![[Division logo]](SPD_logo_2003_25percent.gif)
Solar Physics Division Popular Writing Awards:
The Solar Physics Division (SPD) of the American Astronomical Society
(AAS) holds an annual competition for two Popular Writing Awards
to be awarded to authors of popular or semi-popular articles on the
Sun or its effects on the Earth's environment. The purpose of these
awards is to encourage scientists, science writers, and journalists to
write about the Sun and thereby educate and excite the public about
solar research.
Awards will be made in two categories, one for scientists (students,
professionals, and retired) and another for science writers and
journalists. One award will be offered in each category. Any living
scientist, science writer, or journalist, not currently serving on the
panel, is eligible to receive the award without consideration of race,
sex, or nationality (SPD or AAS membership not required).
Awards will be made for articles which are published the previous
calendar year and which, in the judgement of the selection committee,
best communicate the results from contemporary scientific studies of
the Sun and heliosphere. The articles will be judged based on the
following criteria: relevance of the article to solar astronomy or
solar physics, or space physics directly associated with the Sun;
educational value; accuracy in describing the scientific issues
involved; clarity of presentation; and number of readers who would
likely have seen the article. The article must be in English, and must
have been published in a North American newspaper, magazine, or
popular science journal. Books, book chapters, and
electronic publications are not eligible.
The cash amount of each award is $500. Awards will be accompanied by a
certificate. In the case of a winning article with multiple authors,
each author will receive a certificate, but a check for $500 will be
issued only to the lead author.
The articles will be judged by the SPD Popular Writing Awards
committee, which consists of four solar scientists and a fifth member
from outside the science community. Nominations for the awards may be
submitted to the address below; self-nominations are most welcome.
Nominations should give the title
of the article, the name(s) and address(es) of the author(s), where
and when the article was published, the category for which the article
is nominated (scientist or science writer/journalist), and in case of
a newspaper article, a copy of the article. The committee reserves the
right to nominate articles itself. The decisions of the committee are
final.
Link to SPD
homepage. The awards were incorporated in the
SPD bylaws in December 1998.
Nominations for the 2006 SPD Popular Writing Awards:
Please submit nominations on or before March 31, 2006, to:
SPD Popular Writing Awards Committee,
c/o Dr. Rachel Howe,
NSO,
950 N. Cherry Ave.,
Tucson, AZ 85719,
Tel: (520) 318-8573,
email: rhowe@noao.edu.
Previous Winners of the SPD Popular Writing Awards:
2005:
- Curt Suplee, Living with a Stormy Star, National
Geographic, July 2004
- Charles Liu, Our Stormy Sun, Natural History,
February 2004
2004:
- Joseph B. Verrengia (Associated Press), Watch out: Here
comes the Sun, The Salt Lake Tribune, Nov 16, 2003
- Bhola N. Dwivedi and Kenneth J. H. Phillips, Paradox of
the Sun's Hot Corona, Scientific American special edition
"New Light on the Solar System," October 2003
2003:
- Mark Garlick, The Fate of the Sun, Sky & Telescope,
October 2002
- E.C. Krupp (Griffith Obs.), Shelter from the Storm,
Sky & Telescope, October 2002
2002:
- Ron Cowen, Stormy Weather, Science News, vol. 159,
13 January 2001, pp. 26-28; and Sid Perkins, Pinning Down the
Sun-Climate Connection, Science News, vol. 159, 20 January 2001,
pp. 45-47
- Carolus J. Schrijver & Alan M. Title (Lockheed-Martin),
Today's Science of the Sun, Part 1 in Sky & Telescope,
February 2001; Part 2 in March 2001
2001:
- Curtis B. Suplee, Sun Studies May Shed Light on Global
Warming , The Washinton Post, October 9, 2000
- Paul M. Bellan (Caltech), Simulating Solar Prominences in
the Laboratory , American Scientist, March, 2000
2000:
- Peter Weiss, The Sun Also Writhes , Science News, March
27, 1999
- Sten Odenwald (Raytheon ITSS, NASA/GSFC), Solar Storms ,
The Washington Post, March 10, 1999
1999:
- Kurt Loft, Solar Sentry, The Tampa Tribune, September 7,
1998
- Adam Frank (Univ. of Rochester), Blowin' in the Solar
Wind, ASTRONOMY magazine, October, 1998
1998:
- Dick Thompson, Eyes on the Storm-Tossed Sun, TIME magazine,
September 8, 1997
- Bradley E. Schaefer (Yale Univ.), Sunspots that Changed the
World, Sky & Telescope, April 1997
1997:
- J. Madeleine Nash, Cosmic Storms Coming, TIME magazine,
September 9, 1996
- Kenneth R. Lang (Tufts Univ.), Unsolved Mysteries of the
Sun - Part I, Sky & Telescope, August 1996
SPD Popular Writing Awards Committee:
Current committee members:
- Rachel Howe (2005 - ), chair
- Peter Foukal (2005 - )
- TBD others
Former committee members:
- Ron Cowen (2004 - 2005)
- Rich Wolfson (2004 - 2005)
- Jack Zirker (2004 - 2005)
- Julia Saba (2003 - 2004)
- Charles Kankelborg (2003 - 2004)
- Terry Kucera (2002 - 2003)
- Curt Suplee (2002 - 2003)
- David Webb (2002 - 2003)
- Jeff Brosius (1999 - 2002)
- Mark Giampapa (2000 - 2002)
- Leila Belkora (1999 - 2001)
- David Smith (2000 - 2001)
- Aad van Ballegooijen (1997 - 2001)
- Peter Gilman (1999)
- Jeff Kuhn (1997 - 1998)
- Jay Pasachoff (1997 - 1998)
- Joan Schmelz (1997 - 1998)
References to Popular Articles on Solar Physics:
Year of publication: