Pannekoek’s one revolution: Anton Pannekoek and the Modernization of the Dutch astronomical community

Publication date

2019

Authors

Baneke, DavidORCID 0000-0002-6920-9940ISNI 0000000040746780

Editors

Tai, Chaokang
van der Steen, Bart
van Dongen, Jeroen

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

When Anton Pannekoek left Dutch astronomy in 1905, he left a stagnating, uninspiring research community. When he returned a decade later, things started to change in the Dutch astronomical community. By the mid-1920s, De Sitter, Hertzsprung, Oort, Minnaert, and Pannekoek had built a flourishing discipline. Through their work and students, they shaped Dutch astronomy for the rest of the twentieth century. This paper focuses on Pannekoek’s return to astronomy and his role in Dutch astronomy in the Interwar period. First, I will provide a detailed reconstruction of his failed appointment at Leiden Observatory in 1918-1919. After that, I will analyse how he could play an influential role, even though he had little staff, students, or facilities at the University of Amsterdam.

Keywords

Anton Pannekoek, history of astronomy, science and politics, discipline formation, astronomy education

Citation

Baneke, D M 2019, Pannekoek’s one revolution : Anton Pannekoek and the Modernization of the Dutch astronomical community. in C Tai, B van der Steen & J van Dongen (eds), Anton Pannekoek's Views on Science and Society : Modernity in Science, Radical Politics, and Visual Art. Amsterdam University Press, pp. 87-108. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvp7d57c.7