| Mercury, 
              Sep/Oct 1995 Table of Contents 
              
 by 
              Vladis Vujnovic, University of Zagreb   (c) 
              1995 Astronomical Society of the Pacific 
               Over 
              the past several years, things have come together for Croatian astronomers, 
              thanks largely to better communications with the rest of the world. 
              On the down side, researchers are strapped for cash and, at one 
              point, had to rescue their telescope from a war zone. 
               In 
              much of Europe, astronomy goes back hundreds of years. Croatia's 
              tradition is shorter. Although Dubrovnik-born Rugjer Boskovic was 
              a central figure in Newtonian physics during the 18th century, the 
              first astronomical observatory was not founded in Zagreb until 1903. 
              For several decades it was headed by science writer Oton Kuchera, 
              famous for his book, Our Sky, by which astronomy grabbed 
              many of our souls. 
               After 
              World War II, Zagreb's university expanded, the scientific disciplines 
              diversified, and popular science flourished. A popular astronomy 
              journal, Man and Universe, started 40 years ago and 
              continues to this day. A Zeiss planetarium opened in Zagreb in 1965 
              and became a frequent destination for pupils from across the country. 
              A dozen amateur societies are spread all over the country and celebrate 
              the Day of Astronomy each Dec. 3. Some societies have their own 
              domes, such as the Observatory Visnjan in Istria, which organizes 
              courses for the advanced amateur and is on its way to becoming a 
              de facto professional observatory. 
               As 
              much as we would wish to, we cannot say that the astronomy is a 
              regular subject in the school -- better to say that it was never 
              completely excluded. On the other hand, for 30 years an enthusiastic 
              group of teachers has supported and conducted out- of-class activities. 
              School astronomical groups have taken part in competitions, observed 
              astronomical objects, analyzed the results, and developed instruments. 
              This kind of activity was stimulated and directed by a movement 
              called "Science for Youth," supported by the local astronomical 
              societies. Fifteen summer schools for the young astronomers were 
              organized, mainly at the seaside. It is partly due to this persistent, 
              broadly anchored activity that astronomy last year entered school 
              curriculums as an optional subject. 
               At 
              the university, there is a small community of professional astronomers. 
              Most belong to a narrow generation interval -- around 40 years old 
              -- and have physics backgrounds. The Faculty of Geodesy supplements 
              their efforts with research in positional astronomy. Astronomers 
              use facilities situated at the Hvar Observatory, which opened in 
              1972 close to Split on the Adriatic coast. The instrument was dismantled 
              from 1991 to 1992 because of the risk of damage during the war, 
              but now all the instruments are again in place. Researchers investigate 
              two main topics, solar physics and variable stars, with occasional 
              excursions to other topics such as asteroids. Hvar has a double 
              solar telescope and Cassegrain photometer, with a 65-centimeter 
              mirror and effective focal length of 7.5 meters (see picture). The 
              observatory is on a hill 245 meters above sea level, immediately 
              above a resort town. Other research relies on international collaboration, 
              especially with the Academy of Sciences in Prague. 
               What 
              is the present situation in astronomy? It can be surprising that 
              in time of war, or neither-war-nor peace, when standards of living 
              and the incomes of professional institutions suffer great blows, 
              intellectual activity can undergo a renaissance. Human nature compensates 
              for distress. In Croatia, there could be also a more rational explanation: 
              Fax and electronic mail expanded rapidly from the declaration of 
              independence in 1990. The professional astronomical society entered 
              the International Astronomical Union, our students and research 
              workers started to study and work abroad, and foreign experts began 
              to visit us. 
               Over 
              the past three years, the position of astronomy within the Faculty 
              of Science has improved. Astrophysical courses are taught intensively 
              in the graduate physics program, complementing special courses that 
              have been taught on the postgraduate level for two decades. General 
              astronomical courses are nowadays obligatory for teachers in physics, 
              mathematics, and technical education in all four Croatian universities: 
              Zagreb, Osijek, Rijeka, and Split. 
               Our 
              financial support is sufficient for the normal life of a citizen 
              -- income, daily expenses within the institutions, repairs of old 
              apparatus -- but there is no money for new instruments and new people. 
              We look to participate in international endeavors, projects, and 
              teams. 
               Fifty 
              thousand of our school pupils are exiles from parts of Croatia and 
              Bosnia and Herzegovina; the total number of such people is nearly 
              400,000. They too share the privileges of the education system, 
              including astronomy classes, amateur activities, and competitions. 
              They are normally included in the schools as everybody else. 
               VLADIS 
              VUJNOVIC is a researcher in atomic spectroscopy at the University 
              of Zagreb, Croatia. He has written monographs in atomic physics 
              and popular-level astronomy. He got interested in astronomy as a 
              child when he asked his parents why people can't live on the Sun. 
              He soon went on to model the constellations with marbles of different 
              size and colors on the living-room carpet. His email address is 
              vvujnovic@olimp.irb.hr. 
              The University of Zagreb is on the World Wide Web at gopher://gopher.ifs.hr. 
               
             Illustration 
              caption  The 
              65-centimeter Cassegrain telescope of Hvar Observatory. The dome 
              is located on an island just off the Dalmatian Coast, about 40 kilometers 
              (25 miles) south of Split and 110 kilometers (70 miles) east of 
              Mostar in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Photo courtesy of Vladis Vujnovic. 
              
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