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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
22, No. 9, Nov. 7, 2002

retiree
profile
Professor
still star struck in retirement
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
(217) 244-1072; slforres@uiuc.edu
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| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| Still
hooked Astronomy
professor John Dickel retired in May after 38 years with
the university. He is still engaged in several research
project with the department. "Astronomy is my life,
and I'm going to continue to do it," Dickel said. |
|
Retiree John Dickel
relishes watching the neighbors. No, not the people next door, but the
stars and galaxies surrounding Planet Earth.
Dickel, who retired May 21 after 38 years with the department of astronomy,
is still engaged in various research projects, observing and cataloging
neighboring galaxies and phenomena such as supernova remnants –
the remains of exploded stars.
"Astronomy is my life, and I’m going to continue to do it,"
Dickel said.
Much of Dickel’s research has been devoted to observations of
supernova remnants and as-yet unexplainable traits, such as why material
in some remnants implodes while other material concurrently explodes.
Dickel said he became "hooked" on supernova remnants shortly
after he came to the university in 1964, when he and some students discovered
a new supernova remnant while conducting a survey of the sky.
"It’s a thrill to be the first person ever to see something,"
Dickel said. "In many ways it’s more fun than experimental
physics, where you can build devices to test reactions. We can’t
do that. We’re stuck with what natures gives us, which is more
of a challenge."
Dickel said he began studying the sky while pursuing his bachelor’s
degree in physics at Yale University, where he did some volunteer observing
with a radio telescope he had helped the university’s amateur
radio club and the astronomy department build. An astronomy course he
took during his junior year piqued his interest, and Dickel later went
on to earn his doctorate in astronomy at the University of Michigan.
In December, Dickel will be making his fourth visit to Australia as
part of a research project in which he and several colleagues are surveying
a nearby galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud, which is visible only from
the southern hemisphere. The project requires making multiple observations
from several telescopes in different configurations and is a collaborative
study involving astronomers from the United States as well as from Australia
and Germany.
Additionally, Dickel is engaged in a multi-year observation of the Andromeda
Galaxy with an astronomer at the national observatory in New Mexico
and another in the Netherlands.
Although Dickel’s workload seems relatively unaffected by his
retirement, he said with a smile that his emeritus status does have
perquisites, namely immunity from committee obligations.
Coincidentally, Dickel’s dedication to his work is matched by
his spouse, Helene Dickel, an emeritus faculty member from the department
of astronomy who also continues her research in the field despite her
retirement in 2001.
"We’re retired. So what? We’re still having fun,"
John Dickel said about their enduring interest in their work.
Calling it "the best job in the worst place," Dickel said
he has an abiding affinity for mountains and oceans, and this summer,
the couple made their annual sojourn to Maine, where they share a vacation
home.
When not focused on the stars, the Dickels are often on the ice. The
couple enjoy ice dancing and skate three times a week at the University
of Illinois Ice Arena. Dickel said he also enjoys a variety of outdoor
activities, such as camping, canoeing, hiking and cross-country skiing
"if the winter allows it."
"When we really retire, we’ll probably go to New Mexico in
the winters and Maine in the summers," Dickel said. "But that’s
another five years or more down the road."
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