|
Feature Name |
Lat
|
Long
|
Diam
|
Origin |
|
D'Alembert
|
50.8N |
163.9E |
248 |
Jean-le-Rond ~ (1717-1783), French
mathematician and astrophysicist; a friend of Lagrange
(q.v.), he published "d'Alembert's principle" in
Traité de Dynamique (1743), which was a powerful
new interpretation of Newton's Third Law. He also studied
physical astronomy, in which he solved the precession of
the equinoxes, and was the first to find and solve the
wave equation. |
|
d'Arrest
|
2.3N |
14.7E |
30 |
Heinrich Ludwig ~ (1822-1875), German
astronomer; discovered 342 N.G.C. objects, mainly with an
11-inch refractor. As a graduate assistant at Urania
Observatory, Berlin, he was working with Johann Gaul
(q.v.) on the night that Neptune was discovered. |
|
d'Arsonval
|
10.3S |
124.6E |
28 |
Jacques Arsene ~ (1851-1940), French
physicist; a pioneer in electrotherapy, he studied the use
of high-frequency currents in medical applications. Among
his inventions were dielectric heating and various
measuring devices, including the thermocouple ammeter and
moving-coil galvanometer, which helped establish the
science of electrical engineering. The galvanometer, which
he invented in 1882 for measuring weak electric currents,
became the basis for almost all panel-type pointer meters. |
|
Daedalus
|
5.9S |
179.4E |
93 |
Greek mythological character; a skilled
craftsman and inventor, he helped Minos' daughter elope
with Theseus. Minos punished him by imprisoning him and
his son, Icharus (q.v.), in the Labyrinth. Daedalus made
two pairs of wings from feathers, wax and thread. He and
Icharus flew from the Labyrinth, but Icharus flew too
close to the sun and his wings melted. He plunged into the
sea and died. |
|
Dag
|
18.7N |
5.3E |
0 |
Scandinavian male name. |
|
Daguerre
|
11.9S |
33.6E |
46 |
Louis ~ (1789-1851), French artist,
photographer and chemist; developed the pioneering method
of photograph processing knows as
"Daguerreotype." |
|
Dale
|
9.6S |
82.9E |
22 |
Sir Henry Hallett ~ (1875-1968), British
physiologist; shared the 1936 Nobel Prize in medicine with
Otto Loewi (q.v.) "for their discoveries relating to
chemical transmission of nerve impulses." |
|
Dalton
|
17.1N |
84.3W |
60 |
John ~ (1766-1844), British chemist and
physicist; the first to provide a scientific description
of color blindness (1794), a condition from which he
suffered and which was long referred to as "Daltonism."
He recorded over 200,000 observations of the atmosphere in
his notebooks, and studied mixed gases and the expansion
of gases under heat; Dalton's Law is still used to
describe the law of partial pressures in chemistry. This
work led him to his most important theoretical
contribution to chemistry, a scientifically grounded
atomic theory of matter. |
|
Daly
|
5.7N |
59.6E |
17 |
Reginald Aldworth; Canadian geologist
(1871-1957); served as an instructor in geology at Harvard
(1898-1901), from which he had received his M.A. (1893)
and Ph.D. (1896), following which he began a six-year
stint as field geologist with the Canadian International
Boundary Commission. Daly taught physical geology at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1907-1911, then
accepted the position of Sturgis-Hooper Professor of
Geology at Harvard, which he retained until his retirement
in 1942. |
|
Damoiseau
|
4.8S |
61.1W |
36 |
Baron Marie Charles Théodore de ~
(1768-1846), French astronomer. |
|
Daniell
|
35.3N |
31.1E |
29 |
John Frederick ~ (1790-1845), British
physicist, chemist, educator and meteorologist; first
professor of chemistry and meteorology at the then-new
King's College of London (1831-1845). Devised the first
two-fluid class battery (1836), the first battery that
produced a constant reliable source of electrical current
over an extended period of time. His research also led to
the invention of a dew-point hygrometer (1820) that
measured relative humidity and later became a standard
instrument. |
|
Danjon
|
11.4S |
124.0E |
71 |
Andre Louis ~ (1890-1967), French
astronomer; devised a method to measure
"Earthshine" on the Moon using a telescope in
which a prism split the Moon's image into two identical
side-by-side images. By adjusting a diaphragm to dim one
of the images until the sunlit portion had the same
apparent brightness as the earthlit portion on the
unadjusted image, he could quantify the diaphragm
