Author: Cyril Deicha
The Liechtenstein Scientific Society has commemorated its 25th
jubilee, in the newly opened community center of Vaduz. The chosen date
was May 16th in order to give to the event an international character
related to the UNESCO Day of Light. There were two items on the agenda:
The presentation of a book, and a conference about the “Liechtenstein
exoplanet”.
The book is a very interesting chronicle of the
Scientific Society. It describes the highlights of a quarter century
devoted to the popularization of science and networking with museums and
scholar associations on local level. On a global level it stresses the
developing of relations between learned societies in Europe and all
over the world. The book is illustrated with citations of newspapers
describing events both global and local: The first exhibition of a
moon-rock and the “Spice Bees in Space” projects with the NASA, the 2005
international exhibition about Einstein's travel through Liechtenstein ,
and for the International Year of Light 2015 the philatelic emissions
of stamps which can be used for optical experiments. At the end of the
book there is a short biography of Dr.Cyril Deicha, the founder and
honorary president of the Society.
The second item was a public
discussion about “our” Exoplanet which is 700 light-years away. Let's
remember that three years ago the International Astronomical Union
organized a contest to give popular names to some “Exo-Worlds” ( i.e.
stars having planets). Every nation could make proposals in his own
language. That's how it happened that the the local Liechtenstein
dialect was choosen by the IAU to name two celestial bodies: a star was
named “Pipoltr” and his planet "Umbäässa". These are names of tiny
insects living in our forests and mountains, a very useful image to
represent the proportions in the universe. That was the central theme in
this science outreach conference.
“Let's consider an ant, a small
insect so tiny that its limbs (a few dozen micrometers thick) are
hardly visible without a magnifying glass. Now try to see the legs of
the little animal climbing on a tree. And imagine the tree is atop of
one of those mountains rising on the horizon. So difficult was the
challenge facing astronomers when discovering the exoplanet Umbäässa at
the distance of 700 light-years” That was our input statement for the
discussion. Indeed the exoplanet has the same angular diameter as the
ant's leg at a distance or over 100 kilometers!
