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      Contact information 
      Klaus R. Brasch, Ph.D., Director 
      Research Development & Technology Transfer 
      California State University, San Bernardino 
      5500 University Parkway, CA 92407 
      x 
      Telephone: 
      (909) 880-5314; Fax:  (909) 
      880-7028 
       
      
      
      e-mail 
      kbrasch@csusb.edu 
      . 
      
      website 
      
      http://techtransfer.csusb.edu/ 
      . 
      Locator Map 
      
      http://www.frappr.com/apppublic 
      Level of accuracy: California State University, San Bernardino 
      
      Biography 
      
      My interest in astronomy was kindled as a teenager in Montreal when I 
      joined the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada around the time of Sputnik 
      1. I quickly took to lunar
      and planetary observing and joined the ALPO, 
      later serving as its Mars coordinator. Astrophotography was very 
      challenging in those days, but I got hooked on it by snapping
      the moon and 
      planets with the horribly grainy films available at that time. It was off 
      to college
      after that and then graduate school with little money or time 
      for telescopes, astronomy or
      anything else deemed extra-curricular! After 
      earning my Ph.D. in 1972, I joined Queen's
      University in Kingston, Canada 
      and began a rewarding research and teaching career in
      cellular and 
      molecular biology.  
       
      I took up astrophotography in earnest again in 1980, while on sabbatical 
      as visiting scientist
      at City of Hope National Medical Center in Duarte, 
      California. I purchased a classic
      Celestron C-10, f/13 Schmidt-Cassegrain 
      and first experienced the clear skies of Mount
      Pinos and other California 
      dark sites. I was totally hooked on astrophotography from then
      on. My wife 
      Margaret, young daughter Madeleine and I moved to the United States in 
      1983
      and shortly after I purchased a superb 1970s vintage C-14. Deep sky 
      photography had really come into its own by then as better films and 
      support equipment became available. Many
      visits to the Texas Star Party, RTMC, Mount Pinos, the Mojave and Sierra Nevada
      followed, and I met and 
      became friends with some of the best and most active amateur astronomers 
      around.  
       
      Over the years my work has appeared in Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, Sky 
      News and
      numerous popular books. I have also translated several French 
      astronomy books into
      English. While I do mostly administrative work at the 
      university now, I frequently lecture on
      topics ranging from 
      astrophotography to life in the universe, at colleges, clubs and star 
      parties.  
       
      I experienced an astronomical "epiphany" of sorts in 1999 and 2000 when 
      Mike Mayerchak,
      Terry Dickinson, Alan Dyer and I were guests at Siding 
      Spring Observatory in Australia.
      The people, scenery and southern skies 
      were absolutely overwhelming and we came back
      with some of our finest 
      images ever. Film based astrophotography is pretty much over now,
      but 
      digital imaging has opened up an entirely new dimension which I intend to 
      pursue well
      into my retirement years. 
      
      Areas of astrophotography interest 
                                       deep 
      sky                                
           
       
      Astrophotography publications 
      
      Sky & Telescope, Astronomy, Sky News and numerous popular books 
       
      
      Observing sites 
      
      various sites including: 
      
      x 
      
      In California 
      Mt. Pinos, Last Chance (near Red 
      Rock Canyon), Tarantula Rocks,  
      White Mountains 
      
      In Oklahoma 
      Okie-Tex Star Parties 
       
      
      In Texas 
      Texas Star Party near Ft. Davis, Texas 
       
      
      In Australia 
      Anglo-Australian (Siding Springs) Observatory 
      
      Astronomical Equipment 
       Telescopes 
      Celestron 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain Telescope 
      TeleVue 101 refractor 
      
      Mount 
      Losmandy Titan 50 
       
      Camera 
      Canon 20D digital SLR 
       
  
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