founded in 1992, in a re-structuring following the German reunification.
Karl Nikolaus Adalbert Krueger was a German astronomer. Born in Marienburg, Prussia, he was editor of Astronomische Nachrichten from 1881 until his death.
The Mannheim Observatory was a tower observatory built between 1772 and 1774 in Mannheim, Germany, which remained in operation until 1880. The observatory was transferred to Karlsruhe and finally in 1898, was established on the Königstuhl near Heidelberg where today's successor institution the State Observatory Heidelberg-Königstuhl is located.
Karl Khristoforovich Friedrich Knorre; Russian: Карл Христофорович Кнорре was a Russian astronomer of Baltic German ethnic origin who is best known for founding the Nikolayev Astronomical Observatory in 1827. Knorre's father, Ernst Friedrich Knorre, and his son, Viktor Knorre, were also prominent astronomers. Recently NASA named an asteroid in honor of the three generations of Knorre astronomers.
Paul Friedrich Ferdinand Kempf was a German astronomer.
Arthur Beer was a German astronomer who worked at Cambridge University
Ernst Heinrich Bruns was a German mathematician and astronomer, who also contributed to the development of the field of theoretical geodesy.
Diedrich Wattenberg was a German astronomer. He was a prolific populariser, writer and speaker on his subject, becoming in the 1950s a familiar presence on radio and, later, television programmes.
Adolph Christian Wilhelm Schur, RAS Associate was a German astronomer and professor of astronomy at the University of Göttingen. He held important positions at multiple observatories throughout his career, namely deputy director of the Strasbourg Observatory and director of the Göttingen Observatory. His main work was in astrometry, although he focused on publishing astronomical catalogues in his later life.
The Altona Observatory was an astronomical observatory situated in the Palmaille, in Altona, Hamburg. The observatory was founded by Heinrich Christian Schumacher in 1823 and continued to operate until 1871, 21 years after his death. It closed due to funding being cut off following the cession of the 'Elbe Duchies' of Schleswig, Holstein, and Saxe-Lauenburg by Denmark to Austria and Prussia following the Second Schleswig War.
Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Peters was a German astronomer. His key work was on studies of chronometers and the effect of temperature and humidity on their accuracy.
Holger Christian ReedtzS.K. was a Danish aristocrat, landowner, civil servant, diplomat and politician.