John Seiradakis conducted his M.Sc. and Ph.D. projects under the supervision of Dr. John G. Davies. His M.Sc. thesis was entitled "High sensitivity pulsar search." His MSc thesis examiners were Dr. Bryan Anderson and Prof.
Antony Hewish. For his Ph.D. project, entitled "Low latitude pulsar survey at 408
MHz", he designed and conducted a sensitive survey for
pulsars in the
galactic plane. This survey discovered 18 new radio pulsars, more than 20% of the then known population. His PhD viva examiners were Dr. Robin G. Conway and Prof.
Bernard E.J. Pagel. After receiving his Ph.D., Seiradakis moved to Germany as a postdoctoral fellow at the
Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR), working under Prof. Richard Wielebinski. At the MPIfR, he made contributions to the understanding of pulsar emission and helped in the development of the first-generation pulsar instrumentation for the 100-m
Effelsberg Radio telescope. He returned to the MPIfR several times during his career; in 1979 as a
postdoctoral researcher, from 1982 to 1984 as an
Alexander von Humboldt fellow and in 1991 as a visiting researcher on sabbatical leave from the University of Thessaloniki. using the 100-m radio telescope at Effelsberg. From 1982 to 1984 he worked as a researcher at the
University of California, San Diego, where he continued his research on pulsar emission and interstellar
scintillation. In 1984, together with collaborators A. N. Lasenby, F. Yusef-Zadeh, R. Wielebinski and U. Klein, Seiradakis performed some of the first
polarimetric observations of
Sag A* at 10 GHz. This study revealed an extended polarised radio source with jet-like lobes originating from the
Galactic Center. In 1986 he joined the Department of Physics of the
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and in 1996 was promoted to Professor. As a faculty member, he contributed in numerous fields, including
neutron stars (pulsars),
neutral hydrogen modelling in nearby galaxies, the
Galactic Center,
Flare Stars,
Lunar Transient Phenomena and
Archaeoastronomy. He published more than 74 scientific papers in refereed journals, and more than 80 papers in conference proceedings and special volumes, as well as three University-level textbooks. He was a founding member of the
Hellenic Astronomical Society (Hel.A.S.) where he served as Secretary (1994-1998) and as President (1998-2002). (AMRP). Prof. Seiradakis led the Greek involvement in this effort, along with Prof. Xenophon Moussas and Yannis Bitsakis. In 2005 the AMRP was granted permission to study the mechanism using novel tomographic and imaging techniques. This new study resulted in breakthrough discoveries regarding the design, function and origin of the mechanism. The project's findings have been presented in a series of scientific papers and are summarised in a review article in
Nature entitled, "Our current knowledge of the Antikythera Mechanism" and documentaries. Prof. Seiradakis gave numerous lectures and presentations presenting the new results all over the world, including
Chicago (USA), Bonn (Germany),
CERN (Switzerland), etc.
Education and outreach Through his teaching and outreach activities, Seiradakis played a central role in the development of astronomy in Greece during the entire period of the
Third Hellenic Republic. Dozens of his students have continued their studies at the postgraduate level in astrophysics and went on to assume faculty research positions, both in Greece and abroad. With the initiative of Prof. Seiradakis, the 2006 General Assembly of the
International Astronomical Union established the
International Olympiad on Astronomy and Astrophysics, an international competition for high-school students, which is now one of the
International Science Olympiads. Seiradakis represented Greece in the IOAA board until his death in 2020. Together with Prof. Loukas Zachilas, he also led the Greek team, from 2007 until 2017. == Selected publications ==