Macarthur Astronomical Society

Macarthur Astronomical Society is an organisation of amateur astronomers, based in the Macarthur Region of outer South Western Sydney, NSW, Australia, including the local government areas of the City of Campbelltown, Camden Council, Wollondilly Shire, the City of Liverpool and surrounding districts.

Macarthur Astronomical Society
AbbreviationMAS
Formation15th January 1996
Legal statusNon-profit organization
PurposeFoster the science of astronomy
Location
Region served
Macarthur Region
Membership
100-140
President
John Rombi
Main organ
Prime Focus magazine.
Websitewww.macastro.org.au
A Macarthur Astronomy Forum being introduced by Macarthur Astronomical Society President, Tony Law.

Objectives and activities

The constitutionally adopted objectives of the Society are: (i) to foster the science of Astronomy; (ii) to organise observational field nights for the purpose of carrying out astronomical observation; (iii) to assist and give advice regarding astronomical instrumentation; and (iv) to participate in/co-operate with other scientific societies and groups with a similar scientific interest in astronomy.[1]

In keeping with these objectives, the Society's three core activities are:

  1. The Macarthur Astronomy Forum.[2]
  2. Dark sky astronomical observing nights for members. These are held regularly at two locations: the Dudley Chesham Sports ground at The Oaks, owned by Wollondilly Council; and a property at Belanglo Forest, owned by International House, University of Sydney, for the purpose of telescopic observing and astro-imaging.[3]
  3. Public outreach events, which include visits to schools and other community organisations; and open nights for the general public, generally held at either the Campbelltown Rotary Observatory at Western Sydney University or the Dudley Chesham Sports Ground, The Oaks.[4]

Formation and management

Formed in 1996[5] in Ingleburn, NSW by Philip Ainsworth, Macarthur Astronomical Society Inc. is registered as an independent Incorporated Association by the NSW Office of Fair Trading.[6] Its affairs are governed by its own constitution[7] and managed by an elected seven member Management Committee. The Financial year commences on 1 March. As required by the Office of Fair Trading, the Secretary of the Society acts as Public Officer.[8] The Society is approved by the NSW Commissioner of Police for the purpose of an exemption from obtaining a laser pointer permit.[9]

Macarthur Astronomy Forum

The monthly meetings of the Society provide a platform for professional astronomers and prominent amateur astronomers, on each third Monday (Jan.to Nov.). These meetings were renamed the Macarthur Astronomy Forum in 2011. Guest speakers have included Nobel Laureate Professor Brian Schmidt, Professor Bryan Gaensler, Australia's Astronomer at Large, Professor Fred Watson,[10] Dr Mark Phillips and NASA astronaut Greg Chamitoff.

Office holders

Dr. Ragbir Bhathal (University of Western Sydney), Patron of Macarthur Astronomical Society, 1997-2011
Professor Bryan Gaensler University of Toronto, Patron of Macarthur Astronomical Society 2009-2020
Geraint F. Lewis Professor Geraint Lewis, University of Sydney, Patron of Macarthur Astronomical Society since 2020

List of Patrons

Patrons are appointed by the Management Committee. Between 2009 and 2011 the Society had dual Patrons.

Presidents

  • 1996–2000 Phillip Ainsworth
  • 2000–2007 Noel Sharpe
  • 2007–2011 John Rombi[12]
  • 2011–2012 Trevor Rhodes[13]
  • 2012–2015 Chris Malikoff[14]
  • 2015–2019 Tony Law[15]
  • 2019-2020 Allan Hobbs[16]
  • 2020- current John Rombi [17]

Management Committee

The Committee is tasked with the total management of the affairs of the Society and aims to mix youth with experience. It meets monthly and consists of a President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer and three other Committee Members. Office bearers are elected by the membership at an Annual General Meeting, normally held in April each year. Whilst a ballot is provided for, the Society has traditionally never received more than one nomination per position, thus a ballot has never been held.

Awards

On 9 December 2014, MAS won the University of Western Sydney (renamed Western Sydney University in 2015) "Excellence in Partnership Award". The University awards this to recognize the many and highly valued contributions of the University's community partners. The accompanying citation reads: "The Macarthur Astronomical Society has, in partnership with the Campbelltown Rotary Observatory, conducted astronomy talks and activities to bring the latest advances in physics, astrophysics and high technology to the community. This enables the community to participate in debates about science in an informed manner with experts and politicians."

Youth in Astronomy

The Society instituted an annual Students Night in 2015, to encourage school children from Prairewood High School to study the science of astronomy and report their research findings to the Society's Macarthur Astronomy Forum in December each year.

During 2018, a Student Mentoring Programme was introduced to assist year 7 – 11 students at Broughton Anglican College[18] to complete a scientific astronomical investigation as part of their science courses.

Publications and exhibitions

Journal

The Society's journal "Prime Focus" was published monthly, for the benefit of members, between 1996 and 2012. Initially the publication was a printed edition but since 2009 it was distributed electronically. In 2011, the first colour editions were published and printed copies became available again. The journal ceased in October 2012.[19] but resumed in April 2020.

