04003nam 2200541Ia 450 991081616500332120200520144314.00-306-48080-8(CKB)1000000000024351(DE-He213)978-0-306-48080-5(Au-PeEL)EBL197701(OCoLC)70734591(PPN)237914328(MiAaPQ)EBC3035955(EXLCZ)99100000000002435120030212d2003 uy 0engurnn#008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierInformation handling in astronomy historical vistas /edited by Andre Heck1st ed.Dordrecht Kluwer Academic Publishersc20031 online resource (XII, 298 p.)Astrophysics and space science library ;v. 28590-481-6245-9 1-4020-1178-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Half a Century of Intense Maturation -- Evolution of Time Measurement in Astronomy -- Evolution of Data Processing in Optical Astronomy — A Personal Account -- IHAP: Image Handling and Processing System -- FITS: A Remarkable Achievement in Information Exchange -- The Munich Image Data Analysis System -- AIPS, the VLA, and the VLBA -- Changes in Astronomical Publications During the 20th Century -- The Evolution and Role of the Astronomical Library and Librarian -- The Development of the Astronomy Digital Library -- From Early Directories to Current Yellow-Page Services -- Pre-College Astronomy Education in the United States in the Twentieth Century -- The Birth and Evolution of the Planetarium -- The Changing Role of the IAU in Providing and Organizing Information -- Was the Carte du Ciel an Obstruction to the Development of Astrophysics in Europe? -- Amateur Data and Astronomical Discoveries in the 20th Century.This book is dedicated to the memory of Gisèle Mersch whose life ended prematurely in June 2002. Back in the 1970's, when few people were using them, Gisèle introduced me to the arcane secrets of then advanced multivariate statistical methodologies. I was already involved in more classical statistical studies undertaken at Paris Observatory with Jean Jung: developing and applying maxim- likelihood algorithms to stellar photometric and kinematic data in order to derive absolute luminosities, distances and velocities in the solar neighborhood. But what could be envisaged with those methodologies was something of another dimension: for the first time, I could really see how to extract information from massive amounts of data without calling for elaborated physical or mechanical theories. Several pioneering applications were developed under Gisèle’s guidance and with her collaboration to study the delicate interface between spectroscopic and photometric data. Thus errors in spectral classifications were investigated as well as predictions of spectral classifications from pho- metric indices (see Heck 1976, Heck et al. 1977, Heck & Mersch 1980 and Mersch & Heck 1980), with very interesting results for the time. Gisèle also took part in studies of period determination algorithms (see Mersch & Heck 1981, Manfroid et al. 1983 and Heck et al. 1985).Astrophysics and space science library ;v. 285.AstronomyData processingCommunication in astronomyInformation storage and retrieval systemsAstronomyAstronomyData processing.Communication in astronomy.Information storage and retrieval systemsAstronomy.520/.1/4Heck A(Andre)346682SpringerLink (Online service)MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910816165003321Information handling in astronomy4194585UNINA