William Pendry Bidelman
Born(1918-09-25)September 25, 1918
DiedMay 3, 2011(2011-05-03) (aged 92)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materHarvard College, University of Chicago
Known forco-discovery of the barium stars with Philip Keenan, expert on the peculiar stars.
SpouseVerna Pearl Shirk (1918–2009; her death)
Scientific career
Fieldsastronomer, astrophysicist
InstitutionsYerkes Observatory,
Lick Observatory,
Michigan Observatory
McDonald Observatory,
Warner and Swasey Observatory
Doctoral advisorWilliam Wilson Morgan[1]
Doctoral studentsCraig Chester,[2] Stephen Naftilan,[2] Cynthia Irvine,[3] William G. Smethells[3] Thomas Ake,[4] Sang-Gak Lee[5]

William Pendry Bidelman (BAI-dəl-maən; September 25, 1918 - May 3, 2011)[6] whose friends called him "Billy", was an American astronomer.[7] Born in Los Angeles, and raised in North Dakota, he was noted for classifying the spectra of stars,[8] and considered a pioneer in recognizing and classifying sub-groups of the peculiar stars.[9]

Bidelman’s undergraduate degree was from Harvard College,[7] and his Ph.D. in astronomy was from the University of Chicago under advisor William Wilson Morgan.[10] He was a physicist in the Army during World War II.[7] A professional astronomer for over 50 years,[11] Bidelman taught for ~41 years[12] at The University of Chicago,[13] The University of California,[14]

He co-discovered the class of barium stars with Philip Keenan,[7] the phosphorus and the mercury stars,[15] and was the first to describe the hydrogen-deficient carbon stars.[16]

Born in Los Angeles, California, Bidelman was raised in North Dakota, where he met his future wife of 69 years. He was a father of four and a grandfather.[7] As an Emeritus Professor William P. Bidelman continued working in astronomy after he retired from teaching,[17] and was 92 when he died in Murfreesboro, Tennessee.[7]

Education edit

 
A prism disperses visible light disperse when passing through a prism, displaying a spectrum.

As an undergraduate at Harvard College, Bidelman received an Honorary Harvard College Scholarship for academic excellence in 1939.[18] He graduated in 1940.[7] Bidelman entered the graduate program at the University of Chicago affiliated with Yerkes Observatory. His doctoral advisor was William W.Morgan,[19][20] who discovered the first definite evidence that our Milky Way Galaxy is a spiral galaxy,[21] and, with Philip Keenan, the Morgan-Keener (MK) system of stellar classification.[22][23] As a graduate student, Bidelman assisted Morgan and Keenan by taking some of the spectrograms for their book, An Atlas of Stellar Spectra.[24][25]

For his 1943 dissertation,[26][27] Bidelman reported the Double Cluster in the I Persei association is physically associated with neighborhood supergiant stars,[28] and is part of an association of O- and B-type stars,[29] and designated 47 stars as its members.[30] Bidelman received his Ph.D. in 1943.[31] The Yerkes astronomy graduate program directed by Otto Struve began issuing degrees in 1940, and he was among their first ten graduates.[32]

Career edit

 
Though the colors of a star's spectrum appear similar to a rainbow, a rainbow emits no light. Information about elements present at a star's surface, and many other features are found within the spectrum of a star.

Bidelman served in the U.S. Army’s Ballistic Research Laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Ground for over 2 years during World War II,.[13] He attended the 1942 American Astronomical Society’s annual meeting despite a small assembly due to gasoline rationing during World War II.[33]

University of Chicago, Yerkes Observatory edit

 
Yerkes, located in the village of Williams Bay, Wisconsin[34] is where faculty and students lived, and they rarely visited the Chicago campus.[35]

In 1945, when Bidelman left Aberdeen he was hired at Yerkes as an Instructor.[13] Under Otto Struve Yerkes became the leading astrophysics center, when he directed it.[36] In addition to Bidelman, by 1946 the Yerkes astronomy staff included Paul Ledoux, Arne Slettebak, Armin Deutsch, Marshall Wrubel, Arthur D. Code,Carlos Cesco, Víctor M. Blanco, W. W. Morgan, Otto Struve Jesse L. Greenstein, Gerard P. Kuiper, George Van Biesbroeck, Louis G. Henyey Anne B. Underhill, Guido Münch, Nancy G. Roman,[37] and the two future Nobel Prize winners, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar and Gerhard Herzberg.[38] Other astronomers at Yerkes when Bidelman was there were Kaj Strand, W. Albert Hiltner, Aden B. Meinel, and visiting professors Bengt Strömgren from Denmark, and Jan Oort, Hendrik C. van de Hulst and Adriaan Blaauw from the Netherlands.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). George Herbig, also there, remembered it as an "exciting, stimulating place to work" and a "powerhouse in astronomy" while under Struve’s direction.[39]

 
A spectrum from the star Capella. Vertical absorption lines are related to the elements and ions present in a star's atmosphere.
 
A spectrum from an R CrB star in black and white displays some of its complexity. As a spectroscopist, Bidelman needed to identify the origins of lines like these.

Bidelman spent long hours observing in remote west Texas at McDonald Observatory[40] because he, like other Yerkes faculty, was also an astronomer at the University of Texas (UT). At the suggestion of Struve, the two universities had cooperated to create McDonald Observatory when the UT system had no astronomy department but W. J. McDonald gave them money in 1926 for an observatory, while in Wisconsin, the Yerkes astronomers needed a larger telescope but lacked the funds to obtain one.[41]

Otto Struve, who directed both Yerkes and McDonald, has been described as dedicated yet demanding.[42] His managerial style included daily inspections of the faculty to see if they were working.[43] Despite reports of tensions there was also "close knit camaraderie" and "boisterous parties" evidenced by Yerkes "spontaneous party songs" including "The Billy Bidelman Song". Sung to the tune of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic", it consisted of repeating three times the line: "Struve, Kuiper, Hiltner, Morgan, Chandrasekhar too," followed by: "And Billy Bidelman".[44][notes 1]

 
To accurately understand the stars, astronomers must compensate for the impact of dust between the stars that will make them appear dimmer and redder than they are. Dust causes the sky to redden at sunset and sunrise, when being seen at the horizon through more of our atmosphere.[45]

In 1946, W. W. Morgan and William P. Bidelman published a paper[46] on interstellar reddening using the MK system of spectral classifications and photoelectric photometry.[47] Morgan later said this paper with Bidelman on interstellar reddening was "the principal paper along the way" to the UBV system, which he devised with Harold Johnson. [48]

 
Star clusters are contain stars born at the same time out of the same material and are the same distance from us, and can be valuable in understanding how stars change over time.[49]

In 1947, Bidelman[50] became first to note the concentration of type M supergiant stars around χ Per, suggesting they were young Population I objects,.[51]

This group, along with the Double Cluster, was later named the Perseus OB1 Association.[49] Based on its radial velocity,[52] Bidelman also became first to see that S Persei is part of the Per OB1 association,[53] which was later confirmed.[54] Among the first stars that were studied at far-infrared wavelengths,[55] M-type supergiants may be used to find the spiral arms of our galaxy.[51] Bidelman found four red supergiant stars in 1947, bringing the total then known to 13.[49] How red supergiant stars evolved was considered an "astronomical puzzle",[56] so the Double Cluster was used to test ideas about the evolution of red supergiant stars during the 1960s.[49] The M-type supergiants of h and χ Per became the prototypes of this class of stars, and the major source of data for their properties.[57]

Unlike most the usual relatively young star clusters inclusing few supergiant stars, 18 were found in the Double Cluster of Perseus by 2007, which Robert F. Wing noted as the 60th anniversary of Bidelman’s "important paper", saying Bidelman’s 1947 two-dimensional classifications of the then-known supergiants in h and χ Per had "served as the benchmark" for later studies of the red supergiant stars.[58]

 
Vertical Lines of H-alpha and Balmer lines are shown using spectra from many dwarf stars. Weak Balmer lines show a star's atmosphere to be hydrogen-deficient.

Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the Universe, so stars displaying very little hydrogen in their atmospheres are chemically peculiar stars. There are many kinds of hydrogen-deficient stars. Upsilon Sagittarii is a hydrogen-deficient star.[59] It is a very luminous, variable, and unusual eclipsing binary with a spectrum quite difficult to classify.[60] In 1949, Bidelman[61] was possibly the first to suggest that Upsilon (υ) Sagittarii’s violet-shifted absorption lines, which apparently takes place during some conjunctions of this binary pair when star 2 advances in front of star 1, could be caused by gas streaming from the primary star.[62] Bidelman suggested when the displaced H-alpha(Hα) absorption line was present, it happened at regular intervals when the primary star was furthest away from Earth.[63]

Upsilon Sag was the only example of a star of its type until Bidelman discovered another star similar to it, HD 30353.[64] This star became known as "Bidelman's star".[65][66]

 
Stars make elements, and what a star makes depend on its mass at its beginning. When Bidelman and Keenan noticed a strong line of ionized barium at the position λ4554 in the spectra of stars theories said were too young and the wrong kind to produce any barium, it created a mystery for astronomers.
 
When Hertzsprung and Russell independently plotted stars on a chart of luminosity vs. temperature, they found there are patterns. The HR Diagram is a tool used by astronomers to know what stars are and how they will change.

Bidelman and Keenan[67] were the first to regard the barium star red giants as different from other red giants[68] and to describe them as a spectroscopic class.[69]Barium is a heavy metal element made by certain advanced stars with a helium-burning shell surrounding a spent carbon core[70] In addition to the λ4554 barium line, some other characteristics of the group were two enhanced strontium (SR II) lines, at λ4077 and another at λ4215 blended with the head of the CN band, and also an enhanced G band due to CH and possibly CN.[67] There are some supergiant stars with these BA II, strontium lines and CN band, but the G and K-type stars Bidelman and Keenan described did not appear to be supergiants.[71]

G, K, and M-type giants, the most complex area of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (HR) diagram, have spectra so complicated "many astronomers have shied away from studying them".[72]

 
A star follows a pattern as it ages that depends on its mass at the beginning. Here, a chart depicting temperature and luminosity shows how a star 5 times the mass of our Sun changes from a main sequence star into a white dwarf and a planetary nebula.

