Cross-disciplinary research in astronomy
Eric D. Feigelson

TL;DR
This paper reviews the historical and ongoing cross-disciplinary collaborations in astronomy, highlighting their importance for discoveries and emphasizing the need for increased support and training in these integrated fields.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of how astronomy has historically interacted with various disciplines and advocates for fostering cross-disciplinary research and education.
Findings
Astronomy's collaboration with physics led to astrophysics.
Astrostatistics and astrochemistry are growing fields.
Cross-disciplinary research enhances astronomical discoveries.
Abstract
In the distant past, astronomy was often intertwined with religion into a unified cosmos. As science became a distinct cultural enterprise, astronomy has witnessed a variety of rich interactions with other fields. Mathematical statistics was stimulated in the 19th century by astronomical problems, and today astrostatistics is a small but growing cross-disciplinary field advancing methodology to address challenges in astronomical data analysis. Throughout the 20th century, astronomy became closely allied with physics such that astronomy and astrophysics are now profoundly intertwined. Physical chemistry played a major role in the identification of molecules in the Milky Way Galaxy, and astrochemistry is now an active subfield giving insights into cosmic molecular processes. The importance of cross-disciplinary interactions with engineering (for instrumentation), Earth sciences (for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Scientific Research and Discoveries
