Clifford Cunningham

Clifford J. Cunningham is a Canadian-born astronomer and author of numerous books on asteroids. He obtained his Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Waterloo in 1976; upon enrollment, at age 15, he was the youngest student ever to attend UW.[1] In 1991 he earned his BA in Classical Studies. For his book Introduction to Asteroids (1988) and development of The Minor Planet Index to Scientific Papers (currently on the small bodies node of the Planetary Data System managed by NASA), an asteroid was named in his honour. Asteroid 4276 was named Clifford. [2]He is a contributing editor to Mercury magazine (since 2001), and a contributor to The Astronomical Calendar (1988-2013). In 2013 he became affiliated with NARIT, the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand. In 2016 he was appointed associate editor of the Journal of Astronomical History & Heritage, and in 2014 a contributor to Encyclopædia Britannica.[3] He earned his PhD in the history of astronomy at the University of Southern Queensland in Australia in 2015.

After years of research, Dr. Cunningham finally discovered who actually coined the word 'asteroid'. Although 'asteroid' has been attributed to the famous astronomer William Herschel, Cunningham found evidence that it was actually proposed by Greek expert Charles Burney, Jr., the son of a friend of Herschel.[4] In 2014 he discovered a previously unrecognised allusion to the aurora borealis in Milton's Paradise Lost.

Publications

Annals of Science 61 (4), pg. 469-480. <http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/00033790310001660164>

Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage vol. 12 (3), pg. 240-248.

Journal of Astronomical History and Heritage 14(2), 129-135.

Journal for the History of Astronomy, 42, part 3, 283-306.

Journal for the History of Astronomy, 44, 187-205.

Culture and Cosmos. Special issue: Literature and the Stars, 17, 3-29.

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, 20, 47-62.

Renaissance and Reformation, 39(1).

References

Notes


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.