Publications

The Society has published two DVDs, "magnitude" and "magnitude II", both containing the best astro-images taken by its members.

Authors

The Society has the following authors of astronomy books within its ranks.[20]

Exhibitions

The Society has held major public exhibitions displaying the astro-photographic work of its members:

Observatory

In 2011, the Society set up a sub-committee to seek a suitable site - remote from city lighting, yet within easy reach of Campbelltown/Camden - at which to locate its first astronomical observatory. In 2012, a suitable site was identified in the Dharawal National Park and the Society is pursuing opportunities to secure use of the site.[27] The location was until recently the site of the North Cliff coal mine, operated by BHP Billiton. Whilst anticipating some opposition to placing an observatory in a national park, the Society was inspired by the Australian Astronomical Observatory in the Warrumbungles National Park and the concept has received much local support.[28]

If successful, the observatory will be used for astronomical research, public outreach, astro-imaging and members private observing.[29]

Distributed computing

The Society organises a Citizen Science team[30] for the purpose of carrying out scientific research using the Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC) Project Management middleware platform, which allows users to contribute to a range of scientific computing projects at the same time. Distributed computing is often also referred to as Citizen Science, Volunteer Computing or Grid Computing. The team is currently working as volunteers on projects for theSkyNet, SETI@home, Einstein@home, asteroids@home, LHC@home and other BOINC projects.

gollark: I think that would be a rally against a rally against a rally against a rally. It's hard to say. Rally stopped sounding like an actual word some time ago.
gollark: Anti³rally⁴ when?
gollark: Current historians increasingly use lots of past records to assemble a more complete picture of history, instead of just looking at things explicitly written as historical records. There's no reason to think future ones wouldn't do this even more, and we have a *lot* of data on random unimportant people, and the ability to store it basically forever (unless there's some kind of civilizational collapse, in which case it will all just disintegrate into half-remembered legends).
gollark: Hmm. Discord is rebelling and refusing to display an embed.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flynn_effect

See also

List of astronomical societies

References

  1. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/mas-documentation/our-constitution
  2. http://macarthur-chronicle-campbelltown.whereilive.com.au/news/story/stars-of-astronomy-set-to-visit-campbelltown/
  3. http://macarthur-chronicle-camden.whereilive.com.au/photos/gallery/macarthur-astronomical-society/
  4. http://macarthur-chronicle-wollondilly.whereilive.com.au/news/story/macarthur-astronomical-society-will-be-seeing-stars/
  5. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/our-history
  6. http://www.search.asic.gov.au/cgi-bin/gns030c?state_number=Y2418036&juris=2&hdtext=NSW&srchsrc=1 Y2418036
  7. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/mas-documentation/our-constitution
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-03-01. Retrieved 2014-10-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-11-26. Retrieved 2015-11-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. https://www.minister.industry.gov.au/ministers/karenandrews/media-releases/star-science-appointed-astronomer-large
  11. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/information/our-patron
  12. http://macarthur-chronicle-camden.whereilive.com.au/news/story/macarthur-astronomical-society-president-john-rombi-steps-down/
  13. http://macarthur-chronicle-camden.whereilive.com.au/news/story/trevor-rhodes-looks-to-the-stars/
  14. Fairfax Regional Media (1 May 2012). "Neil's big step, Chris's giant leap". Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser.
  15. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/mas-documentation/annual-reports/annual-report-2016
  16. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas
  17. https://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/information/our-history
  18. https://www.broughton.nsw.edu.au/news/announcing-partnership-with-macarthur-astronomical-society?A=SearchResult&SearchID=3708317&ObjectID=7483165&ObjectType=35
  19. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/our-history
  20. http://www.macastro.org.au/mas/index.php/about-us/information/book-authors
  21. https://www.westernsydney.edu.au/campbelltown_observatory/home/books
  22. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/fortunate-universe/780F63557252678C09B4198A2DC04F21
  23. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cosmic-revolutionarys-handbook/08C93F8E64EA5334C8471B481B8BB4D0
  24. http://macarthur-chronicle-campbelltown.whereilive.com.au/events/story/macarthur-astronomical-society-presents-m-a-g-n-i-t-u-d-e/
  25. "Macarthur Astronomical Society - magnitude". YouTube. 10 October 2010.
  26. http://macarthur-chronicle-campbelltown.whereilive.com.au/lifestyle/story/macarthur-astronomical-society-exhibition-at-campbelltown-arts-centre/
  27. Fairfax Regional Media (16 October 2012). "Dharawal observatory plan gets thumbs-up, but council wants more details". Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser.
  28. Fairfax Regional Media (9 October 2012). "Reminded of our place on the planet". Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser.
  29. Fairfax Regional Media (9 October 2012). "Dharawal observatory a heavenly idea". Campbelltown-Macarthur Advertiser.
  30. "Meetings & Events - Macarthur Astronomical Society". macastro.org.au. Archived from the original on 2015-03-01. Retrieved 2014-10-14.
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