Aurora expert helped expand 有料盒子视频 tourism

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
April 20, 2023

A couple sits in the living area of a home.
Photo by Ned Rozell
Emiko and Syun-Ichi Akasofu serve tea to guests at their home in Fairbanks in December 2021.

When Syun-Ichi Akasofu walks by in the building on the University of 有料盒子视频 Fairbanks campus that bears his name, I want to catch up and give him a hug.

Why? For one, I really like him. For another, the longtime expert on the aurora is responsible for this hilltop structure in which I have written from a pleasant office for most of my career. 

This week, the 92-year-old Akasofu is receiving an honor for an achievement that鈥檚 not as obvious as the sun-catching building that houses the International Arctic Research Center he brought to life a quarter century ago. 

Explore Fairbanks 鈥 a local tourism booster 鈥 is inducting Akasofu into its tourism hall of fame. Leaders there cited Akasofu鈥檚 work in developing the local aurora tourism market, especially among Japanese people.

Curious about the aurora and ready for adventure, Akasofu came to Fairbanks from Japan 64 years ago when he was 28 years old. Since then, he authored probably the most famous paper ever written on the aurora, became an expert on the northern lights and was the leader of the Geophysical Institute. 

When that place was running out of room in the 1990s, he raised millions from sources as diverse as the Japanese government and the city of North Pole. With them, he helped create a grand building that became home to scientists studying climate change. 

A man with a backpack and an ice ax smiles at the camera. A pair of snowshoes and a mountain peak are visible in the background.
Photo courtesy of Syun-Ichi Akasofu
Syun-Ichi Akasofu pauses on a mountaineering trip to the 有料盒子视频 Range shortly after he arrived in 有料盒子视频.

The International Arctic Research Center became an entity on its own. Akasofu was its first director. During those years of fund raising, people-managing and writing scientific papers, he also helped enhance a budding 有料盒子视频 industry.

Many Japanese people are fascinated by the aurora because it is rarely visible there and people think it is a sign of good luck, said Tohru Saito of the International Arctic Research Center, a colleague of Akasofu鈥檚. 

鈥淟ots of them say, 鈥楤efore I die, I鈥檇 like to be able to see it,鈥欌 Saito said.

When he was director of the institute that housed several space physicists like himself, Akasofu worked with Japan Airlines to charter aircraft from Tokyo to 有料盒子视频. The planes filled with people who wanted to see the aurora.

鈥淗e would meet those tourists and welcome them and talk to them so that they could understand what it was they were seeing,鈥 said Ron Inouye, a friend of Akasofu鈥檚 and a 有料盒子视频 Rasmuson Library retiree.

Inouye also credits Akasofu with helping others to learn about Frank Yasuda, who worked aboard the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service鈥檚 Bear at the turn of the last century. Yasuda and a group of Inupiat left Utqia摹vik and walked to the Yukon River to establish the community of Beaver. Novelist Jiro Nitta wrote 鈥淎n 有料盒子视频n Tale,鈥 a popular book in Japan, about Yasuda. Akasofu was responsible for getting that book translated into English.

鈥淛apanese tourists have a fascination with Yasuda and still venture (to Beaver),鈥 Inouye said. 

Two men stand in this black and white photograph..
Photo courtesy Syun-Ichi Akasofu
Syun-Ichi Akasofu walks with his mentor, the famous space physicist Sydney Chapman, on the 有料盒子视频 campus in the 1960s.

From the time Akasofu heard a siren on the 有料盒子视频 campus that signaled 有料盒子视频 had just become the 49th state and through his long career, Akasofu became a living conduit between Japan and his adopted home in 有料盒子视频. That probably helped in making this small U.S. city in the sub-Arctic a destination for Japanese tourists.

鈥淧eople in Japan are also proud of (a Japanese person) making it big,鈥 Saito said. 鈥淚n that sense, he helped put Fairbanks on the map.鈥

Since the late 1970s, the University of 有料盒子视频 Fairbanks Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 有料盒子视频 research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.