TY - JOUR
T1 - Ms. Hisako Koyama
T2 - From Amateur Astronomer to Long-Term Solar Observer
AU - Knipp, Delores
AU - Liu, Huixin
AU - Hayakawa, Hisashi
N1 - Funding Information:
D. J. K. thanks William Denig and Sarah Gibson for commenting on the manu script. She also thanks Leif Svalgaard for bringing Ms. Koyama’s record to light. H. H. thanks T. Horaguchi, K. Saijo, T. Nakajima, and K. Noji, and other National Museum staff members, fellows, and Ms. Koyama’s younger colleagues, for providing access to archived data, interviews related to Ms. Koyama’s life, and permissions for image reproductions. H. H. also thanks Shibata for introduction to staff at NMNS. H. L. thanks Sawako Maeda for interesting discussions. H. L. acknowledges support from JSPS KAKENHI grant 15K05301. H. H. acknowledges support form Grant-in-Aid from (1) JSPS Research Fellow JP17J06954; (2) the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan, grant JP15H05816; and (3) the Exploratory and Mission Research Projects of the Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere. D. J. K. was partially supported by NSF grant DES-1446704 via a contract with Queensborough Community College of New York. We thank the National Museum of Nature and Science for maintaining the database of “Observations of sunspots 1947-1996, Hisako Koyama,” and for providing reproductions of Ms. Koyama’s sunspot drawings, with all rights reserved. NCAR is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. Data related to this manuscript can be found in the references provided and at http://www.kahaku.go. jp/research/db/science_engineering/ sunspot/.
Publisher Copyright:
©2017. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2017/10
Y1 - 2017/10
N2 - The path to science for a girl of any nationality born in the early twentieth century was formidable-to-nonexistent. Yet paths were forged by a few. We present the little-known story of one of Japan's premier solar observers and her contribution to the world's understanding of sunspots and space weather cycles. Ms. Hisako Koyama, born in Tokyo in 1916, became a passionate amateur astronomer, a dedicated solar observer, and a long-serving staff member of the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo. As a writer for amateur astronomy journals she advised many on the details and joys of sky viewing. She created a consistent, extended record of sunspots. Her multidecade archive of sunspot drawings is one of the “backbones” for the recent international recalibration of the sunspot record that provides insight into space weather reaching back to the early 1600s. We detail her contributions to the citizens of Japan as an ambassador of astronomy and her international contribution to understanding the symmetries and asymmetries of the solar cycle. We comment on the value of her continuous record of sunspots and on her tenacity in promoting a science that links to space weather.
AB - The path to science for a girl of any nationality born in the early twentieth century was formidable-to-nonexistent. Yet paths were forged by a few. We present the little-known story of one of Japan's premier solar observers and her contribution to the world's understanding of sunspots and space weather cycles. Ms. Hisako Koyama, born in Tokyo in 1916, became a passionate amateur astronomer, a dedicated solar observer, and a long-serving staff member of the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo. As a writer for amateur astronomy journals she advised many on the details and joys of sky viewing. She created a consistent, extended record of sunspots. Her multidecade archive of sunspot drawings is one of the “backbones” for the recent international recalibration of the sunspot record that provides insight into space weather reaching back to the early 1600s. We detail her contributions to the citizens of Japan as an ambassador of astronomy and her international contribution to understanding the symmetries and asymmetries of the solar cycle. We comment on the value of her continuous record of sunspots and on her tenacity in promoting a science that links to space weather.
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U2 - 10.1002/2017SW001704
DO - 10.1002/2017SW001704
M3 - Comment/debate
AN - SCOPUS:85030476317
SN - 1542-7390
VL - 15
SP - 1215
EP - 1221
JO - Space Weather
JF - Space Weather
IS - 10
ER -