- William Henry Pickering
William Henry Pickering (
February 15 ,1858 –January 17 ,1938 ) was an Americanastronomer , brother ofEdward Charles Pickering .Work
He discovered Saturn's ninth moon Phoebe in 1899 from plates taken in 1898. He also believed he had discovered a tenth moon in 1905 from plates taken in 1904, which he called "Themis". Unfortunately "Themis" does not exist.
Following
George Darwin , he speculated in 1907 that the moon was once a part of the earth and that it broke away where now thePacific Ocean lies. He also proposed some sort ofcontinental drift (even beforeAlfred Wegener ) and speculated that America,Asia ,Africa , andEurope once formed a single continent, which broke up because of the separation of the moon. [Citation | author=Pickering, W.H| title = [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1907PA.....15..274P The Place of Origin of the Moon - The Volcani Problems] | journal= Popular Astronomy | pages=274–287| year=1907]In 1908 he made a statement regarding the possibility of airplanes that had not yet been invented, saying that "a popular fantasy is to suppose that flying machines could be used to drop dynamite on the enemy in time of war".
He led
solar eclipse expeditions and studied craters on theMoon , and hypothesized that changes in the appearance of the crater Eratosthenes were due to "lunar insects". [ [http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/products/journals/aag/aag_December00/aag632.htm AAG: Reviews 12-2000 ] ] He claimed to have foundvegetation on the moon. [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B05E0D81439E133A2575AC0A9669D946095D6CF]In 1919, he predicted the existence and position of a
Planet X based on anomalies in the positions of Uranus and Neptune but a search ofMount Wilson Observatory photographs failed to find the predicted planet. Pluto was later discovered at Flagstaff byClyde Tombaugh in 1930, but in any case it is now known that Pluto's mass is far too small to have appreciable gravitational effects on Uranus or Neptune, and the anomalies are accounted for when today's much more accurate values of planetary masses are used in calculating orbits. When the planet was named, he interpreted its symbol as a monogram referring to himself and Lowell by the phrase "Pickering-Lowell". [cite journal|title= The discovery of Pluto|author = Pickering W. H. |journal = Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society |volume =91 |issue =1 |pages = 0812–0817|year= 1930|url = http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1931MNRAS..91..812P]Pickering constructed and established several observatories or astronomical observation stations, notably including
Percival Lowell 'sFlagstaff Observatory . He spent much of the later part of his life at his private observatory inJamaica . He produced a photographic atlas of the Moon: "The Moon : A Summary of the Existing Knowledge of our Satellite" — New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1903.Pickering crater on the
Moon is jointly named after him and his brotherEdward Charles Pickering .Notes
External links
Obituaries
* [http://adsabs.harvard.edu//full/seri/JRASC/0032//0000157.000.html JRASC 32 (1938) 157] (one paragraph)
* [http://adsabs.harvard.edu//full/seri/MNRAS/0099//0000328.000.html MNRAS 99 (1939) 328]
* [http://adsabs.harvard.edu//full/seri/PASP./0050//0000122.000.html PASP 50 (1938) 122]References
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