Eventually, Robert McClure[73] discovered that essentially all barium stars began with a companion star that made the s-process elements, and when the companion star aged into a white dwarf, a stellar wind moved what was made by one star to the other star,[40] a shifting of mass from an Asymptotic giant branch(AGB) star that turned into a white dwarf, to its companion star.[74]

Bidelman was the first to find[75] three unusual A- and F-type high-latitude bright stars, HR 6144, 89 Herculis, and HD 161796 in the high galactic plane, an unexpected place for supergiant stars to be found.[76][77]

Astronomers expect to find massive young stars that are five to twenty times the mass of the Sun, on the galactic plane, a place where stars form,[78] but it is rare to find stars like Her 89, with a spectrum that appears to be a young supergiant so far from the Galactic plane.[79] Regarding these stars with characteristics of Population I supergiants, yet found at high galactic latitude, another astronomer wrote, "If I were a theoretician, I would simply say, ‘They can’t be, therefore they aren’t’".[80]

Bidelman’s 1951 study also isolated the G- and K-type giant stars with weak G-bands as a class of peculiar giants.[81]

University of California, Lick Observatory (1953-1963) edit

 
Lick Observatory was the first permanently occupied observatory built on a mountain.[82] The night sky over Mount Hamilton displays star trails due to the Earth's rotation.

In October 1953, Bidelman was hired as an assistant astronomer at Lick Observatory.[14] This observatory of the University of California is located on Mount Hamilton (California).[83] The Bidelman family lived on Mount Hamilton and the children attended a one room school where it was an hour’s drive to the nearest grocery store.[40] According to Stanislaus Vasilevskis, due to the lack of a high school for children and other features, Bidelman moved from Mount Hamilton to San Jose, and commuted to work.[84][notes 2]

Otto Struve had left the Chicago for The University of California in 1950.[43] Bidelman lectured for Struve’s Graduate Seminar on Astrophysics at Berkeley in 1955.[85] He and George Herbig also gave ten lectures together on stellar spectroscopy at Berkeley during the 1954-55 academic year. Bidelman served on the program committee for the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Astronomical Society of the Pacific meeting in 1955.[86]

In 1953, Bidelman was the first to describe the hydrogen–deficient carbon star group, although Hans Ludendorff had found the appearance of weak hydrogen in R CrB in 1906.[16]

In 1951, Bidelman informed other astronomers of his intentions to publish a catalogue with data for all known emission-line stars and requested they contribute data to be incorporated into it.[87] He researched emission-line stars for his catalogue and bibliography at Yerkes Observatory (Wisconsin) and McDonald Observatory (Texas), and spent six weeks during the summer at the Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories (California), funded by the Department of Naval Research.[88] While at Yerkes, Morgan, Strömgren, and Chandrasekhar had encouraged Bidelman to prepare such a catalogue,[89] and his catalogue and bibliography of 1,640 middle and late-type emission-line stars was among the ten most-cited papers in astronomy in 1954.[90] Bidelman's catalog included many stars with Ca II H and K emission.[91] In 1996, Helmut Abt researched which papers published in 1954 were cited most frequently from 1955 to 1995, and Bidelman's Catalog and Bibliography ranked among the top four.[92][notes 3]

 
Stars vary from the relatively hot O and B-type stars to the relatively cooler and reddish M stars.

Bidelman served on the Astronomical Society of the Pacific's Nominating Committee and Publications Committees in 1955.[93] When Seth B. Nicholson, Chairman of the Publications Committee for thirteen years[94] retired, he nominated Bidelman as the next chairman.[95] Bidelman resigned from the Nominating Committee,[96] and became the Editor of the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.[97] the scientific journal of the ASP, which gives the gives the Bruce Gold Medal.[98]

In 1957, the Directors discussed but did not act on making the Editor a salaried position.[99] In 1958, the Publications Committee published over 100 papers, over 20 book reviews, and two symposia.[100] Re-elected to the Board of Directors, Bidelman was authorized to spend up to $1,000 for editorial assistance in 1959,[101][notes 4] and they published over 90 papers from ~38 institutions, 15 book reviews and a symposium. His report noted it was a time-consuming task, made more difficult because he had been out of the country for two months that year.[102] in 1960,[103] they published six issues including 100 papers from ten countries, other articles and book reviews, and fulfilled reprint orders.[104]

He was Third Vice President of ASP in 1961,[105] and they published six issues totaling 543 pages, including 100 articles from the United States and nine other countries, and other papers.[106] Bidelman's annual report said being "largely responsible for the welfare" of the journal for approximately five years had been a considerable burden and having found it impossible to find a sufficiently competent technical assistant on Mount Hamilton and not being able to fulfill his obligations to both the University and to ASP, he requested to resign effective July 1, 1961,[106] He was re-elected to the Board of Directors.[107] his resignation became effective in mid-August, and an assistant editor was added to the staff in September.[108] Bidelman summarized his experiences in a 1989 talk entitled "A funny thing happened on the way to the Stanford Press - reminiscences of Five Years with the PASP".[109]

In 1962, Bidelman helped Soviet astronomers edit a manuscript for English readers,[110] He continued on the ASP Publications Committee, no longer as chair, in 1962,[111] 1963,[112] 1964,[113] 1965,[114] 1966,[115][116] 1967,[117] 1968,[118] 1969,[119] and 1970.[120][121][notes 5] When Helmut Abt explored the number of reference errors in astronomy journal articles in 1992, he said the only astronomical editor he was aware of who checked every reference in his journal and found many errors "to which he called the author’s attention—was William P. Bidelman when he edited these Publications".[122][notes 6]

While he was editor, Bidelman was the general supervisor of the students at Lick Observatory.[123] According to Hyron Spinrad, Bidelman encouraged astronomy students at the Berkeley campus to make observations at Lick Observatory. Spinrad recalled: "I don’t know how he was regarded on Mt. Hamilton, but at Berkeley he was regarded as sort of a good will emissary from the mountain".[124]

In March 1962,[125] Bidelman used three peculiar stars, 3 Centauri, κ Cancri and 112 Herculis, to make the first certain identification of the rare element gallium II (Ga II) in stellar spectra, with lab work assistance by Charles H. Corliss at the National Bureau of Standards, which they reported in May 1962.[126]

T Tauri, the prototype of the T-Tauri stars, is a young star found in the constellation Taurus.[70] In November 1962, Bidelman found ~100 times more gallium I in the spectrum of T Tauri than is found in the spectrum of the sun.[127] Bidelman noted that it was at present "impossible to explain these abundance anomalies in terms of known nucleogenesis patterns".[127]

University of Michigan (1963 – 1969) edit

 
The Schmidt telescope is a camera that can photograph large areas. Bidelman helped move this Schmidt to South America, then later used it for an all-sky study of the southern hemisphere.

Bidelman became a Professor of Astronomy at the University of Michigan in Fall 1963.[128][129]

At the University of Michigan, Freeman D. Miller and Bidelman began to direct the complete reactivation of the Curtis Schmidt telescope, to search for stars with spectra that showed unusual chemical compositions.[128][130] After the University of Michigan agreed in 1966 to transfer the telescope to South America,[131] the telescope was moved to the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO)[132] in Chile, for astronomical viewing in the Southern Hemisphere[133] which was completed in 1967.[131] Under a National Science Foundation grant to Bidelman, Darrell Jack MacConnell moved the telescope,[134] and the two later conducted research using objective-prism plates taken with by the Curtis Schmidt.[135]

In the early 1960s Bidelman gave a colloquium at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, where Bidelman suggested it would be feasible to reclassify all stars listed in the Henry Draper Catalogue on the MK system. Graduate student, Nancy Houk heard Bidelman’s colloquium and became interested in classifying. Only about 23,000 of the HD stars had Morgan-Keenan classifications, and those had been classified by different people using different standards and sometimes chosen out of interest, creating an biased sample.

Reclassifying all HD stars the same way would create a vast data set that could be used as a teaching data set for a computer to encourage automated classifications which would be as better telescopes looked at for fainter stars. Houk eventually led the Michigan Survey and because it was anticipated that the work which she began in 1970 would not be completed until 2004, Bidelman used the same Curtis Schmidt objective-prism lens plates to begin an "early results" program.[136] Bidelman recalled:

Even though I was on record as having thought it ‘feasible’ to reclassify all of the Henry Draper Catalogue stars, I myself had no intention of doing this, nor had Dr. McConnell. But what we did do, to begin utilization of the beautiful plates that kept coming, was to start a so-called ‘early-result’ program in which we, assisted by several gifted graduate students, scanned the plates for all peculiar stars, supergiants, and late-type dwarfs. The previously unrecognized objects were then published.[137]

By 1964, Bidelman reported finding ~150 peculiar stars, about 80% were believed to be new discoveries.[138] In 1966, Bidelman reported finding Praseodymium III in χ Lupi[139] and with the Curtis Schmidt telescope, Bidelman and Robert Victor made provisional identifications of 23 peculiar stars including 3 new metallic line stars.[140] By 1969, Bidelman and his assistants discovered ~90 new, mainly F- and G-type supergiant stars, 33 new B-type emission (Be) stars, ~75 new metallic-line stars, over 150 new peculiar A-type stars, and other astronomical objects of interest.[141]

With the help of MacConnell and research assistants Bond, Frye and Humphreys, Bidelman discovered 53 new Barium (Ba II) stars, 26 new late-type giants which had strong Ca II emission lines, new supergiants of various spectral classes and G- and K-type stars with very weak CH absorption in their spectra.[142]

The first worldwide milestone in creating one or more astronomical data centers was the first discussion in 1966 at a National Science Foundation event in Maryland. The second was when Bidelman was president of the International Astronomical Union’s Commission 45 and they discussed the issue at the 1967 IAU meeting in Prague Czechoslovakia. At this meeting in Prague: "W.P. Bidelman spoke of the need for a general reference catalogue giving full bibliographic data for individual stars". Bidelman said it would include about a million stars and require the resources of an organization like NASA, and some members of the Commission supported the proposal.[143]

The University of Texas at Austin (1969-1970) edit

In 1969, Bidelman was a Professor in the astronomy department at Austin.[41] By the end of the 1960’s, astronomers had begun to discuss the possibility of creating astronomical data centers.[143] In a letter in 1969, Luboš Perek wrote that an astronomer who wanted a star’s MK classification might search through 5 to 100 papers "according to his temperament" then give up, or take a plate to determine the type, or choose another star. Astronomers might observe the same star under different names.[143] Catalogs, though useful, were often created as personal endeavors by astronomers near retirement and usually published only once, and while astronomical data increased rapidly, there were few making catalogs.[144] In 1969, Bidelman became one of the six astronomers funded by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific to study the feasibility of a computerized data center.[145]

 
The Observatory housing the Otto Struve Telescope at McDonald Observatory, Texas.

