Daniel
B. Caton - Biographical Sketch
Dan Caton (Caton rhymes
with "Dayton"), grew up in Tampa, Florida and attended the University
of South Florida, graduating in 1973 with B.A.'s in astronomy and physics.
He stayed on to get a Masters in astronomy, and married Susan Hatcher
in 1976. They moved to Gainesville where he got his Ph.D. in astronomy.
After graduation he
took a temporary position at Appalachian State University in Boone, North
Carolina, for two years. When that position ended he left for a year at
Salisbury State College in Maryland. When a tenure-track position came
open back at Appalachian, he and Susan returned to Boone, where he eventually
became a tenured full professor of physics and astronomy, and Director
of Observatories.
His area of expertise
is in the study of binary stars--pairs of stars that orbit each other.
Such systems include most of the stars in our galaxy--the single stars
like our Sun are the exceptions. Other work includes CCD drift-scan observations of stars occulted by asteroids, CCD photometry of the transits of exoplanets around their parent stars, and studies of flare rates in flare stars in binary star systems.
As the founding president of the North Carolina Section of the International Dark-Sky Association, Caton works to reduce light pollution in the state.
Caton also works to debunk pseudoscience
and at the same time investigates claims of the paranormal in such phenomena as the Brown
Mountain Lights, having appeared on specials on Discovery Kids, the Travel Channel, and the National Geographic Channel. He has been a contributor of columns to the Charlotte
Observer since 1996 and currently writes the monthly Up in the Air column for the Observer's SciTech section.
Susan and Dan have
twins, son Ashton and daughter Celeste, now students at Appalachian State.


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