- Walther Bauersfeld
Walther Bauersfeld (
January 23 ,1879 inBerlin –October 28 ,1959 inHeidenheim an der Brenz ) was a German engineer, employed by the Zeiss Corporation, who, on a suggestion by the German astronomerMax Wolf , started work on the first projectionplanetarium in 1912. This work was halted by military needs duringWorld War I , but resumed after the war. Bauersfeld completed the first planetarium, known as the Zeiss I model in 1923, and it was initially placed on the roof of a Zeiss building in the corporate headquarters town ofJena . This model projected 4,900 stars, and was limited to showing the sky only from Jena'slatitude . Subsequently, Bauersfeld developed the Model 2 with 8,956 stars, and full latitude capability. Over a dozen were installed beforeWorld War II again suspended planetarium work. These inter-war planetariums went intoBerlin andDüsseldorf in Germany, as well asRome ,Paris ,Chicago ,Los Angeles andNew York . The Düsseldorf planetarium did not survive the war, not from military action, but was removed by theNazi government because it had been a donation of a Jewish businessman.The Zeiss I planetarium in Jena is also considered the first
geodesic dome derived from theicosahedron , more than 20 years beforeBuckminster Fuller reinvented and popularized this approach. Post-war, the Zeiss firm, like Germany, split in two. Bauersfeld remained with the core firm in Jena,East Germany , where after 1953 he developed the ZKP-1 (Zeisskleinplanetarium=Zeiss Small Planetarium #1). This was intended for small dome planetariums, and while it had latitude change capabilities, the operator had to turn a hand crank to accomplish this. The ZKP-2 added a motor for latitude change. Bauersfeld retired shortly after the ZKP-2 was introduced.A monthly newsletter named in Walther Bauersfeld's honor, "Bauersfeld's Folly", was circulated to mostly North American planetariums 1973 to 1983.
Asteroid 1553 Bauersfelda was named in his honor.External links
* [http://www.physics.princeton.edu/~trothman/domes.html First Geodesic Dome: Planetarium in Jena 1922] incl. patent information
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