Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (original) (raw)
Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams
The Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams (CBAT), founded in Europe as a result of the sungrazing comet of 1882 to announce new astronomical discoveries, is a nonprofit organization located on the Harvard University campus since 1966. Principal funding comes from subscriptions to the various services offered by the Bureau, and (during 2008-2010) also from the U.S. National Science Foundation, but donations are encouraged. The Central Bureau has operated for more than a decade on computers generously provided by the Tamkin Foundation, first in collaboration with the Minor Planet Center at SAO and now also on new computers at EPS/Harvard.
The CBAT is responsible for the dissemination of information on transient astronomical events and various IAU news including the announcement of designations and names of various celestial objects -- via the IAU Circulars (IAUCs), a series of printed-postcard-sized announcements issued at irregular intervals as necessary in both printed and electronic form, and (as of 2002 Dec. 20) also via the electronic-only Central Bureau Electronic Telegrams (CBETs). The CBAT has been at times the official worldwide clearinghouse for new discoveries of comets, solar-system satellites, novae, supernovae, and other transient astronomical events. During 1965-2010, the CBAT operated at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (specifically under the SAO umbrella). During 2010, the CBAT and its Director have moved to the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Harvard University, and the computer infrastructure was moved from SAO to EPS. The CBAT operated under the auspices of Commission 6 of the International Astronomical Union (IAU) from soon after the IAU's creation in the early 1920s until 2015, when the Commissions were disbanded.
Special Note: The Central Bureau was moved over from the SAO computers to new computers at Harvard/EPS on 2010 August 30. As well over 20,000 webpages are involved in the transfer, there are many broken links that did not survive an automatic conversion of internal URLs, and we are working hard to fix those links. The vast majority of pages should be working now. If you find a broken link to a page that you need access to, drop us an e-mail (cbatiau@eps.harvard.edu). Note that there may still be some .cfa.harvard.edu URLs in these webpages; if you find any, they need to be changed to .eps.harvard.edu.
Services of the CBAT
- Astronomical headlines from recent CBAT publications.
- CBAT publications and services.
- Subscription information.
- On-line IAUCs. [the hundred-or-so most recent IAUC_s are available only to subscribers, while many issues before_IAUC 2700 (1974 Sept. 20) are unavailable in any form yet (though most of these should be available by late 2009).]
* Scans of older IAUCs
* all IAUCs from the years 1920-1930 are available here
* scans of (or links to) all Harvard Observatory circulars/bulletins from the years 1895-1920
* Index of item titles on IAUCs 1-8000 [warning: large file!]. - Most recent 50 on-line CBETs. [CBETs 1-1199 freely available; CBETs 1200+ available to subscribers only.]
* CBETs 4300-4399.
* CBETs 4200-4299.
* CBETs 4100-4199.
* CBETs 4000-4099.
* CBETs 3900-3999.
* CBETs 3800-3899.
* CBETs 3700-3799.
* CBETs 3600-3699.
* CBETs 3500-3599.
* CBETs 3400-3499.
* CBETs 3300-3399.
* CBETs 3200-3299.
* CBETs 3100-3199.
* CBETs 3000-3099.
* CBETs 2901-3000.
* CBETs 2801-2900.
* CBETs 2701-2800.
* CBETs 2601-2700.
* CBETs 2501-2600.
* CBETs 2401-2500.
* CBETs 2301-2400.
* CBETs 2201-2300.
* CBETs 2101-2200.
* CBETs 2001-2100.
* CBETs 1901-2000.
* CBETs 1801-1900.
* CBETs 1701-1800.
* CBETs 1601-1700.
* CBETs 1501-1600.
* CBETs 1401-1500.
* CBETs 1301-1400.
* CBETs 1201-1300.
* CBETs 1101-1200.
* CBETs 1001-1100.
* CBETs 901-1000.
* CBETs 801-900.
* CBETs 701-800.
* CBETs 601-700.
* CBETs 501-600.
* CBETs 401-600.
* CBETs 301-400.
* CBETs 201-300.
* CBETs 101-200.
* CBETs 1-100. - Topical indices to recent IAUCs and CBETs:
* Comets
* Novae and Unusual Variables
* New Planetary Satellites
* Supernovae - ADS search for items on_IAUCs_ and CBETs
- Web access to the computer services.
- Search the CBAT site.
Information for CBAT contributors
- How to report a discovery
- What types of discoveries should be reported to the CBAT for possible publication?
- Discovery report form.
- Check your (super)nova suspects for known minor planets.
- How to submit CCD images in support of a discovery.
- Reporting faint, spectroscopically-unconfirmed supernova candidates.
- Unconfirmed objects reported to the CBAT that are in need of confirming observations.
- How to submit a scientific report for possible publication
- How to submit photoelectric photometry or visual magnitude estimates of variable stars and comets for possible publication.
History of the CBAT
The first Central Bureau was formally created in the 1880s in Kiel, Germany, remaining there until World War I when it was moved to Copenhagen Observatory (Denmark), where it essentially remained until the end of 1964 (except for a brief period at Uccle in 1920-1922); the IAU (formed in 1919) adopted the Copenhagen Observatory's Central Bureau as its official Bureau Central des Télégrammes Astronomiques in 1922. On 1965 Jan. 1, the CBAT moved from Copenhagen to Cambridge, Massachusetts, where the Harvard College Observatory had been acting as the western hemisphere's astronomy information center also since 1883.More in-depth CBAT history is provided on a separate webpage.
Other Helpful Information
- Astronomical headlines from recent circulars.
- Index to the CBAT/MPC/ICQ pages.
- The Edgar Wilson Award, an award for amateur comet discoverers.
- Ephemerides and orbital elements for comets, NEOs, distant objects and bright minor planets.
- Various lists and plots.
- Press Information Sheets
- List of new features on these pages.
- Links to other IAU-related sites are now accessible from theInternational Astronomical Union's website.
- Notices concerning power outages and downtimes for the CBAT/MPC computers (meaning web and e-mail-access downtime).
- ALERT! We have introduced additional screening software to block spam e-mail, due to its prolific increase; it is strongly recommendedthat those sending e-mail to the CBAT (or ICQ or MPC) remove ALL html-encoded text, as we cannot read such text easily (we do not use web browsers for reading e-mail) and such text may be deleted by our anti-spam software. (This means: send plain ASCII text *only*, *not* plain ASCII text plus html-encoded text in same message. The vast majority of CBAT contributors have no problem sending ASCII-only e-mail with contributed observations, so HTML-encoding is a natural place to attack SPAM e-mail since the vast majority of SPAM has html-encoding.)
- Credits (and awards) and auser-feedback form.