| Jenik
Hollan
Born
December 3, 1955 in Brno, Czechoslovakia.
Studies of physics at the Masaryk University in Brno, Faculty of
Sciences.
Since 1980, scientist and teacher at the N. Copernicus Observatory
and Planetarium in Brno.
19942001 teaching astronomy also at Faculty of Education of
Masaryk University in Brno.
Currently a
graduate student at the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the TechnicalUniversity
in Brno, investigating energy fluxes in advanced buildings and components
of passive houses. Research in meteor astronomy and didactics of
astronomy during the 80's, then educating young people and general
public on astronomy, on many issues of physics in everyday life
and environmental problems (esp.global warming). Tens of his students
are doing research in astronomy now.
Many lectures
and texts on the prevention of light pollution and quality outdoor
lighting (most of the existing Czech info, including the legislative
proposals). Works from the last five years mostly available on the
internet, on the light pollution at http://svetlo.astro.cz/darksky.
How
should the light pollution be controlled (pdf)
an experience from the Czech Republic
Light pollution
is perhaps the only one still growing exponentially everywhere.
The growth should be slowed down and stopped and the trend reversed
to achieve sustainable night environment. Reducing light pollution
has similarities with the efforts to reduce fossil carbon emissions.
Both pollutants have been considered harmless 30 years ago. Both
are very dangerous. The common key solution is energy efficiency.
But it wont go successfully without legislation giving the
effective rules, which could be as simple as:
Shine below
horizon only. Use no more light than the standards demand. Ensure
that the amount of light can be lowered at night substantially.
Dont use more then 1 cd/m2 or 10 lux, if a
safety standard does not apply. Put a limit for illuminated advertisements
(like 200 cd for small surfaces, 300 cd for those over
5m2 and 500 cd for those over 30m2).
Apply emergency measures for the most vulnerable sites. Exceptions
should be just traffic lights, short-time lighting, faint sources
used by ordinary citizens.
Good experience
from Lombardy, where such law holds since 2000. Need to document
the
benefits. Failure of laws using just a declaration, including the
Czech one. The rules should
be inside the very law, we hope to make it true in Czechia (http://svetlo.astro.cz/darksky/cz_law).
Reasons for
demanding LPS, HPS or fluorescent sources.
Digital imaging
photometry, glare quantification, road surfaces measurements, true
amount of light at night (http://amper.ped.muni.cz/light/luminance), huge advantages
of dimming the light sources (an example from Brno).
Possible opposition
from industries wanting business as usual.
Sleep disturbed
by light-at-night, vanished heavens (stars never noticed among strong
luminaires), deprived childhood and rise of crime. Light does not
help against crime, just dark hopefully. Bad rules worse than no
rules at all. Good rules, like those in Lombardy, are a hope to
restore the night again.
text of the lecture (pdf 50k), foils (pdf 2M) - Jenik Hollan.
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SPEAKERS
Bidwell,
Tony
Buchanan, Bryant
Crawford, Dr. David L.
Dick, Robert Stephen
Dickinson, Terence
French, Randy P.
Hill, Tom
Hills, Reverend Johanne
Hollan, Jenik
Hummel, Monte
Lickers, F. Henry
Lockley, Steven W.
Mesure, Michael
Moore, Chad A.
Reid,
Ron
Riley, John L.
Roberts, Dr. Joan
Rutenberg, Tony
Shaver, Dorothy
Welch, David
Whitehead, Brian
Wise, Sharon
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