In 1970, the first official IAU debate on astronomical data centers took place.[143] After a temporary IAU working group held meetings, and representatives from 16 countries showed interest, the IAU established the first permanent Working Group on Numerical Data, and Bidelman became one of its "main data center leaders" to plan centers to make data more reliable and accessible.[143] Their first goal was to distribute information on existing Data Centers as well as lists of data errors.[146] The Strasbourg Astronomical Data Center, NASA Astrophysics Data System, and data centers in Japan and by the Astronomical Council of the USSR Academy of Science were among the first centers developed, and said many goals in creating data centers were eventually met and, as A. Heck noted, "sometimes largely facilitated by not-so-quickly-expected technologies such as the electronic networking of the planet".[143]

While at Austin in 1970, Bidelman, MacConnell and Frye published findings on six new stars showing strong neutral helium lines whose spectra appeared different from other "hydrogen deficient" stars, on objective prism plates from Cerro Tololo, Chile.[147]

By the end of the school year, Bidelman resigned to accept the position of Director of the Warner and Swasey Observatory and Chairman of Astronomy at Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) in Ohio.[41]

Case Western Reserve University (1970–2011) edit

 
Moving the Burrell Schmidt to Kitt Peak in Arizona made it possible to continue the "early results" program to the Northern Celestial Hemisphere.

Bidelman directed the Warner and Swasey Observatory from 1970-1975, and was a Professor of astronomy from 1970-1986.[65] In June 1970, Bidelman began as Chairman and Director.[148] Bidelman’s office was at the old Taylor Road Observatory,[149] given to the University by theWarner & Swasey Company in 1920.[150] Due to light pollution from the city of Cleveland, by the 1950’s viewing was difficult and the Burrell Schmidt telescope was relocated ~30 miles away to Geauga County.[151]

In 1973, Bidelman and MacConnell provided data on a variety of B-emission (Be) and shell stars, peculiar stars, weak-metal stars and other bright stars of the southern hemisphere, covering ~81% of the southern sky. They said when completed, Houk’s more comprehensive study would "provide spectral date of inestimable value to stellar astronomers" and should supersede their report, but they did it as an "early result" study.[152] Using CTIO objective –prism plates they found nearly 800 previously unknown A-type peculiar stars.[153] They also found 34 weak G-band giants stars in the southern hemisphere.[154] Their study was called a "major contribution" in providing data to help identify the relatively rare Population II stars.[155] It created an unbiased sample,[156] and doubled the number of known peculiar A-type (Ap) stars.[157] After nineteen years of study by various investigators, in 2014, Beers et. al studied 302 of the Bidelman-MacConnell possible weak-metal stars and concluded that a metal-weak thick disk (MWTD) is present in the Milky Way galaxy, and noted its importance in understanding the development of our galaxy.[158]

In 1962 and 1966, Bidelman had reported that the wavelength of λ 3984 varied somewhat from star to star, and stated differences in the ratios of mercury isotopes could be the reason.[159] Bidelman was the first to note this, and in 1974, Michaud, Reeves and Charland, considering the isotopic abundances to be real, and that Hg was in fact overabundant and not an artifact of blending, suggested the mercury overabundances were due to radiation pressure that caused the element to pile up until radiation and gravitational forces almost cancelled each other, then its isotopes would separate, sorting themselves.[160] Michaud suggested that element segregation would proceed naturally due to gravitational settling and radiation pressure if the stellar atmosphere was steady.[161]

 
The movement that is intrinsic to a star, or part of its "property", is called the "proper motion" of a star.

In 1975, Bidelman and San-Gak Lee reported spectral classifications for 601 proper-motion stars that had been listed in both a Lowell Observatory survey under Henry L. Giclas, and the Luyten Two-Tenths Catalogue and supplement, and their report included data from Gerard Kuiper.[162] Kuiper and Bidelman had been at Yerkes Observatory at the same time.[37]

[38] For six years Kuiper had worked to classify ~3,200 high proper motion stars using ~9,000 spectra taken at Yerkes and McDonald, and with an added 300 spectra from Luyten, Kuiper had planned to publish the data with Luyten.[163] Bidelman called it "very important spectroscopic work[163] and a "large-scale assault" on the problem of unclassified proper motion stars.[164]

 
Barnard's star (HIP 87937) is the highest proper motion star known. Stars of greater proper motion appear to move more greatly against the background of stars as seen from Earth, so proper motion can be used to help find stars located closer to our planet.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

When Kuiper ran out of stars of large proper motion and parallax in a region of sky, he observed the planets and their moons "nicely lined up" in that region.[165] When Kuiper found evidence of an atmosphere on Saturn's moon, Titan, his research changed focus and much of his data on proper motion stars remained unpublished.[163] Kuiper died in 1973.[164]

Following his paper with Lee, Bidelman had "renewed interest" in proper motion stars and asked whether Kuiper's unpublished proper motion material could be found.[163] With help from the Kuiper Memorial Committee at the University of Arizona, Ewen A. Whitaker, Elizabeth Roemer, and Helmut Abt, Bidelman obtained copies of five of Kuiper's notebooks which had stars noted by name and right ascension without declination, and many with multiple spectra and more than one classification. Bidelman established a card file for every star or binary pair, and sought to find the exact star Kuiper observed.[163] His goal was not to create definitive spectral types or change Kuiper's classifications, but to set out clearly "the enormous amount of useful spectral data relating to these objects gathered by an energetic and most talented astronomer to whom many, including the writer, owe much. This work represents a partial repayment of that debt".[164] He estimated there could be ~1,000 stars with better spectral types than otherwise known.[163] Bidelman worked on Kuiper’s data.[166][167] and published it in 1985.[164]

In 1975, Peter Pesch replaced Bidelman as Director of the Observatory and Chairman of the Astronomy department.[168] While Bidelman had been the observatory director,[169] three of Bidelman’s graduate students, Craig Chester,[2] Cynthia Irvine, and William Smethells,[3] were part of a group from CWRU who wanted to begin their own observatory.[170] The outlook for employment in research astronomy was bleak, so the group began a mail-order business and took part-time jobs to solve their "food on the table problem" while seeking to build an observatory in California, and Bidelman gave them their first cash donation.[169] Other donations followed, and the Monterey Institute for Research in Astronomy opened in 1984.[171]

 
In 1977, Congress agreed to fund the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope, named after Edwin Hubble.[172] In September, 1977, Bidelman served on the Ad Hoc Advisory Subcommittee for NASA’s Space Telescope.[167]

In 1976, Bidelman headed an IAU working group on the proper designation for astronomical objects.[166] At a 1978 symposium discussion following a paper[173] Bidelman stated he wanted to make a slightly off-topic point about nomenclature, and asked whether the star under discussion, VI Cyg #5 is the same star as BD+40° 4220. Informed it is and another one of its names is V729 Cyg,[174][notes 7] Bidelman responded, "Well, I’d like to say, as a member of an IAU Commission concerned with such things, that one should adopt a consistent labeling for a star". After being seconded by Underhill, he added: "We don’t all have encyclopedic memories".[175]

The Warner and Swasey Observatory in Cleveland, Ohio suffered from light pollution,[151] and was moved first to a better viewing site in Ohio, then later to Kitt Peak, Arizona in 1979.[176] By 1979, Houk had classified 69,000 southern stars. As she finished the southern classifications, Bidelman became responsible to oversee taking the northern plates at CWRU’s new Kitt Peak observation site in Arizona. The Curtis Schmidt telescope that was used for the southern all-sky survey was a twin to the Burrell Schmidt used in the northern survey.[177]

 
Bidelman also conducted research with infrared and ultraviolet data as they became available.

When the telescope at Kitt Peak became operational in 1981, Bidelman continued his "early-results" research involving "systematic, but nonetheless somewhat cursory inspection" to classify stars for the northern hemisphere that had been given HD numbers, and published the spectral data in 1983.[178] Bidelman identified 175 peculiar or otherwise interesting stars, most thought to be new discoveries.[176]

Bidelman was the first to identify the peculiar F str λ4077 dwarfs.[179] As part of the "early results" program, in 1981, 1983 and 1985 Bidelman found 21 stars he identified as "F str λ 4077".[180] Almost nothing was known about these stars other than Bidelman’s spectral classification.[181] Later researchers found evidence that about half are main-sequence counterparts of Barium stars.[182]

Bidelman retired from teaching at Case Western in 1986.[8] He became a Professor Emeritus, and in 1990 and 1991 continued to do research and remained active in the astronomy department.[183] As a Professor Emeritus, Bidelman continued with the Henry Draper Reclassification project with Houk and the Michigan Spectral Survey and compiled identification of stars in the IRAS Low-Resolution Spectral Catalogue.[184]

 
A close conjunction of Venus and Jupiter in Leo in July 2015 gave a suggestion of the conjunctions in 3 and 2 BC which Bidelman argued were a plausible explanation for the biblical Star of Bethlehem.[185]

Bidelman became interested in the Star of Bethlehem and argued it was involved planetary conjunctions.[40] In 1991, Bidelman used astronomical tables by Bryant TuckermanCite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). to investigate Roger Sinnott's suggestion[186] that that two close conjunctions of Venus and Jupiter on the morning of August 12, 3 BC, and the evening of June 17, 2 BC, could explain the Star of Bethlehem. He found that for these two planets, an easily-observable morning conjunction is "invariably followed" by an evening conjunction approximately ten months later whenever the morning conjunction has an elongation of at least 19⁰.[187][15] Bidelman found 28 such pairs of Venus-Jupiter conjunctions in the ~100 years before the birth of Christ, although the 3 and 2 BC conjunctions appeared closer together.[187] Bidelman noted that John MosleyCite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). has shown the August 3 BC morning conjunction was ~4.3 arcminutes, and the June 2 BC evening conjunction was an "extremely close" 0.5 arcminutes, and Bidelman[15] considered some historical events to determine the date of Christ's birth, and noted these conjunctions took place in Leo, a constellation associated with Judaism and the Tribe of Judah.[188][15] Bidelman[15] suggested the conjunctions in 3 and 2 BC are a plausible explanation for the Star of Bethlehem.[188][189][185]

