Jean Kovalevsky (May 18, 1929 – August 17, 2018) was a French astronomer, specializing in celestial mechanics. He is known as a primary initiator (with Pierre Lacroute) and a leader of the Hipparcos space experiment.[1][2][3]
From 1960 to 1971 Kovalevsky was head of celestial mechanics at the Bureau des Longitudes. Celestial mechanics experienced a new boom in the Sputnik age and he published an introduction to the subject, which also considered the orbits of artificial satellites. At the Bureau des Longitudes he founded the Service des Calculs et de Mécanique Céleste, where he developed new calculation methods using computer algebra methods, which were constantly improved over time with his collaborators. From 1971 to 1978 he was head of the research group spatial geodesy (Groupe de recherches de géodésie spatiale, GRGS), which was also supported by the French space agency Centre national d'études spatiales (CNES).[4] In 1979 he and Jean Delhaye led an astronomical delegation visiting China.[6]
From 1974 to 1982 Kovalevsky was the first director of the Centre de recherches en géodynamique et astrométrie (CERGA) in Grasse,[7] which in 1988 merged with the Nice Observatory to become the Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur. From 1982 to 1987 he was an astronomer in CERGA, but he resigned as CERGA's director so that he could work on the data analysis for the Fundamental Astronomy by Space Techniques (FAST) consortium for double star data reduction.[4][8][9] From 1987 to 1992 he was again CERGA's director. In 1994 he retired as astronomer emeritus.[4][10]
Kovalevsky died in 2018 in Saint-Laurent-du-Var. He was predeceased by his wife and survived by three children, six grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren.[1] He was a churchwarden and benefactor of the Russian Orthodox parish of Antibes.[11]
Research
He dealt with celestial mechanics (with a focus on methods for calculating the orbits of artificial satellites, as well as the moons of planets and the Earth's moon) and astrometry.[1][12] With František Link (1906–1984), he estimated the diameter, flattening, and optical properties of Neptune's upper atmosphere.[13] At the Paris Observatory, Kovalevsky's group developed advanced computer algorithms for celestial mechanics that were also used in the Gaia mission (the INPOP software). In astrometry, he was involved in the Hipparcos mission to accurately measure the proper motion and parallax of 118,000 stars. He initiated the European phase of Hipparcos preparation at a meeting in Frascati in 1974 and lobbied tirelessly until the European Space Agency (ESA) decided in 1980 to fund the mission in 1980. He was also involved in Gaia (the successor to Hipparcos) as a member of the working group Reference Frame and Relativity. Despite declining health, he still worked on the first data from Gaia.[1] He was also involved in the geodesy program of the French satellites D1A (Diapason) and D1C and D1D,[14] as well as in the international geodesy program International Satellite Geodesy Experiment (ISAGEX) 1972/73.[15][16]
Méthode numérique de calcul des perturbations générales: application au VIIIe satellite de Jupiter, Bulletin Astronomique, Tome 22, 1959, pp. 1–83 (Dissertation) Bibcode:1959BuAst..23....1K
Sur le mouvement d’un satellite à inclinaison et excentricité quelconque, C. R. Acad. Sci., Tome 258, Nombre 18, 1964, pp. 4435–4438
with F. Barlier and Irène Stellmacher: Liaison Nice—Beyrouth a l’aide des observations du Satellite D1A, Bulletin géodésique, Tome 93, Nombre 1, 1969, pp. 235–242 doi:10.1007/bf02521866
with Annick Bec-Borsenberger: Convergence of a literal solution of Lunar theory, in: Natural and Artificial Satellite Motion, 1979, pp. 83–98
with Michel Froeschlé: The connection of a catalogue of stars with the extragalactic reference frame, Astronomy and astrophysics, I, vol. 115, 1982, pp. 89–97 Bibcode:1982A&A...116...89F
with 17 coauthors: Construction of the intermediate Hipparcos astrometric catalogue, Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 304, 1995, pp. 34–43 Bibcode:1995A&A...304...34K
with 24 coauthors: The Hipparcos catalogue as a realisation of the extragalactic reference system, Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 323, 1997, pp. 620–633 abstract
Books
Introduction à la mécanique céleste, Paris: A. Colin 1963 (translated into English in 1967 and into Chinese in 1984)
Introduction to Celestial Mechanics, Reidel 1967[23][24]
with J. J. Levallois: Géodésie générale, Tome 4, Paris: Eyrolles 1971
Astrométrie moderne, Springer Verlag 1990 (translated into English in 1995 and into Russian in 2004)
as editor with Seidelmann: Applications of computer technology to dynamical astronomy, IAU Colloq. Gaithersburg/Maryland 1988, Kluwer 1989; Kenneth Seidelmann, P.; Kovalevsky, Jean (6 December 2012). 2012 pbk reprint. Springer. ISBN9789400909854.
^Kovalevsky, J.; Link, F. (1969). "Diameter, flattening and optical properties of the upper atmosphere of Neptune as derived from the occultation of BD-17 4388". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2: 398–412. Bibcode:1969A&A.....2..398K.
^Kovalevsky, Jean (2001). "Naissance de la géodésie spatiale en France by J. Kovalevsky". In Schürmann, Brigitte (ed.). L'Essor des Recherches Spatiales en France: Première rencontre de l'I. F. H. E.. "Des Premières Expériences Scientifiques aux Premiers Satellites". Conference held October 24-25, 2000, in Paris. Vol. 472. European Space Agency, ESA SP-472. pp. 101–108. Bibcode:2001ESASP.472..101K. ISBN92-9092-729-1. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
^Kovalevsky, J. (1973). "Analysis of ISAGEX results and their application in European geodesy". Nabliudeniia Iskusstvennykh Sputnikov Zemli. 12: 57–62. Bibcode:1973NISZ...12...57K.
^"Prix Janssen : M. Jean Kovalevsky". The Nautical Almanac for the Year. Nautical Almanac Office, United States Naval Observatory under the authority of the Secretary of the Navy. 1979. pp. 539–540.
^Clemence, G. M. (1968). "Review of Introduction to Celestial Mechanics by Jean Kovalevsky". American Journal of Physics. 36 (11). American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT): 1024. doi:10.1119/1.1974345. ISSN0002-9505.