Biography:Bambang Hidayat

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Short description: Indonesian scientist
Bambang Hidayat
Born18 September 1934
Kudus Regency, Central Java Indonesia
NationalityIndonesia
CitizenshipIndonesian
Alma materCase Western Reserve University
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy
InstitutionsBosscha Observatory
Bandung Institute of Technology
International Astronomical Union

Bambang Hidayat is an Indonesian scientist known for promoting astronomy nationally and internationally.[1] His work has focused on the study of binary stars and galactic structure.[2] The minor star Hidayat (3468 T-3), discovered in 1977, was named after him by Cornelis Johannes van Houten and Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld.[1] He has over forty papers published to his name and has written several astronomy textbooks.[3]

He graduated from Case Western Reserve University in 1965.[4] Soon thereafter, he served as the director of the Bosscha Observatory from 1968 until 1999.[1] He also served as the Chairman of the Department of Astronomy at the Bandung Institute of Technology as well as Vice President of the International Astronomical Union from 1994 to 2000,[1][2] and has been a fellow of the Islamic World Academy of Sciences (IAS) since 1992[5] He is also a member of the American Astronomical Society, Royal Astronomical Society, and Indonesian Academy of Sciences, as well as the founder of the Indonesian Astronomical Society and co-founder of the Indonesian Physics Society.[3]

Hidayat helped to establish the first International School for Young Astronomers in Indonesia. When first visited by Donat Wentzel, himself a pioneer in establishing ISYAs, Hidayat was alone in his observatory; later, Wentzel found that Hidayat had trained a group of astronomy students to work around him as well as spurred others to work in astronomy and Indonesia's space program elsewhere.[6]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 12176 Hidayat (3468 T-3). JPL Small-Body Database, Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Accessed 27 June 2018.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Introduction of Astronomy Across Cultures: The History of Non-Western Astronomy, p. xv. Ed. Helaine Selin. Springer Science+Business Media, 2000. ISBN:9789401141796
  3. 3.0 3.1 Prof. Bambang Hidayat, Islamic World Academy of Sciences, 2010. Accessed 27 June 2018.
  4. David Stanley Evans, Under Capricorn, A History of Southern Hemisphere Astronomy, p. 278. Milton Park: Taylor & Francis, 1988. ISBN:9780852743843
  5. "IAS » Fellows". http://www.iasworld.org/fellows/. 
  6. Donat Wentzel, International Schools for Young Astronomers, Astronomically Developing Countries, and Lonely Astronomers. Taken from New Trends in Astronomy Teaching, p. 29. Eds. Lucienne Gouguenheim, Derek McNally, and John Peret. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press , 1998. ISBN:9780521623735