In a brief 1991 Newsweek on Air interview about the Star of Bethlehem, when asked when and why he became interested in the topic, Bidelman said he had always been an astronomer, and it is of astronomical interest. When asked whether he thought his theory demystified Christmas, Bidelman replied:

Oh, I don’t think so. If it is right that the astrologers saw in fact two conjunctions of Venus and Jupiter, one in 3 BC and one in 2 BC, I think perhaps it would make us feel that there was a little bit more reason for what is stated in the scriptures than we might otherwise think. It’s somewhat fashionable to think that there’s no scientific basic for this at all, and that is certainly, I think, an incorrect position to take.[190]

In 1992, almost 50 years after his thesis paper,[27] Bidelman stated On revient toujours à ses premières amours ("One always returns to his first loves") when he returned to the topic of his dissertation in 1992 and he considered it "perhaps worth mentioning" that two stars seen then had completely changed their spectral appearance.[191]

In 1993, Bidelman provided data on 177 known and possible asymptotic giant branch stars, saying he was confident many would "prove to be interesting and important. Unfortunately, I don’t know which ones!"[192] Bidelman’s list of high Strömgren c1 index high galactic latitude stars included promising post-AGB candidates to lead to finds of similar objects to better understand the post-AGB sub-groups of stars.[193]

Invited to speak at the 1996 IAU Symposium on carbon stars Bidelman declined on advice from his doctor, but sent introductory comments in which he said said:

I have always been fascinated by red stars, partly because they were easy to find in a telescope field, and partly also because they seemed to warm things up a bit on a cold winter night. Thus I early became acquainted with the celebrate carbon star 280 Schjellerup, better known as WZ Cassiopeiae, which was recognized about 100 years ago as an unusual member of a group of red stars then known as the stars of Secchi's fourth type.[194]

Pointing out that observers sometimes "note things that don’t seem to make much sense, but which later are realized to have been very significant indeed", he traced a brief history of this "this stellar oddball" and concluded:

I hope you get my point: that if something seems a bit strange it is worth doing some serious thinking to try to make sense of it. At the very least, do tell others about it; though perhaps hard to believe, they may be smarter than you! This policy may not make you popular with the establishment but the risk is well worth taking.[194]

In May 1998, the Case astronomy students and graduates held a 2-day "Kth" reunion to honor Bidelman and new retiree Peter Pesch.[195]

Bidelman (1969) once said that the problem of the Ap stars (1969) is that "stars of unusual spectrum are doing unusual things".[196] In 2002, Bidelman suggested the peculiar magnetic A stars may have once been close binaries that "merged and are now in the process of learning to live as single objects",[197] and suggested in 2005 that Przybylski's Star may be one such object.[198]

In Case Western University's 2008 astronomy department newsletter, Chair Heather Morrison wrote they were sorry to say goodbye to Professor Bidelman, who had turned 90 "and has decided to finish his distinguished career in Astronomy by retiring for a second time".[17]

Honors edit

Bidelman was elected to the American Astronomical Society in 1944.[199] and was a member for over 65 years.[200] He was president of the Cleveland Astronomical Society from 1973 to 1976.[201] Bidelman was elected to the international science honor society Sigma Xi by Case Western Reserve University.[202] The minor planet 9398 Bidelman (1994 SH3), discovered by the Arizona group Spacewatch at Kitt Peak on September 28, 1994 was named in his honor.[8][66] It is an outer main belt asteroid.[203] The peculiar supergiant star HD 30353 is named "Bidelman's star".[204]

Personal life edit

 
In Bidelman's tribute to North Dakota, he mentioned the beautiful badlands.

William Pendry Bidelman was born on September 25, in 1918 in Los Angeles, California.[7] Bidelman’s father, the son of Howard Bidelman and Julia Pendry, had the same name[205] but Bidelman did not use the designation “Jr.,” after college. When the family experienced financial difficulties, Bidelman moved with his mother to Grand Forks, North Dakota where his grandparents raised him.[40] As a boy, Bidelman wrote to Alfred H. Joy at Mount Wilson, to ask how to become an astronomer.[206] They later served together on the Astronomical Society of the Pacific Publications Committee in 1955[93] and 1956.[95] He met his future wife, Verna Shirk, in grade school[7] and became “smitten” with her at age 10.[40]

 
A US stamp celebrating the 100th anniversary of professional baseball.

In a Grand Forks Central High School competition, Bidelman's tribute to North Dakota was judged best, and was read on October 20, 1935 at the Washington Memorial Chapel at Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, an annual event for essays by high school students about their states. In his essay, Bidelman praised North Dakota for its plains "covered with an ocean of wheat, rolling gently in the soft summer breezes", its rolling prairies, mighty rivers; International Peace Garden "in the heart of this continent", its industry, agriculture, and its "scores of untold secrets which have not been discovered to this day". He finished by quoting state poet James W. Foley, by writing: "North Dakota, hail to you!"[207]

 
Bent Creek Ranch Square Dance Team dancing at the Mountain Music Festival, Asheville, North Carolina.

At a 1977 IAU Symposium honoring the memory of Henry Norris Russell, Bidelman recalled reading during his High School years the “fascinating and inspiring” monthly articles Russell wrote for Scientific American. Saying it was “an important part of my early scientific education”, Bidelman suggested they might be worth reprinting.[208] Asked to make some remarks at that symposium, Bidelman said he had little personal knowledge of Russell, but could believe the comments he had heard that Russell was both a great scientist and a great human being, because he had found it to be true of most other influential astronomers. In addition to Alfred Joy, Bidelman recalled "with great pleasure" Bart Bok, Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin and Martin Schwarzschild from Harvard, and "the whole motley Yerkes crew: Struve, Greenstein, Henyey, Chandrasekhar, Kuiper and all the rest", and stated he marveled at his youthful contacts with them and their passionate devotion to science and to life. He ended his speech by saying:

I suppose I am being provincial but I've always felt that astronomers on the whole are the best people on Earth. ... . Let us never forget, nor let our students forget, that of every million people on the face of the Earth, only one is an astronomer.[206]

 
Bidelman wrote the section on Spectral Classification for the U.S. Navy’s 1992 edition of The Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac.[209] In it he wrote, "The road from Secchi to Morgan and Keenan and beyond has been long and winding, and its end is still now only faintly glimpsed".[210]

Among Bidelman’s many interests were baseball, philately, music, and square dancing.[40] His wife, Verna Pearl Shirk was born in 1918 in Grand Forks, North Dakota. She graduated from the University of North Dakota, and was a teacher and a poet who used her time for family, friends, and church work. The Bidelman’s had four children, and also grandchildren and great-grandchildren. One daughter died in 2000, and Verna Bidelman died in 2009. They were married 69 years.[211] Bidelman died at 92 on May 3, 2011 in Tennessee.[7]

Select bibliography edit

[notes 8]

Bidelman, William P. & MacConnell, Darrell J. "The brighter stars of astrophysical interest in the southern sky". Astronomical Journal, 78(8):687-733. October, 1973.

Bidelman, William P. “Classification and identification of IRAS sources with low-resolution spectra”. Astrophys. J. Supplement, 112(2):557-584. October, 1997.

Bidelman, William P. "Catalogue and bibliography of emission-line stars of types later than B”. Astrophysical Journal Supplement, 1:175-264. November, 1954.

Bidelman, William P. & Keenan, Philip C. "The BA II stars”. Astrophysical Journal, 114:473. November, 1951.

Bidelman, William P. "Spectral classification of stars listed in Miss Payne's Catalogue of C Stars". Astrophysical Journal, 113:304-308. March, 1951.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The authors who have noted the "The Billy Bidelman Song" stated: "No one seems to recall why William P. Bidelman deserved such august company, but it must have seemed a good idea at the time". They also noted that the "W. W. W. W. Morgan" song has apparently, and "perhaps fortunately" been lost.
  2. ^ NASA Maps.com estimates the distance from Mount Hamilton to San Jose as 22.4 miles with an estimated driving time of 59 minutes. Retrieved on June 27, 2017
  3. ^ Abt (1996) ranked Bidelman's paper fourth, because with 153 citations it had tied for third place with a paper by Walter Baade, and the two authors were listed alphabetically.
  4. ^ $1,000 in 1959 is estimated to be equivalent in buying power to $8,410.07 in 2017 by US Inflation Calculator. Retrieved on June 22, 2017.
  5. ^ Bidelman may have served on the Publications Committee longer, but no other reports have been found.
  6. ^ After examining 1009 references from an astronomy journal, Abt found more than 12% contained reference errors.
  7. ^ According to its "Identifiers" area on SIMBAD, V729 Cyg has 51 names.
  8. ^ These journal articles are William P. Bidelman's five most-cited works on the NASA Astrophysics Data System as of July, 2017.

