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Bohdan Paczynski, renowned astrophysicist, dies at age 67 (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old May 2nd 07, 05:03 PM posted to sci.astro
Andrew Yee
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Default Bohdan Paczynski, renowned astrophysicist, dies at age 67 (Forwarded)

News from PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
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22 Chambers St.
Princeton, New Jersey 08542
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Media contact:
Chad Boutin, (609) 258-5729

For immediate release: April 24, 2007

Bohdan Paczynski, renowned astrophysicist, dies at age 67

Princeton astrophysicist Bohdan Paczynski, whose insights into the nature
of celestial phenomena guided many developments in his field, died April
19 after a three-year battle with brain cancer. He was 67.

Paczynski's pioneering efforts to develop the technique called
gravitational lensing permitted the discovery of the first terrestrial
planet found outside our solar system. Despite widespread skepticism from
the astrophysics community, he also championed the idea that the
still-mysterious events known as gamma ray bursts originated billions of
light years away rather than within our own Milky Way galaxy -- a theory
that was ultimately confirmed by observations.

"He was incredibly creative and original," said Michael Strauss, a
professor of astrophysical sciences and a colleague of Paczynski's. "All
his life he brought interesting approaches to interesting problems."

Paczynski was also well respected for both his enthusiasm for teaching and
his support for other astronomers, on campus and around the world. One of
the world's foremost experts on the lives of stars, he routinely opened
the minds of the undergraduates who took his courses on stellar evolution
and mentored many graduate-level scientists as well.

"Bohdan was always the center of our daily departmental gatherings," said
David Spergel, chair of the astrophysical sciences department. "He brought
perspective to our conversations about stars and everything else as well.
He didn't just teach students. He taught us too."

Paczynski obtained his Ph.D. in astronomy from Warsaw University in his
native Poland and spent 20 years at what is now Warsaw's Copernicus
Astronomical Center, where he attained the rank of professor in 1979. He
came to Princeton in 1982 and in 1989 was named the Lyman Spitzer Jr.
Professor of Theoretical Astrophysics.

His early career was defined largely by his studies of the interesting
ways stars can change, beginning with his teenage observations of double
stars called binaries, whose combined brightness can vary dramatically
when one eclipses the other.

Because gravity bends light rays, a star passing directly in front of
another can focus the background star's light in a manner akin to a
telescope lens. Paczynski showed that this effect could be applied to
survey the population of stars in our galaxy. Now known as gravitational
microlensing, the technique has enabled astronomers to determine the mass
of the stars in the Milky Way.

"Einstein's theory of relativity predicts that gravitational lensing
should occur, but Bohdan first worked out its technical underpinnings,"
said astrophysicist Jeremiah Ostriker, who first brought Paczynski to
Princeton. "He turned it into a backyard science that has produced our
best catalog of the most stars."

A consortium of astronomers led by Paczynski eventually founded the
Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE), which has witnessed
thousands of lensing events and now has a telescope at Chile's Las
Campanas Observatory dedicated to searching for more. Paczynski's efforts
revealed that stars, even including small, faint ones, could not fully
account for the gravity holding our galaxy together, demonstrating the
presence of the substance known as dark matter.

"The next thing Bohdan realized was that when you observe lensing that
often, you can do other clever things, such as use it to look for planets
around faraway stars," Strauss said. "If there's a planet orbiting the
foreground star, the planet will subtly change the lensing signature,
which can be used to infer the existence of the planet."

These insights led to OGLE's discovery last year of one of the smallest
planets known to exist outside the solar system: a rocky planet five and a
half times the size of Earth orbiting a star more than 20,000 light years
away. Some 70 astronomers were on the team that made the discovery, but
Spergel said Paczynski was the acknowledged intellectual leader.

"His influence on the field was enormous," Spergel said. "Entire subfields
of astrophysics either would not have existed without him, or would have
been radically different."

Paczynski's colleagues mentioned his perceptions about gamma ray bursts as
a prime example.

"People have known about these mysterious bursts of energy since the Cold
War, and everyone thought that with such high luminosity they must
originate somewhere within our galaxy," Strauss said. "Bohdan looked at
the data and said, maybe it's not so crazy to think they are from much
farther away. Other astrophysicists thought he was nuts, but he turned out
to be right."

Paczynski, whose generosity toward others was legendary, maintained strong
relations with the astronomy community in Poland, and he hosted a steady
stream of visitors from his homeland.

"The role of Professor Paczynski in the development of modern Polish
astronomy is enormous," said Andrzej Udalski, a professor of astronomy at
Warsaw University. "He was always full of bright ideas and shared them
with his many collaborators. To many of them, the collaboration with
Paczynski was a crucial point in their careers. Practically every active
Polish astronomer in the last 40 years was in one or another way
influenced by him."

Many of his research partners on the OGLE experiment are from Poland, and
Ostriker said Paczynski was instrumental in bringing several promising
Polish scientists to visit American universities.

"He was always trying to give credit and support to others," Ostriker
said. "He was an extremely modest man. Bohdan would tell me, 'I have no
expertise in anything -- I just do things based on common sense.' But he
had an awful lot of common sense."

Paczynski received many honors, including the Gold Medal of the Royal
Astronomical Society and the 2006 Henry Norris Russell Lectureship, the
highest award of the American Astronomical Society. He was a member of the
Polish Academy of Sciences and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences.

He is survived by his wife, Hanka, and their two children, Agnieszka and
Martin.

A University memorial service will be scheduled at a later date. Memorial
contributions may be made to the Brain Tumor Society Ride for Research in
which Martin is participating.


 




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