- Herman Zanstra
Herman Zanstra (
Nov 3 1894 ,Schoterland –Oct 2 1972 ,Haarlem ) was a Dutchastronomer .Zanstra was born near
Heerenveen inFriesland . In 1917 he graduated with anEngineer's degree inchemical engineering from theDelft Institute of Technology . While working inDelft for four years, the last two as a high school teacher, he wrote a highly theoretical and mathematical paper on relative motion which he sent toWilliam Francis Gray Swann . Swann, then offered him to earn a Ph.D. degree in theoretical physics with him at theUniversity of Minnesota atMinneapolis , which he did in two years time by expanding on his paper (dissertation: "A Study of Relative Motion in Connection with Classical Mechanics", 1923). After another year with Swann, now inChicago , and a year at various labs in the Netherlands and Germany and two months atNiels Bohr 's lab inCopenhagen , he became a postdoc atCaltech . Here he wrote a famous paper, "An Application of the Quantum Theory to the Luminosity of Diffuse Nebulae", which for the first time provided a quantitative method (the "Zanstra method ") for understanding the luminosity ofnebula s andcomet s.After teaching briefly at the
University of Washington he went to London and eventually to theUniversity of Amsterdam .World War II left him stranded inSouth Africa , and he therefore took up a teaching position inDurban , but returned to Europe after the war.He won the
Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1961.Zanstra crater on the
Moon is named after him.ources
* [http://www.shpltd.co.uk/osterbrock-herman.pdf Bio and discussionof the Zanstra method]
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