References edit

  1. ^ "William Pendry Bidelman". Academic Family Tree. Retrieved on January 30, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Bidelman, W. P. "Warner and Swasey Observatory, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio. Observatory report". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 7:218 – 222. January, 1975. Retrieved on August 22, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Bidelman, William P. "Observatory reports: Warner and Swasey Observatory, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 8:268 – 271. January, 1976. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  4. ^ Pesch, Peter. "Warner and Swasey Observatory CWRU report for 1 July 1976 - 30 June 1977". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 10:364 – 367. January, 1978. Retrieved on May 9, 2017.
  5. ^ Lee, Sang-Gak. "Spectral classification of high-proper-motion stars". Astronomical Journal, 89:702-719. May, 1984. Retrieved on October 26, 2016.
  6. ^ Death record for William Bidelman on Mooseroots. Retrieved on May 2, 2016.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "William P. Bidelman". The Cleveland Plain Dealer. May 15, 2011. Retrieved on May 2, 2016.
  8. ^ a b c Schmadel, Lutz D. (2012). "Catalogue of minor planet names and discovery circumstances". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, 6th Edition, 2:686. Springer Science & Business Media. Retrieved on June 3, 2016. ISBN 9783642297182.
  9. ^ Wing, Robert F. "Preface". The Carbon Star Phenomenon. (2000). 177th IAU Symposium, Turkey, 1996. Edited by Robert F. Wing. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Netherlands. pp. xvii- xxv. Retrieved on July 27, 2016. ISBN 0792363469.
  10. ^ "William P. Bidelman". Ph.D. Tree. Retrieved on June 3, 2016.
  11. ^ "William P. Bidelman". Legacy.com. Retrieved on February 1, 2017.
  12. ^ Bidelman, W.P. "The bimillenary of Christ’s birth". Planetarian. September 1991, 20(3). Retrieved on June 6, 2016.
  13. ^ a b c Struve. Otto. "Notes from Yerkes Observatory". Popular Astronomy, 53:522. December, 1945. Retrieved on May 9, 2017.
  14. ^ a b Rigaux, F. "General notes: From the Lick Observatory". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 66(388):38-40. February, 1954. Retrieved on May 19, 2016
  15. ^ a b c d e Bidelman, William P. "The bimillenary of Christ's birth: the astronomical evidence". The International Planetarium Society. Reprinted from the Planetarian,September 1991. Retrieved on June 7, 2016. Cite error: The named reference "Bidelman 1991 Bimillenary" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. ^ a b Jaschek, Carlos & Jaschek, Mercedes. (1990). "K-type stars". The Classification of Stars. Cambridge University Press. New York, USA. Retrieved on October 17, 2016. ISBN 9780521389969.
  17. ^ a b Morrison, Heather "Chair’s space". Astronomy Department Newsletter. Case Western Reserve University College of Arts and Sciences. September, 2008. Retrieved on August 18, 2016.
  18. ^ "Honorary scholarships are awarded to 101 high ranking undergraduates". The Harvard Crimson. November 27, 1939. Retrieved on May 18, 2016.
  19. ^ Garrison, R. F. "William Wilson Morgan (1906 – 1994)". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 107(712):507-512; see p. 511. June 1995. Retrieved on May 5, 2016.
  20. ^ "World War II, 1939-1945". Yerkes Observatory, 1892-1950: The Birth, Near Death, and Resurrection of a Scientific Research Institution. (2008). Osterbrock, Donald E. University of Chicago Press. p. 261. Retrieved on May 18, 2016. ISBN 9780226639468
  21. ^ Wilford, John Noble. "William Morgan dies at 88; a leading U.S. astronomer". The New York Times. June 24, 1994. Retrieved on May 18, 2016.
  22. ^ Copage, Eric. "Philip C. Keenan, 92, Pioneer in the classification of stars". The New York Times. April 25, 2000. Retrieved on June 10, 2016.
  23. ^ "Stellar classification." Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved on June 10, 2016.
  24. ^ Morgan W. W., Keenan Philip C. & Kellman, Edith. (1943) "Conclusion". An Atlas of Stellar Spectra: with an Outline of Spectral Classification. Astrophysical Monographs, University of Chicago Press, Illinois. Page 30 in book or 40 online. Retrieved on June 28, 2016. ASIN: B0006APX06.
  25. ^ Osterbrock, D. E. "Fifty years ago: astronomy; Yerkes Observatory; Morgan, Keenan and Kellman". The MK Process at 50 Years: A Powerful Tool for Astrophysical Insight. (1994). Astron. Soc. Pac. Conf. Ser., Vatican Observatory workshop. Edited by Chris Corbally, R. O. Gray, and R. F. Garrison. pp. 199-214; see p. 211. Retrieved on June 7, 2016. ISBN 0937707791.
  26. ^ "Thesis (Ph.D.) of William P. Bidelman, University of Chicago". SearchWorks. Retrieved on January 30, 2017.
  27. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "A Spectroscopic study of the region of the Double Cluster in Perseus".Astrophysical Journal, 98:61-81. July, 1943. Retrieved on January 30, 2017.
  28. ^ Crawford, D., Limber, D. N., Mendoza, E., Schulte, D., Steinman, H., & Swihart, T. "The association in Geminorum". Astrophysical Journal, 121:24-31. January, 1955. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  29. ^ Elmegreen, Bruce & Efremov, Yuri. "The formation of star clusters". American Scientist, 86(3):264. May–June, 1998. Retrieved on September 14, 2016.
  30. ^ Slettebak, Arne. "Stellar rotation and Be stars in the h and χ Persei association". Astrophysical Journal, 154:933-944. December, 1968. Retrieved on September 14, 2016.
  31. ^ "Chicago Astronomy Degree Recipients: 1940 – 1949". The University of Chicago, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Retrieved on June 6, 2016.
  32. ^ "World War II, 1939-1945". Yerkes Observatory, 1892-1950: The Birth, Near Death, and Resurrection of a Scientific Research Institution. (2008). Osterbrock, Donald E. University of Chicago Press. p. 261. Retrieved on June 16, 2017.
  33. ^ McLaughlin, Dean B. "The sixty-ninth meeting of the American Astronomical Society".Popular Astronomy, 51:59-62. 1943. Plate 1: Bidelman (#18) stands near the center in December 1942. Retrieved on August 23, 2016.
  34. ^ "Yerkes Observatory: the birthplace of modern astrophysics". The University of Chicago. Retrieved on July 9, 2016
  35. ^ Horak, Henry George. "My graduate study in astronomy after the War". Department of Physics and Astronomy, Kansas University. Not dated. Retrieved on June 16, 2017.
  36. ^ Hearnshaw, John B. (1990). The Analysis of Starlight: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Astronomical Spectroscopy. Cambridge University Press, USA. First printed 1986. Retrieved on May 19, 2017. ISBN 9780521399166.
  37. ^ a b "Yerkes Observatory staff photo". The University of Chicago Photographic Archive. Retrieved on May 9, 2017.
  38. ^ a b DeVorkin, David. "Kaj Strand". American Institute of Physics. Oral history interviews. Thursday, December 8, 1983. Retrieved on May 9, 2017.
  39. ^ Reipurth, Bo. (2016). "The budding astronomer". George Herbig and Early Stellar Evolution. Institute for Astronomy Special Publications, No. 1. Retrieved on July 9, 2016.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g Bond, Howard E. "William Pendry Bidelman (1918–2011)". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Pacific, 129(971):1-9. January, 2017. Retrieved on June 28, 2017.
  41. ^ a b c Smith, Harlan J. "The Astronomy Department, The McDonald Observatory, and the Radio Astronomy Observatory (UTRAO) of the University of Texas at Austin". Observatory reports. Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 3(3) Part II:418 – 432. June, 1971. Retrieved on July 14, 2016.
  42. ^ Krisciunas, Kevin. "Otto Struve".. Biographical Memoirs. 61:351-387. 1992. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Retrieved on June 16, 2017.
  43. ^ a b Osterbrock, Donald E. (2008). "The boy president, 1929-1932". Yerkes Observatory, 1892-1950: The Birth, Near Death, and Resurrection of a Scientific Research Institution. University of Chicago Press. Page 131. ISBN 9780226639468. Retrieved on May 18, 2016.
  44. ^ Evans, David S. & Mulholland, J. Derral. (1986). "Texas independence". Big and Bright: A History of the McDonald Observatory. University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas. p. 132. Retrieved on July 2, 2016. ISBN 9780292759008.
  45. ^ "Interstellar reddening". COSMOS: The SAO Encyclopedia of Astronomy. Swinburne University of Technology. Retrieved on May 19, 2017.
  46. ^ Morgan, W. W. & Bidelman, W. P. "On the interstellar reddening in the region of the North Polar Sequence, and the normal color indices of A-type stars". Astrophysical Journal, 104(2):245-252. September, 1946. Retrieved on July 9, 2016.
  47. ^ Hearnshaw, J. B. (1996). The Measurement of Starlight: Two Centuries of Astronomical Photometry. Cambridge University Press, New York. p. 304. Retrieved on June 6, 2016. ISBN 0-521-40393-6.
  48. ^ Johnson, H. L. & Morgan, W. W. "Fundamental stellar photometry for standards of spectral type on the revised system of the Yerkes spectral atlas". Astrophysical Journal, 117(3):313-352. May 1953. Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
  49. ^ a b c d Brelstaff, Tristram. "Red supergiants, neutrinos and the Double Cluster". Journal of the British Astronomical Association. 106(5):246-251. October, 1996. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  50. ^ Bidelman, William P. "The M-type supergiant members of the Double Cluster in Perseus". Astrophysical Journal. 105:492-496. Retrieved on January 30, 2017.
  51. ^ a b Humphreys, Roberta W. "M Supergiants in the Perseus Arm". Astrophysical Journal, 160:1149-1159. June, 1970. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  52. ^ Asaki, Y.; Deguchi, S.; Imai, H.; Hachisuka, K.; Miyoshi, M.; Honma, M. "Distance and proper motion measurement of the red supergiant, S Persei, with VLBI H2O maser astrometry". Astrophysical Journal. 721:267–277. September, 2010. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  53. ^ Humphreys, Roberta M. "On the distances and velocities of M supergiants associated with OH and H2O emission sources". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac.. 87:433-437. June 1975. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  54. ^ Skiff, Brian A. "Photometry of stars in the field of S Persei". Information Bulletin on Variable Stars #4054, #1:1-4. July, 1994. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  55. ^ Humphreys, Roberta M. "Veiling and the presence of circumstellar gas and dust in some infrared stars". Astrophysical Journal. 188:75-85. February, 1974. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  56. ^ Stothers, Richard." Red Supergiants and neutrino emission". Astrophysical Journal, 155:935-956. March, 1969. Retrieved on May 15, 2017.
  57. ^ Blanco, Victor M. "The M-type supergiants in h and χ Persei". Astrophysical Journal, 122:434-437. November, 1955. Retrieved on May 12, 2017.
  58. ^ Wing, Robert F. "The biggest stars of all". The Biggest, Baddest, Coolest Stars. (2009). 412:113-135. Edited by Donald G. Luttermoser, Beverly J. Smith, and Robert E. Stencel. San Francisco, CA. Retrieved on October 5, 2016. ISBN 978-1583817049.
