Amri Wandel | |
Birth Date: | 1954 |
Birth Place: | Tel Aviv, israel |
Citizenship: | Israel |
Field: | Astrophysics |
Work Institution: | the Racah Institute of Physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
Known For: |
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Amri Wandel (born 1954, Hebrew: עמרי ונדל) is a senior scientist in Astrophysics at the Racah Institute of Physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Wandel is an expert in astrobiology and chairman of the Israeli Association of Astrobiology and Early Life. He is also president of the International Academy of Sciences San Marino.
His main research topics are high-energy astrophysics, black holes, active galaxies, quasars, and astrobiology. He has published over 100 professional articles in the world's leading journals in the field of astrophysics.
Wandel is also very active in the international and Israeli Esperanto movement.
Amri Wandel was born in 1954 in Tel Aviv.
In 1974 he completed his bachelor's degree in physics and computer science at Tel Aviv University. In the years 1974-1980 he served in the IDF. He then went on to pursue a master's degree in physics, which he also completed at Tel Aviv University in 1978. In 1980 went on to pursue a doctorate in astrophysics at Stony Brook University. From 1983 to 1988, he held post-doctoral positions in astrophysics at Princeton University, the University of Maryland, and Stanford University.After returning to Israel, he began working as a researcher at the Weizmann Institute in 1988. Wandel remained at the Weizmann Institute until 1990, when he began working at the Hebrew University. In 1999 he created the course "Astrophysics and Life in the Universe", which he also teaches. Wandel serves as a senior scientist at the Racah Institute of Physics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
In the year 1998–1999 he was a visiting professor, on sabbatical at the Department of Astronomy at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he taught four astrophysics courses. In that year Wandel collaborated at UCLA on research of Active Galactic Nuclei together with Professor Math Malkan which produced three groundbreaking papers on the subject of massive black holes. One of their articles,[1] which was the first to present the relationship between the mass and luminosity of massive black holes in active galaxies, was cited about 600 times. Consequently, Wandel and Malkan won a research grant from the BSF Foundation. Since then, Wandel has been teaching summer courses at UCLA every few years, as well as conducting research collaborations.
Since 2018, he has been the chairman of the Israeli Association for Astrobiology and the Beginning of Life.[2]
Wandel is president of the International Academy of Sciences San Marino.
A sample from his lecture "Life in Distant Worlds" seals the song "There is no space between us" by the Israeli rapper Tuna on his album "And now for the intergalactic part".[3] The recording is sampled and as if from a walkie-talkie Wandel says: "Actually some people think it's on the frontier of science fiction. But as we shall see, there is a great deal of non-fiction science, which prepares us to answer the question man has always asked himself - are we alone?"
In 1992 he joined the International Academy of Esperanto (AN). Since 1995, Wandel has been a member of the board of the World Esperanto Association, albeit on breaks. In Israel, he served as chairman of the Israel Esperanto Association from 2008–2019 and editor of its journal, Israela Esperantisto. Since 2020, he is a plain member of the association's board. In 2015, he published a study on the number of Esperanto speakers on social networks,[4] which reached an estimated two million speakers. This study has become the accepted reference for the number of Esperanto speakers in the world and is even quoted by Ethnologue.[5]
In 2012, he recorded an online 33-lesson Esperanto version of his astrophysics course at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, as part of the "University of Esperanto".[6]
In Wandel's view, as long as the current situation persists and the linguistic status quo prevails, preferring one national language over the others, there will be no room for widespread Esperanto as a language of communication and it will remain the domain of a relatively small user public. However, in his view, this situation may change if and when the international, economic and political forces change in the direction of greater balance between the major languages, and the need for a single language of communication increases. In such a situation, a neutral and easy-to-learn language is likely to be chosen. In Wandel's view, Esperanto is the only language with this qualities, as well as the only one that is also a living and spoken language, so it will be the natural candidate for this position.
Amri Wandel's article "Esperanto and the Problem of International Communication" appeared in the 2009 Hebrew Expression and Language Israeli state Examination. Originally, the article was published in "Almost 2000 - Journal of Science and Technology".
Wandel has translated into Esperanto several books, including:
Wandel is married and has three children, and lives in Modi'in. He also taught his children Esperanto; He translated "Evening has set" to Esperanto for his eldest daughter.
Beyond his professional pursuits, Wandel is an Orienteering instructor at Maccabim Reut Mor High School and a member of the Israeli Orienteering Association. He is also a member of the "Action Committee for the Rescue of the Maccabim Forest". Wandel is also a certified tourist guide.
In addition, he is a photography enthusiast and several of his photographs have appeared in the media and local newspapers.