Astronomers as Diplomats
2 contributors - Hardback
£119.99
Thierry Montmerle has been General Secretary of the IAU from 2012 to 2015. In the framework of the centenary celebrations of the creation of the IAU and four other International Unions in 1919, he and co-Editor Danielle Fauque have organized an international conference in Paris, where the IAU Secretariat in currently located, honoring in particular the first President of the IAU, Benjamin Baillaud, who was Director of the Paris Observatory at the time. While this book is based on the conference, it has been vastly expanded to include more contributions. He has written two papers on the history of the IAU in the "IAU Centenary Symposium" held during the IAU General Assembly in Vienna (2018). During his long career in astrophysics (PhD Paris, 1975), he has edited many proceedings of international conferences (including the IAU General Assembly in Honolulu, 2015, edited by Cambridge University Press), and also contributed to books edited by Springer (Encyclopedia of Astrobiology, 2015+; Young Sun, Early Earth, and the Origin of Life, 2012).
Danielle Fauque graduated in physics, chemistry, and history of science. She is a member of the International Academy of History of Science. She is specialized in history of astronomical instruments (thesis on the history of the heliometer), astronomical navigation, optics and chemistry. She and co-editor Thierry Montmerle have organized a conference on history of IAU in Paris in October 2019. She has been a member of various committees (organization and scientific programme) of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) Congress in Paris in July 2019. She co-edited a special issue of Chemistry International, the IUPAC magazine on the history of IUPAC. She published papers on the history of the scientific unions, the last one with R. Fox (Oxford), in Acta Historica Leopoldina (2021), on the International Research Council (1919-1931). She has been also a member of the Editorial Council of the RHS for several years. Since 1983, she has published several papers on history of science in collective books (physics, optics, astronomy, science teaching history, scientific travels, chemistry) and continues to publish and organize national and international meetings on the history of science.