  59. ^ Nariai, Kyoji. "Mechanism of mass flow from Upsilon Sagittarii". Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 19:564-574. 1967. Retrieved on May 17, 2017.
  60. ^ Burnham, Robert. "Sagittarius: Upsilon". Burnham's Celestial Handbook: An Observer's Guide to the Universe Beyond the Solar System, 3:1566-1569. Courier Corporation, New York. 1978, reprinted 2013. ISBN 9780486318035. Retrieved on May 16, 2017
  61. ^ Bidelman, W. P. "Displaced absorption lines in the spectrum of Upsilon Sagittarii". Astrophysical Journal, 109:544-546. May, 1949. Retrieved on May 16, 2017.
  62. ^ Koubský, P. et.al. "New Observations of the Binary System υ Sagittarii". Solar and Stellar Physics Through Eclipses ASP Conference Series, 370:207-212. Edited by O. Demircan, S. O. Selam, and B. Albayrak. San Francisco, CA. May, 2007. Retrieved on May 16, 2017.
  63. ^ Jeffery, C. S. and Cuadrado, R. Aznar. "BI Lyncis: A hydrogen-deficient binary consisting of two low-mass giants of spectral types early-B and G". Astronomy & Astrophysics, 378(3):936 – 945. November, 2001. Retrieved on October 4, 2016.
  64. ^ Jeffery, C. Simon "Hydrogen-deficient stars: an introduction". Hydrogen-Deficient Stars. 87th IAU Colloquium; India, 1985. 391: 3-16. Edited by Klaus Werner & Thomas Rauch. ASP. San Francisco, CA. July, 2008. Retrieved on August 22, 2016.
  65. ^ a b Schmadel, Lutz D. (2012). "Catalogue of minor planet names and discovery circumstances". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names, 6th Edition, 2:686. Springer Science & Business Media. Retrieved on June 3, 2016. ISBN 9783642297182.
  66. ^ a b The Minor Planet Center. "(9398) Bidelman = 1994 SH3 = 1997 AC20". The International Astronomical Union. Retrieved on July 1, 2016.
  67. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. & Keenan, Philip C. "The BA II stars."The Astrophysical Journal, 114(3):473-476. November, 1951. Retrieved on May 19, 2016
  68. ^ Lambert, David L., Smith, Verne V., & Heath, James. "Lithium in the barium stars". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 105(688):568-573. June, 1993. Retrieved on May 19, 2017
  69. ^ Bond, Howard E., Pollacco, Don L., Webbink, Ronald F. "WeBo 1: A young barium star surrounded by a ringlike planetary nebula". Astronomical Journal, 125:260-264. January, 2003. Retrieved on May 19, 2017.
  70. ^ a b Kaler, James B. (2002). The Hundred Greatest Stars. Copernicus Books, New York. ISBN 0-387-95436-8.
  71. ^ Smith, Verne. V. "The barium stars". Evolutionary Processes in Interacting Binary Stars. IAU Symposium 151, Argentina, 1991. Editors, Y. Kondo, R. F. Sistero, R. S. Polidan; Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, Boston, MA. 1992. P.103, 1992 pp. 103-113. Retrieved on May 19, 2017. ISBN 0-7923-1731-9.
  72. ^ Jaschek, Carlos. "Taxonomy of late-type giants". Cool Stars with Excesses of Heavy Elements, 114:3-14. 1985. Edited by Mercedes Jaschek and Philip C. Keenan. D. Reidel Publishing Company. Dordrecht, Holland. First published in 1985. Reprinted in 2012. Retrieved on June 11, 2016. ISBN 9789401088510
  73. ^ McClure, Robert D. "The barium stars". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 96(576):117-127. February, 1984, Retrieved on May 23, 2017
  74. ^ de Castro, D. B., et al. "Chemical abundances and kinematics of barium stars." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, (Preprint) 000:1-30. April, 2016. Retrieved on May 19, 2017.
  75. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Spectral classification of stars listed in Miss Payne's catalogue of C stars". Astrophysical Journal. 113:304-308. March, 1951. Retrieved on July 18, 2016.
  76. ^ Luck, R. E. "The chemical composition of luminous high-latitude stars". Luminous High-Latitude Stars. (1993). International ASP Workshop, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1992. Editor, Dimitar D. Sasselov. San Francisco, CA. pp. 87-102; see pp. 87 and 100. Retrieved on October 20, 2016. ISBN 0937707643.
  77. ^ Waelkens, Christoffel, Waters, Rens. "Post AGB stars". Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars. Edited by Harm J. Habing & Hans Olofsson. Springer Science & Business Media. 2013. Reprinted from Springer-Verlag 2004. ISBN 9781475738766
  78. ^ Molina, R. E.; Rivera, H. "Chemical abundances for A-and F-type supergiant stars". Revista Mexicana de Astronomía y Astrofísica, 52:399-411. 2016. Retrieved on October 20, 2016.
  79. ^ Fernie, J. D. "89 Herculis - further misdemeanors". Astrophysical Journal, Part 1, 243:576-582. January, 1981. Retrieved on October 20, 2016.
  80. ^ Garrison, R. F. & Lopez-Cruz, Omar. "MK spectra of apparently luminous yellow stars at high galactic latitude". Luminous High-Latitude Stars. Edited by Dimitar D. Sasselov. ASP. San Francisco, CA. pp. 43-44. Retrieved on February 2, 2017. LC # QB815 .L85 1992. ISBN 0937707643.
  81. ^ McWilliam, A. & Lambert, D. L. "Carbon monoxide band intensities in M giants". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 96: 882-890. November, 1984. Retrieved on October 5, 2016.
  82. ^ “Telescopes of the Lick Observatory: the great Lick refractor”. UC Observatories. Retrieved on June 22, 2017.
  83. ^ "University of California Observatories: Lick Observatory". Lick Observatory Website. Retrieved on May 9, 2017.
  84. ^ "Interview of Stanislaus Vasilevskis – Session I by David DeVorkin on 1977 July 13". Niels Bohr Library & Archives, American Institute of Physics, College Park, Maryland, USA. Retrieved on June 5, 2017.
  85. ^ Staff. "General Notes". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 67(396):191-195. June, 1955. Retrieved on August 5, 2016.
  86. ^ Staff. "General Notes: "Meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 67(394): 51-53. February, 1955. Retrieved on August 23, 2016.
  87. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Notice concerning late-type emission-line stars". Astrophysical Journal, 113:705. May, 1951. Retrieved on July 26, 2016.
  88. ^ Strömgren, Bengt. "Report". Astronomical Journal, 57(1202):196-206. October, 1952. Retrieved on May 24, 2017.
  89. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "Catalogue and Bibliography of Emission-Line Stars of Types Later than B". Astrophysical Journal Supplement. 1:175-224. November, 1954. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  90. ^ "Top 10 papers per year by citations". Space Telescope Science Institute. Scroll down to the year 1954. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  91. ^ Cassinelli, J. P.; Macgregor, K. B. "Stellar chromospheres, coronae, and winds". Physics of the Sun. (1986). 3:47-123. Dordrecht, D. Reidel Publishing Co. Retrieved on September 7, 2016.
  92. ^ Abt, Helmut A. "How long are astronomical papers remembered?" Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 108:1059-1061. October, 1996. Retrieved on September 13, 2016.
  93. ^ a b Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, January 12, 1955". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 67(395):132-133. April, 1955. Retrieved on September 1, 2016.
  94. ^ Popper, D. M. "General notes: personal notes". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 68:176-177. April, 1956. Retrieved on September 2, 2016.
  95. ^ a b Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, January 11, 1956". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 68(401):182-184. April, 1956. Retrieved on June 5, 2017.
  96. ^ Einarsson, Sturla "Minutes of the meeting of the directors, November 30, 1956". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 69(406):101-103. 1957. Retrieved on October 19, 2016.
  97. ^ Bidelman, William P. Bidelman. "A funny thing happened on the way to the Stanford Press - Reminiscences of five years with the PASP". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 101(644):887. October, 1989. Retrieved on September 15, 2016.
  98. ^ "Past recipients of the Catherine Wolfe Bruce Gold Medal". Astron. Soc. Pacific. Retrieved on July 7, 2017.
  99. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, January 15, 1957". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 69(408):286-289. June, 1957. Retrieved on September 1, 2016.
  100. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Report of the Publications Committee". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 71(420):259-264. June, 1959. Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  101. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected Board of Directors, January 20, 1959". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 71(420):264-266. June, 1959. Retrieved on September 2, 2016.
  102. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Report of the Publications Committee". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 72(426):228-233. June, 1960. From "Minutes of the 71st annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, February 16, 1960". Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  103. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, February 16, 1960". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 72(426):233-236. June 1960. Retrieved on September 1, 2016.
  104. ^ "Minutes of the Meeting of the Newly Elected Board of Directors, February 21, 1961: Report of the Publications Committee". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., August, 1939. 73(433):274-275. Retrieved on June 2, 2016.
  105. ^ Vanasek, Thomas. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, February 21, 1961". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 73(433):279-281. August, 1960. Retrieved on September 1, 2016.
  106. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "Report of the Publications Committee". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 73(433):274-279. August, 1961. From Minutes of the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, February 21, 1961". Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  107. ^ Vanasek, Thomas "Minutes of the 72nd annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, February 21, 1961". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 73(433):274-279. August, 1961. Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  108. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the 73rd annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, February 20, 1962". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 74(438):265-271. June, 1962. Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  109. ^ Bidelman, William P. "A funny thing happened on the way to the Stanford Press - reminiscences of Five Years with the PASP". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., October, 1989. 101(643):887. Summary only; this talk, which is a reference to the Broadway musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum does not appear to be currently online. Retrieved on July 2, 2016.
  110. ^ Vsekhsviatskii, S. K. "Comets, small bodies, and problems of the solar system". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 74(437):106-115; see bottom of p. 106. April, 1962. Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
