From Sky & Telescope, December 2003. Copyright 2003 by Sky Publishing Corp. Reproduced with permission of the publisher. www.skyandtelescope.com. Star Trails - By David H. Levy
The AAVSO's Invariable Star
To me, an observation of a variable star is not a number, not a statistic. It's something very much alive. I see the brightness estimate and imagine the observer's face light up as he or she looks at the star through a telescope. — Janet Mattei
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Janet Akyüz Mattei celebrates her 30th year as director of the American Association of Variable
Star Observers (AAVSO). Founded in 1911, the AAVSO is one of the oldest and largest amateur
organizations in the world, with members in more than 40 countries and more than 10 million
observations in its database. |
In the summer of 1969 in the US
Northeast, a young astronomy student named Janet Akyüz was looking
through the telescope at Maria Mitchell
Observatory on Nantucket Island and
studying photographs of V2584 Sagittarii, a faint RR Lyrae-type variable star
that fluctuates in brightness in less than
a day. That glorious, starlit summer night
was hard to beat, and for Janet and the
American Association of Variable Star
Observers (AAVSO), it was a summer that
changed the organization's history.
"Maria Mitchell Observatory is really
something," Janet recalls. "It gives students an opportunity to do real research,
to gather and analyze data. Each student
would be given a star — our personal
star — and then report about it at the
annual meeting of the AAVSO the following October." This was her first real
contact with the group. When October
came around, the meeting was held at
the same facility where she had spent her
summer.
Observatory director Dorrit Hoffleit
(S&T.. February 1999, page 89), who was
attending a conference in Virginia, was
due to return in time to run the AAVSO
meeting, but a terrible fog prevented her
from getting to Nantucket. "I let Margaret Mayall, then AAVSO director, know
that Janet would handle everything until
I arrived," she says.
Like most AAVSO meetings, that one
included a session at the observatory. "I
had never seen observing as intense as
that evening," says Janet. "John Bortle
and Charles Scovil, two of the association's most enthusiastic observers, were
looking at variables and calling out their
brightness estimates one after another.
Just as we were about to close the dome,
two more guys came. One of them was
my future husband, Michael Mattei. The
two were hungry and wanted to know if
there were any restaurants that were
open late. The next day, we had the meeting and paper session, and that's where I
gave my talk on V2584 Sagittarii."
Roots in Turkey
Janet was born in Bodrum, on Turkey's
picturesque southwestern coast. After
graduating from high school she traveled
to the United States to study at Brandeis
University, from which she graduated in
1965. "I started out as a physics major
but wanted to take classes in as many sciences as I could," says Janet, "so I majored in general science. After graduating
I still didn't know what to do with my
life, so I worked at Beth Israel Hospital
for a year and a half, running its cardio-pulmonary laboratory."
In 1967 she returned to her native
country to teach physics and mathematics. Later on she quit teaching and began
graduate studies in astronomy. During
this period she heard about Hoffleit's
summer program on Nantucket. "Dorrit's decision to hire me as her assistant
changed my life," says Janet.
Joining the AAVSO
At the end of 1969 Janet became a member of the AAVSO and, three years later,
while a graduate student at the University of Virginia, she married Michael
Mattei. She also joined the AAVSO staff
as Mayall's assistant the year before the
longtime director decided to retire. "Why
don't you apply for the position of director?" Mayall encouraged Janet. The latter
had been an assistant for only six months,
but at the AAVSO's council meeting in
the fall of 1973, the body chose her to be
director, a position she has now held for
30 years.
Janet began her new job in awe. "I was
frightened to death," she remembers.
"Where could I direct the organization
that would make a difference?" Her first
decision was to begin digitizing incoming observations so computers could plot the stars' light curves automatically. It
turns out that Janet began her career at
the right time, just as technology was allowing the building of spaceborne observatories. In 1978 two satellites went into
orbit that would have a profound influence on the future of the AAVSO. One
was the High Energy Astrophysics Observatory No. 2 (HEAD 2), renamed the
Einstein Observatory, carrying a sizable
X-ray telescope; the other was the Inter
national Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE). These
satellites put visual observations at a level of importance never before seen in the
AAVSO's history.
