Joseph Ashbrook
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Most Influential Person Across History
American astronomer
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Physics
Joseph Ashbrook's Degrees
- PhD Astronomy University of California, Berkeley
Why Is Joseph Ashbrook Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Joseph Ashbrook was an American astronomer. Life Ashbrook was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He received a doctorate from Harvard University in 1947 and taught at Yale University from 1946 to 1950, and at Harvard from 1950 to 1953. He started to work at Sky and Telescope in 1953, where he wrote the column "Astronomical Scrapbook" from 1954 to 1980, and remained on its staff until his death; he also edited the magazine from 1964 on.
Joseph Ashbrook's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Book-Review - the Astronomical Scrapbook - Skywatchers Pioneers and Seekers in Astronomy (1985) (18)
- Observed times of minimum of eclipsing variables. (1952) (9)
- A new determination of the rotation period of the planet Mars (1953) (8)
- THE LUNAR STRAIGHT WALL (1960) (7)
- Observed times of minimum of eclipsing variables (continued from AJ 1198). (1952) (6)
- Ross, Frank E. (1960) (4)
- The eclipsing variable SVS 995 And. (1951) (4)
- Apsidal motion in the eclipsing binary AG Per. (1949) (4)
- Edmond Halley at St. Helena. (1970) (3)
- The periods of four cluster-type variables: CY Aquari, HU Cassiopeiae, SW Herculis and DY Herculis. (1954) (3)
- A statistical analysis of the light-curve of the variable star MU Cep. (1954) (3)
- Volcanic Activity on the Moon (1959) (3)
- A Well-Observed Transit of Mercury (1974) (2)
- New names on the Moon (1974) (2)
- The Cepheid BY Cassiopeiae (1954) (2)
- Johann Bayer and his star nomenclature. (1973) (2)
- Observations of two cluster-type variables (1949) (2)
- VARIATIONS IN THE BRIGHTNESS OF URANUS (1948) (2)
- ELEMENTS OF THE ECLIPSING VARIABLE 66. 1939 CYGNI (1941) (2)
- Measuring the Earth's Shadow (1964) (2)
- The Cepheid variable GH Cygni (1942) (2)
- Astrophysics and Twentieth‐Century Astronomy to 1950 Volume 4, Part A, of the General History of Astronomy and The History of Astronomy from Herschel to Hertzsprung and The Astronomical Scrapbook: Skywatchers, Pioneers, and Seekers in Astronomy (1986) (1)
- Airborne Dual Antenna System for Aerial Navigation (1959) (1)
- The Astronomical Unit (1962) (1)
- The visual Orion nebula. (1975) (1)
- The minor planet 619 Triberga and the mass of the moon (1951) (1)
- John Herschel's expedition to South Africa. (1969) (1)
- A note on the period of CY Aquarii (1946) (1)
- On the determination of the North galactic Pole from Cepheid variables. (1952) (1)
- Book Review: Astronomy at the Royal Institution: The Royal Institution Library of Science: Astronomy (1972) (1)
- Photographic observations of comet 1948 i (Ashbrook-jackson) (1949) (1)
- More about the visibility of the lunar crescent. (1972) (1)
- Brightest Nova in 33 years. (1975) (0)
- Capella as a close visual binary. (1976) (0)
- Notes on four novae (1953) (0)
- The Cepheid Variable BK Aurigae (1943) (0)
- SS CYG and the rapid burster. (1977) (0)
- Partial eclipse of the sun, November 23, 1946 (1948) (0)
- Book-Review - the Astronomical Scrapbook (1985) (0)
- John Pond: Sixth Astronomer Royal. (1969) (0)
- Two new variable stars (1949) (0)
- November's Lunar Eclipse: an Analysis (1976) (0)
- Names on the back of the Moon (1970) (0)
- W. W. Campbell and a puzzling object. (1971) (0)
- Air Force Atlas of the Moon (1965) (0)
- An Asteroid and a Mobius Strip (1980) (0)
- Notices of Books (1979) (0)
- The Latest Flight of Stratoscope (1970) (0)
- Brightness of the Eclipsed Moon, August 25, 1942 (1941) (0)
- An Analysis of Schmidt's Observations of LINNÉ (1963) (0)
- The visual light curve of gamma Cassiopeiae during 1936-9 (1940) (0)
- An American Astrophysicist (1970) (0)
- More about nova Cygni. (1975) (0)
- Current Observing Programs for Mars (1954) (0)
- Eclipses of Jupiter's satellites observed in 1947-48 (1948) (0)
- Elements of a new cluster-type variable, and observations of BH Ser. (1952) (0)
- Book-Review - Dictionary of Astronomy Space and Atmospheric Phenomena (1980) (0)
- The Dusky Markings of Venus (1956) (0)
- The dwarf Nova V442 Cen. (1978) (0)
- Observations of variables. (1951) (0)
- A Great American Astronomer (1971) (0)
- Comment on a Lunar Halo (1967) (0)
- Pennsylvania Symposium -- "New Horizons in Astronomy" (1956) (0)
- The period of BC Eridani (1946) (0)
- Book-Review - the Facts-On Dictionary of Astronomy (1980) (0)
- GAM CAS as an X-ray source. (1976) (0)
- Definitive orbit of Sigma 2173 = ADS 10598. (1952) (0)
- East and West on the Moon (1966) (0)
- How far away are the stars (1974) (0)
- America's last king and his observatory. (1976) (0)
- The nebular variable R Monocerotis (1949) (0)
- Ephemeris Corrections for Seven Cepheid Variables (1943) (0)
- Observations of eclipses of Jupiter's satellites (1953) (0)
- Navigation near the north pole. (1973) (0)
- Observations of V465 Cygni = Nova Cygni 1948. (1950) (0)
- Some glimpses of early American astronomy. (1971) (0)
- Otto Struve 21 and some other double stars. (1976) (0)
- Recent Light Variations of MU Cephei (1942) (0)
- Moon Eclipse December 30th (1963) (0)
- Yale's Pathfinder of Moons, Planets, and Stars (1966) (0)
- Oriental Records of Novae and Supernovae (1967) (0)
- The Apollo 11 Experiments (1969) (0)
- Book Review: Comets in Old Cape Records, by Donald McIntyre (1949) (0)
- An elusive asteroid: 719 Albert. (1978) (0)
- Two cepheids of very long period (1978) (0)
- The semiregular variable VZ Camelopardalis (1948) (0)
- Book Review: Astronomical Records in the Russian Chronicles from 1000 to 1600 A.D., by A. N. Vyssotsky (1950) (0)
- ALPO Map of Mars (1956) (0)
- About an astronomer-explorer. (1974) (0)
- The disappearing nebula : a star turns on ? (1977) (0)
- BF SER : a pulsating variable with an unusual period. (1950) (0)
- The Moon . H. Percy Wilkins and Patrick Moore. Macmillan, New York, 1955. 388 pp. Illus. $12. (1956) (0)
- Tests of suspected variable stars. (1951) (0)
- The February Eclipse of the Moon I (1971) (0)
- Observations of Nova Scuti 1949. (1950) (0)
- Some bunchings of planets. (1973) (0)
- Observed eclipses of Jupiter's satellites. (1979) (0)
- Erratum [S Vulpeculae] (1943) (0)
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