  111. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the newly elected board of directors, February 20, 1962". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 74(438):271-273. June, 1962. Retrieved on September 3, 2016.
  112. ^ Sturla Einarsson. "Minutes of the meeting of the directors, November 8, 1963". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 76(448):71-76. February, 1964. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  113. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the 76th annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, May 7, 1965". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 77(457):313-321. August, 1965. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  114. ^ Einarsson, Sturla. "Minutes of the meeting of the Directors, Nov. 12, 1965". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 78(461):105-111. February, 1966. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  115. ^ Jeffers, Hamilton. "Minutes of the meeting of the Directors, November 11, 1966". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 79(466):88-92. February, 1967. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  116. ^ Jeffers, Hamilton M. "Minutes of the 77th annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, May 6, 1966". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 78(464):354-361. August, 1966. Retrieved on September 1, 2016.
  117. ^ Jeffers, Hamilton. "Minutes of the meeting of the Directors, November 10, 1967". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 80(472):122-128. February, 1968. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  118. ^ Phillips, John G. Minutes of the 80th annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, May 2, 1969". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 81(481):462-469. August, 1969. Retrieved on June 5, 2017.
  119. ^ Phillips, John G. "Minutes of the meeting of the Directors, November 14, 1969". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 82(484):160-166. February, 1970. Retrieved on August 25, 2016.
  120. ^ Phillips, John G. "Minutes of the 81st annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, May 1, 1970". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 82(488):945-950. August, 1970. Retrieved on September 19, 2016.
  121. ^ Phillips, John. "Minutes of the 82nd annual meeting of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 7 May 1971". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 83(494):514-518. August, 1971. Retrieved on September 6, 2016.
  122. ^ Abt, Helmut A. "What fraction of literature references are incorrect?" Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 104(673):235-236. March, 1992. Retrieved on July 26, 2016.
  123. ^ Shane, C. D. "Lick Observatory". Astronomical Journal, 63:361-365. 1958. Retrieved on August 30, 2016.
  124. ^ "Interview of Hyron Spinrad by David DeVorkin on 1977 July 19". Niels Bohr Library & Archives, American Institute of Physics, College Park, Maryland. Retrieved on June 11, 2016.
  125. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Line Identifications in Peculiar Stars". Astronomical Journal, 67:111. March, 1962. Retrieved on August 2, 2016.
  126. ^ Bidelman, William P. & Corliss, C. H. "Identification of GA II lines in stellar spectra". Astrophysical Journal. 135(3):968-969. May, 1962. Retrieved on August 2, 2016.
  127. ^ a b c Aller, Lawrence H. & Bidelman, W. P. "Atmosphere of 53 Tauri". Astronomical Journal, 67(9):571. November, 1962. Retrieved on July 26, 2016.
  128. ^ a b Mohler, Orren C. "The observatories of the University of Michigan". Astronomical Journal, 68(8):646-653; see pages 646 and 647. November, 1963. Retrieved on May 19, 2016.
  129. ^ Hatcher, Harlan. “Observing programs”. The President's Report to the Board of Regents for the Academic Year. 1963. University of Michigan. Gyan Books Pvt. Ltd., Delhi, India. p. 254. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  130. ^ Mohler, Orren C. "The Observatories of the University: Observing programs". Astronomical Journal, 68:646-648. November, 1963. Retrieved on June 27, 2017.
  131. ^ a b Blanco, Víctor. "Brief history of the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory". Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory website. February, 1993. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  132. ^ Mayall, Nicholas U. "Observatory report". Astronomical Journal, 71(4):229-245. May 1966. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  133. ^ "National Optical Astronomy Observatory Synopsis". National Science Foundation. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  134. ^ MacConnell, D. Jack. "In Memoriam. Victor Blanco 1918-2011. CTIO Director, 1967-1981". National Optical Astronomy Observatory. Section begins: "I was Victor’s last thesis student". Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  135. ^ Bidelman, William. P. & MacConnell, Donald J. "Southern Hemisphere Objective-Prism Discoveries". Astronomical Journal. May, 1982. 87(5):792-793. Retrieved on June 15, 2016.
  136. ^ Houk, Nancy. "The Michigan Survey and the Continuing Importance of Spectral Surveys". The MK process at 50 years. A powerful tool for astrophysical insight.(1994) ASP Conference Series, Workshop of the Vatican Observatory, held in Tucson Arizona, USA, 1993. San Francisco. CA. Edited by Chris Corbally, R. O. Gray, and R. F. Garrison, pp. 285-288 Retrieved on June 24, 2016.
  137. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Discovery of new bright peculiar stars of the northern sky". Astronomy with Schmidt-Type Telescopes, (1984). 78th IAU Colloquium, Italy, 1983. 110:273-278. Edited by Massimo Capaccioli, D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht, Holland. Retrieved on July 18, 2016.
  138. ^ Mohler, Orren C. "The Observatories of the University of Michigan". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 69:689-696. 1964. Retrieved on May 10, 2017.
  139. ^ Guthrie, B. N. G. "New line identifications in the blue spectra of Hg-Mn stars". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. (ISSN 0035-8711).216:1-15. September, 1985. Retrieved on March 9, 2017.
  140. ^ Bidelman, William P. & Victor, Robert C. "Twenty-three stars with peculiar spectra". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac./, 78(466):550-551. December, 1966. Retrieved on September 10, 2016.
  141. ^ Mohler, Orren C. "The Observatories of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Report 1967-1968". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 1:65–73. January, 1969. Retrieved on August 17, 2016.
  142. ^ Mohler, Orren C. "University of Michigan Observatories, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Report 1968-1969". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 2:78–85. January, 1970. Retrieved on August 17, 2016.
  143. ^ a b c d e f Heck, A. "Vistas into the CDS genesis". The Multinational History of Strasbourg Astronomical Observatory. (2005). Edited by André Heck. Dordrecht, Holland. pp. 191-209. Retrieved on August 26, 2016.
  144. ^ Jaschek, C. "Information Problems in Astrophysics". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 80(477):654-661. December, 1968. Retrieved on August 27, 2016.
  145. ^ Staff. "General notes". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 81(483):922-923. December, 1969. Retrieved on August 25, 2016.
  146. ^ Sitterly, C. M. "Working Group 1: Numerical Data for Astronomers and Astrophysicists (Groupe de Travail 1: Données numériques pour les astronomes et les astrophysiciens)". Transactions of the International Astronomical Union, 14B:245-249. 1971. Retrieved on August 27, 2016.
  147. ^ MacConnell, D. J., Frye, R. L., & Bidelman, W. P. "Discoveries on Southern objective-prism plates I. New helium-rich stars". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 82(487):730-735. June, 1970. Retrieved on July 14, 2016.
  148. ^ McCuskey, S. W. "Warner and Swasey Observatory report 1969-1970: personnel". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 3:211 – 217. January, 1971. Retrieved on May 10, 2017.
  149. ^ Pesch, Peter & Bidelman, William P. "Preface". Hot Stars in the Galactic Halo, p. xiii. Edited by Saul J. Adelman, Arthur R. Upgren, Carol J. Adelman. Cambridge University Press, Great Britain. 1994. Retrieved on July 22, 2016. ISBN 0521460875.
  150. ^ "Warner & Swasey Observatory". University Archives. Retrieved on May 10, 2017.
  151. ^ a b Souther J. Mark. "Warner and Swasey Observatory". Cleveland Historical.org Retrieved on July 18, 2016.
  152. ^ Bidelman, William P. & MacConnell, Darrell J. "The brighter stars of astrophysical interest in the southern sky". Astronomical Journal, 78(8):687-733. October, 1973. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  153. ^ Maitzen, H. M., Paunzen, E., Vogt, N., & Weiss, W. W. "Hβ photometry of southern CP2 stars: is the uvbybeta luminosity calibration also valid for peculiar stars?" Astronomy and Astrophysics. 355:1003-1008. March, 2000. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  154. ^ Lambert, David. L. & Sawyer, Scott. R. "Lithium in late-type giants. III - The weak G-band giants". Astrophysical Journal, Part 1; 283:192-199. August, 1984. Retrieved on May 17, 2017
  155. ^ Carney, Bruce W. "Southern subdwarf photometry". Astronomical Journal, 83(9):1087-1089. September, 1978. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  156. ^ Carney, Bruce W "Southern metal-poor stars - UBVRI photometry". Astronomical Journal, 85(1):38-43. January, 1980. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  157. ^ Maitzen, H. M. & Vogt, N. "Photoelectric photometry of peculiar and related stars. II Delta-a-photometry of 339 southern Ap-stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics, 123(1):48-60. June, 1983. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  158. ^ Beers, Timothy C., et al. "Population Studies. XIII. A New Analysis of the Bidelman-MacConnell ‘Weak-Metal’ Stars - Confirmation of Metal-Poor Stars in the Thick Disk of the Galaxy". Astrophysical Journal, 794(1)1-19. October, 2014. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  159. ^ Cowley, Charles R. & Aller, Margo F. "The Hg II Line in HR 465". Astrophysical Letters. 9:159-160. August, 1971. Retrieved on September 16, 2016.
  160. ^ Michaud, G., Reeves, H., & Charland, Y. "Diffusion and Isotope Anomalies of HG in Ap Stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics, 37:313-324. December, 1974. Retrieved on September 16, 2016.
  161. ^ Peterson, Deane M. "The photometric variability of Ap stars". Astrophysical Journal, 161:685-694. August, 1970. Retrieved on September 16, 2016.
  162. ^ Bidelman, William P. & Lee, San-GakAK. "Spectral types for proper motion stars". Astronomical Journal. 80:239 – 244. March, 1975. Retrieved on October 26, 2016.
  163. ^ a b c d e f Bidelman, William P. "On G.P. Kuiper's work on the stars of large proper motion". The HR Diagram: the 100th anniversary of Henry Norris Russell. (1978) IAU Symposium no. 80, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., November, 1977. Edited by A. G. Davis Philip and Donald S. Hayes. D. Reidel Pub. Co., Dordrecht, Holland. pp. 417-420. Retrieved on June 9, 2017.