Cataclysmic variable stars, which can
climb several magnitudes in brightness
in a matter of hours, helped turn the
tide. The AAVSO's worldwide network
of observers would monitor the behavior of these stars and report immediately
when one of them, such as SS Cygni or
U Geminorum, would go into outburst.
Janet would then notify the satellites' observing teams. X-ray emissions were first
detected in SS Cygni thanks to alert amateur observers.
Exciting Times
"My involvement with Janet and the
AAVSO really took off in 1992 with the
launch of EUVE, the Extreme Ultraviolet
Explorer satellite," says Christopher W. Mauche (Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory). "I wanted to use EUVE to
acquire extreme ultraviolet spectra of
dwarf novae in outburst, and since these
observations required [real-time] target-of-opportunity scheduling, I needed to rely on Janet and the AAVSO to inform
us when one of my targets went into
outburst. The first target, SS Cygni, went
into outburst just as I was getting on a
plane to go to Washington, DC, to serve
on a NASA peer-review panel. I learned
about the event when I arrived at my
hotel —Janet had left a message. For
some reason I was not able to get in
touch with her that evening, and I spent
part of a restless night trying to decide
how and when to begin the EUVE observation. But when I contacted Janet in the
morning, I found that she had already
alerted the appropriate individuals at
EUVE and NASA and had started the
observations for me! I had left her with
`power of attorney' and she had exercised it!"
Mauche adds: "Subsequent to these
studies, I have done observations of dwarf
novae in outburst with the Hubble Space
Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory. In each case I've relied on Janet
and her organization to trigger the target-of-opportunity observations."
"The recent discovery of the visual
afterglow of a gamma-ray burst by South
African amateur astronomer Berto
Monard is further testament to the fore
sight and encouragement of Janet," notes
gamma-ray astronomer Jerry Fishman
(NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center).
Monard made the discovery last July
25th from his observatory near Pretoria
(see SkyandTelescope.com/news/article_
1025_l.asp).
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| In 1997 Janet Mattei joined friends in celebrating the 90th birthday of former Maria Mitchell Observatory director Dorrit Hoffleit (second from right). In September 2003 Mattei was diagnosed
with acute leukemia. As this issue goes to press, she is undergoing treatment at a Boston hospital. |
"Janet was determined to enter the
province of the `Big Boys,' the elite professionals with their 4-meter, and larger,
telescopes who are quick to seize the
rapid GRB follow-up challenge every
time a good location is found," says Fishman. "Her inspiration, together with the
technical assistance of AAVSO members
Aaron Price and Arne Henden, has now
successfully thrown the organization into
one of the hottest areas of high-energy
astrophysics today."
I remember that one AAVSO member
marveled at this turn of events at the organization's meeting I attended in 1978:
"I had believed that the professional astronomers had all the data they needed
from us," the member said. "Years ago we
were all part of the excitement of observing for researchers who needed our work.
Then there came a long period in which
we wondered if there was any value to
what we were doing at all. Now the old
excitement, the freshness, is back again."
With new technology, advanced satellites, and education programs, that excitement still drives the AAVSO today. In
the 1980s Janet decided to digitize all of
the AAVSO's data, back to even before
the organization's founding in 1911. In
1986 she welcomed AAVSO members to
their new headquarters on Birch Street
in Cambridge, Massachusetts, right next
door to the offices of Sky & Telescope.
On her 30th anniversary with the
AAVSO, Janet is leading the organization
into the brave new world of CCD observing. She has also begun the massive
project of validating 10.5 million observations of nearly 5,000 stars against the
original observing reports.
"The AAVSO has grown tremendously
in worldwide importance under her leadership," notes Hoffleit.
"The AAVSO is made up of remarkable, dedicated amateur astronomers,"
Janet says. "The camaraderie is truly special and unique. I feel that the future
holds even more exciting things as more
observers extend their observations to
fainter targets with CCDs, as more variables are discovered by professional all
sky surveys, and as more data become
available via the Internet. It's easy to get
distracted in view of so many options
that we have today. The challenge is to
think big, to have a vision, and to move
toward that vision."
David Levy joined the AAVSO in 1974. He is
the author of Observing Variable Stars: A
Guide for the Beginner (Cambridge University Press, 1998).