Astronomy in the Netherlands

For 30 years Zenit has been the leading Dutch astronomy magazine for The Netherlands and Belgium. Next to astronomy it also has an interest in meteorology and space research. It publishes articles written by professional and amateur astronomers and meteorologists.

Astronomy is quite popular in the Netherlands and many towns and regions have their own astronomy club or public observatory. Most local clubs are affiliated with the national club: de Nederlandse Vereniging voor Weer- en Sterrenkunde (NVWS), which was founded in 1901. Many public observatories are united in the Vereniging voor Publiekssterrenwachten. Both organisations work together in a foundation called 'De Koepel' (the Dome, in English). De Koepel is publisher of Zenit, as well as several other publications like astronomical yearbooks. De Koepel also handles many administrative tasks for the associated clubs.

If you do not master the Dutch language, the information on this website is not very useful for you. But if you would like to have more information on astronomical activities in the Netherlands and Belgium, please contact de Koepel: tel. +31-30-2311360, fax. +31-30-2342852, e-mail: info@dekoepel.nl .

Zenit is also interested in the experiences of foreign astronomers and amateurs. If you would like to contribute to our magazine, please contact the Editor, Eddy Echternach, at zenit@dekoepel.nl. Please read further for more technical information.

Writing for 'Zenit', the Dutch astronomy magazine

The editors of 'Zenit' welcome written contributions from amateurs and professionals, as long as the article has some relation with astronomy, meteorology or space science. Possible subjects for amateurs are personal experiences with instruments and computer software, observations, or the more theoretical subjects (results of own calculations etc.). We must advise you though that, before you start working on a longer article, you get in touch with the editorial board first. In that way we can prevent two authors from working on the same subject at the same time. In any case the editorial board has the right -- or must we say duty? -- to edit (and translate!) articles that are sent in for publication or to turn them down. Authors are requested to keep in mind the following.

Contents

Try to be concise and give your article an appetizing title and preface. If the article gets long (several pages) anyhow, please put sub-headers in relevant places. Try to avoid cross-referencing figure and table numbers; otherwise you run the risk that the numbering order will be lost in the final layout (yes, even if you use 'TeX'!). Instead use coded instructions that clearly stand out from the normal text such as '***figure X here***'. Please put captions for figures, photos, tables and all other stuff that doesn't belong in the main text at the end of the article. Try not to make a layout yourself, this interferes with the processing of your article. Be sure that the caption tells the complete story of the figure of photo: don't put essential information about illustrations in the main text only! Keep illustrations simple and preferably put any text on a separate overlay or on a photocopy. Never send in photo negatives or other material that cannot be reproduced. Although we try to return anything you send us, there is always the chance that something gets lost.

Paper size and other formats

We prefer A4 sized paper, printed on one side only and with no more than 4 lines of text per inch. Keep free margins on all sides: on the left at least two inches, one inch on all other sides. This is for making notes and as a safety margin for making photo copies. If you type your article on a regular typewriter - yes these do still exist - please see to it that the letters you type are regular and clearly black. This gives us the opportunity to scan the text of your article. Please do not send in anything that is printed with a dot matrix printer or typewriter. Most authors nowadays use word processors, which saves us a hell of a lot of typing. So, we would like to receive your article as a file on a 3.5" diskette or as attachment with an e-mail. But don't forget to send a printed version of your article as well! We can process practically any format for Mac or PC you can think of: we prefer recent versions of Word (Windows/Mac), but we can also handle older versions of Word, WordPerfect 5.1 or 6 (DOS) or 3.0 (Mac), AppleWorks, MacWrite Pro, or ASCII or RTF (an extra ASCII-version is appreciated also, in case the conversion of the primary file goes wrong). If you use (La)TeX, please use as few self-defined macros as possible. Of course you can send in your illustrations by e-mail or on diskette, 'Zip' or CD-ROM as well! But please get in touch with us before sending several megabytes worth of photos to our mailbox. You can use:

  • for photos: JPEG (high quality) or TIFF (please don't send bit maps (BMP's)!) with at least 200 dpi resolution;
  • for line drawings: EPS (TIFF is also fine, but then you have to use a resolution of at least 1200 dpi).
Don't forget to send in prints or photo copies of your illustrations as well!

Our electronic address is:

zenit@dekoepel.nl

Our 'snail mail' address is:

Zenit, Zonnenburg 2, 3512 NL Utrecht.

We thank you for your co-operation!