  164. ^ a b c d http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1985ApJS...59..197B Bidelman, William P. "G. P. Kuiper's spectral classifications of proper-motion stars".] Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. 59:197-227. October, 1985. Retrieved on February 23, 2017.
  165. ^ Cruikshank, Dale P. "Gerard Peter Kuiper". Biographical Memoirs. 62:259-295. 1993. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Retrieved on June 16, 2017.
  166. ^ a b Pesch, Peter. "Warner and Swasey Observatory, CWRU, report for 1 July 1976 - 30 June 1977". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 10:364 – 367. January, 1978. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  167. ^ a b Pesch, Peter. "Warner and Swasey Observatory, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. Report for the period 1 July 1977 - 30 June 1978. January, 1979". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 11:363–366. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  168. ^ Luck, R. E. "Case Western Reserve University, Warner & Swasey Observatory report for 1 July 1993 - 30 June 1994". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 27(1):75 – 77. January, 1995. Retrieved on August 30, 2016.
  169. ^ a b NYT News Service. "Small group of astronomers create 'adventure'". The Times-News. Henderson, North Carolina. December 29, 1977. Retrieved on April 20, 2016.
  170. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Warner and Swasey Observatory report". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 5:242–247. January, 1973. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  171. ^ Lawren, Bill. "Stargazing on a shoestring: astronomy’s grass-roots self-help movement". The Scientist. June 27, 1988. Retrieved on April 19, 2016.
  172. ^ "Historical Milestones of the Hubble Project". NASA. July, 2009. Retrieved on June 6, 2017.
  173. ^ "Near infrared spectra of O stars and related objects". Mass loss and evolution of O-type stars. (1979). IAU Symposium, Canada, 1978. Dordrecht, D. Reidel Publishing Co. pp. 131-136. Retrieved on July 7, 2017
  174. ^ "BD+40 4220 -- Eclipsing binary of beta Lyr type (semi-detached)". SIMBAD Astronomical Database. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved on July 7, 2017.
  175. ^ "Discussion following Vreux and Andrillat". Mass loss and evolution of O-type stars. (1979). IAU Symposium, Canada, 1978. Dordrecht, D. Reidel Publishing Co. pp. 136-137. Retrieved on July 7, 2017.
  176. ^ a b Bidelman, William. P. "Objective-prism discoveries in the northern sky. I". Astronomical Journal. August, 1983, 88(8):1182-1186. Retrieved on June 11, 2016.
  177. ^ Houk, N. & Bidelman, W.P. Reclassification of the HD stars on the MK system: current status and future plans". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 11:395. March, 1979. Retrieved on June 27, 2017.
  178. ^ Schneider, H. "Intermediate and narrow band photometry of newly discovered CP 2 stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics, 161(1):203-205. June 1986. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  179. ^ Jorissen, Alain, & Boffin, Henri. "Evidences for interaction among wide binary systems: to Ba or not to Ba?" Binaries as Tracers of Stellar Formation. Cambridge University Press, Great Britain. 1992. Edited by Antoine Duquennoy & Michel Mayor. pp. 110 – 131. Retrieved on September 6, 2016. ISBN 0521433584
  180. ^ North, P. "The nature of the F Str lambda 4077 stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 186(1-2):191-199. November, 1987. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  181. ^ North, P., Berthet, S., & Lanz, T. "The nature of the F Str lambda 4077 stars. 3: Spectroscopy of the barium dwarfs and other CP stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 281(3):775-796. January, 1994. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  182. ^ North, P., Berthet, S., & Lanz, T. "The nature of the F Sfr λ4077 stars. V. Spectroscopic data". Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement, 103: 321-347. February, 1994. Retrieved on July 5, 2016.
  183. ^ Pesch, Peter. "Annual reports: Case Western Reserve University, Warner and Swasey Observatory, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. Report for the period 1 Jul 1990 - 30 Jun 1991". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 24(1):135-136. January, 1992. Retrieved on June 28, 2016.
  184. ^ Pesch, Peter." Case Western Reserve University, Warner and Swasey Observatory, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. Report for the period 1 Jul 1988 - 30 Jun 1989. January, 1990". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 22(1):147 – 149. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  185. ^ a b Garrison, Greg. "Is this what the Star of Bethlehem looked like? Venus, Jupiter put on a show". Al.com. June 30, 2015. Retrieved on June 30, 2017.
  186. ^ Sinnott, Roger W. "Thoughts on the Star of Bethlehem". Sky & Telescope, 36:384-386. 1968.
  187. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "Venus-Jupiter conjunctions". The Observatory: correspondence, 111(1102):121-122. June, 1991. Retrieved on June 7, 2016.
  188. ^ a b Begley, Sharon. "The Christmas star – or was it planets?" Newsweek. December 29, 1991. Retrieved on May 2, 2016.
  189. ^ Garrison, Greg. "What was the Star of Bethlehem?". Al.com. December 4, 2014. Retrieved on May 2, 2016.
  190. ^ Alpern, David. "Star of wonder". Newsweek on Air. December 22, 1991. To hear the interview, the knob on the timing bar can be pulled right to advance to ~43:54 where this segment begins.
  191. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Two Be stars with variable spectra". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 104(676):391. June, 1992. Retrieved on September 19, 2016.
  192. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Search for Low-Mass Supergiants - the High C1-STARS". Luminous High-Latitude Stars. The International Workshop on Luminous High-Latitude Stars, held in Cambridge, Massachusetts, May 28–30, 1992. Edited by Dimitar D. Sasselov. ASP. San Francisco, CA. pp. 49-56. 1993. Retrieved on October 20, 2016. ISBN 0937707643.
  193. ^ Giridhar, Sunetra, Molina, R., Ferro A. Arellano, and Selvakumar, G. "Chemical composition of A–F type post-AGB candidates". Monthly Notes of the Royal Astronomical Society, 406:290–306. 2010. Retrieved on October 20, 2016.
  194. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "Watch the details: how to deal with unexpected scientific results". The Carbon Star Phenomenon, 177th IAU Symposium, Turkey, 1996. Edited by Robert F. Wing. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Netherlands. pp. 3-4. 2000. Retrieved on July 27, 2016. ISBN 0792363469.
  195. ^ Pollacco, Don. "Book Review: The Kth reunion". The Observatory, 121(1162):198. June 2001. Retrieved on August 19, 2016.
  196. ^ Wolff, Sidney C. (1983) "The magnetic Ap stars". The A-Type Stars: Problems and Perspectives. Monograph series on Nonthermal Phenomena in Stellar Atmospheres. NASA SP-463. NASA Scientific and Technical Information Branch, Washington, D.C. p. 33 in original is 79 onscreen. Retrieved on July 27, 2016.
  197. ^ Bidelman, William P. "The magnetic B and A stars - their cause and cure". The Observatory. 22(1171):343-345. December, 2002. Retrieved on June 28, 2016.
  198. ^ Bidelman, William P. (2005)."Tc and Other Unstable Elements in Przybylski's Star". Cosmic Abundances as Records of Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis. In honor of David L. Lambert, ASP Conference Series. Austin, Texas, 2004. Edited by Thomas G. Barnes III and Frank N. Bash. San Francisco, CA. 336:309-312. Retrieved on July 12, 2016
  199. ^ McLaughlin, Dean B. "The seventy-second meeting of the American Astronomical Society". Popular Astronomy, 52(7):313-317. August, 1944. Retrieved on August 30, 2016.
  200. ^ "AAS member anniversaries:60-64 years". American Astronomical Society newsletter. Issue 144; p. 10. January–February, 2009, Retrieved on May 2, 2016.
  201. ^ "Presidents of the Cleveland Astronomical Society". Cleveland Astronomical Society; History. Retrieved on June 3, 2016.
  202. ^ Member directory. Sigma Xi website. Scroll down to find William P. Bidelman. Retrieved on May 19, 2016.
  203. ^ "JPL Small-Body Database Browser". NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Retrieved on June 3, 2016.
  204. ^ "HD 30353 -- Evolved supergiant star". SIMBAD Astronomical Database. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved on July 18, 2016.
  205. ^ "Brick Church files". Monroe County Library System. p. 103. Retrieved on August 18, 2016.
  206. ^ a b Bidelman, William P. "Remarks: William P. Bidelman, Warner and Swasey Observatory". The HR Diagram, In Memory of Henry Norris Russell. IAU Symposium No. 80, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC., 1977. Edited by A. G. Davis Philip & David H. DeVorkin. December, 1977. Pages S91 – S92. Retrieved on June 28, 2016.
  207. ^ "Columnist Marilyn Hagerty: A 1935 tribute to North Dakota". Grand Forks Herald. Published online on October 19, 2009. Retrieved on August 19, 2016
  208. ^ DeVorkin, David H. "The origins of the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram: discussion". The HR Diagram, In Memory of Henry Norris Russell. IAU Symposium No. 80, held Washington, DC., 1977 Edited by A. G. Davis Philip and David H. DeVorkin. December, 1977. Report 13:S61-S78; see S77. Retrieved on August 19, 2016.
  209. ^ Pesch, Peter. "Case Western Reserve University, Warner & Swasey Observatory/Department of Astronomy, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-7215. Report for the period 1 Jul 1992 - 30 Jun 1993". Bull. Am. Astron. Soc., 26(1):55–57. January, 1994. Retrieved on August 16, 2016.
  210. ^ Bidelman, William P. "Stellar classification". Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac. Stars and stellar systems, section 10. pp. 519-521. 1992. Edited by P. Kenneth Seidelmann. U.S. Naval Observatory. University Science Books, California. Retrieved on October 6, 2016. ISBN 0935702687.
  211. ^ "Verna Pearl Shirk Bidelman". The Cleveland Plain Dealer. Published December 13 to 16, 2009. Retrieved on June 30, 2017.
  212. ^ Cowley, Anne. P. "The VV Cephei Stars". Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 81(481):297-331. August, 1969. Retrieved on July 7, 2017.

Further reading edit

  • The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Stars by James B. Kaler (2006).

External links edit


Category:1918 births Category:2011 deaths Category:People from Grand Forks, North Dakota Category:People from Grand Forks County, North Dakota Category:People from North Dakota Category:American astronomers Category:American physicists Category:American astrophysicists Category:Spectroscopists Category:American military personnel of World War II Category:Harvard University alumni Category:University of Chicago alumni Category:University of Chicago faculty Category:University of California faculty Category:University of Michigan faculty Category:University of Texas at Austin faculty Category:Case Western Reserve University faculty Category:Scientists from Cleveland Category:Sigma Xi