adjustment, and thus had a real measurement for the
brightness of Earthshine. He recorded the measurements
using his method (now known as the Danjon Scale, on which
zero equates to a barely visible Moon) from 1925 until the
1950s. |
|
Dante
|
25.5N |
180.0E |
54 |
Durante Alighieri, or ~ (1265-1321),
Italian nobleman, philosopher and poet; his lasting
contributions to literature include Purgatorio, Paradiso
Inferno, Divina Commedia (The Divine
Comedy), Vita nuova (New Life), Convivio
(The Banquet), Rime (Rhymes) and Il Fiore
(The Flower). |
|
Darío
|
11.3S |
90.7E |
19 |
Rubén ~, nom de plume of Felix Rubén
Garcia Sarmiento (1867-1916), Nicaraguan author, poet,
journalist, and diplomat; his first collection of poetry, Azul
(1888) won him acclaim throughout South America. His most
notable collection, Prosas Profana y Otros Poemas
(Profane Prose and Other Poems), was published in 1896. Poema
del Otono (1910) is often considered Darío's finest
piece. |
|
Darney
|
14.5S |
23.5W |
15 |
Maurice ~ (1882-1958), French astronomer. |
|
Darwin
|
20.2S |
69.5W |
120 |
Charles ~ (1809-1882), British natural
scientist; following a five-year scientific journey along
the coast of South America, and especially on the Galápagos
Islands, he published his observations in A
Naturalist's Voyage on the Beagle (1839). Darwin,
reflecting on his observation, developed a theory of
evolution. According to this theory, individual
variability means that some organisms have a slight
advantage over others. The advantage will allow the
organisms to compete better in the "struggle for
existence" and produced more offspring, which will
inherit the advantageous qualities. Darwin called the
process "natural selection," whereby favorable
traits in the most "fit" animals allow them to
survive and reproduce. |
|
Das
|
26.6S |
136.8W |
38 |
Amil K. ~ (1902-1961), Indian astronomer. |
|
Daubrée
|
15.7N |
14.7E |
14 |
Gabriel-Auguste ~ (1814-1896), French
geologist; his brilliant experimental researches at
Strasburg and later at Paris served to make him famous in
the annals of geology. They comprised the artificial
production of minerals, the geological action of
superheated aqueous vapor, the effect of mutual abrasion,
and the influence of pressure and strain in
mountain-making. From 1857-1861 he made a detailed study
of the hot springs of Plombières, observing the chemical
action of thermal waters. In 1861 he was admitted to the
Académie des Sciences and succeeded Cordier (q.v.) as
professor of geology at the Museum of Natural History in
Paris and as curator of collections; to the latter he made
extensive additions, particularly of meteorites. Daubréelite
(CrS), a grayish granular mineral found in meteoric iron,
was named after him. |
|
Davisson
|
37.5S |
174.6W |
87 |
Clinton Joseph ~ (1881-1958), American
physicist; while working as a research physicist for Bell
Telephone Laboratories (New York), he was awarded the 1937
Nobel Laureate in physics, along with Sir George Paget
Thomson, "for their experimental discovery of the
diffraction of electrons by crystals." His
fundamental work was the foundation for much of today's
solid-state electronics. |
|
Davy
|
11.8S |
8.1W |
34 |
Sir Humphry ~ (1778-1829), British chemist
and physicist; proved that it was not using two different
metals that made the "Voltaic Pile" work; the
electricity was actually caused by the chemical reaction
caused by the cloth soaked in brine that Volta (q.v.) had
used to increase conductivity. Davy was able to create an
electric current from the same metal in two different
fluids with the metal in each fluid touching. Davy also
used the Voltaic Pile to decompose water into hydrogen and
oxygen, and used the same method to decompose several
compounds which led to his discovery of several new
elements. |
|
Dawes
|
17.2N |
26.4E |
18 |
Reverend William Rutter ~, R.A.S.
(1799-1868), British theologian, physician and astronomer;
moved to Liverpool in 1826 where he was to meet William
Lassell (q.v.) with whom he struck up a lifelong
friendship. In 1829, Dawes took up astronomy and the study
of binary stars in earnest. Sir John Herschel (q.v.) was
to become Dawes' friend and mentor. Dawes improved on
Herschel's own double star work by introducing refinements
to his telescope, a 3.8-inch Dolland refractor, and as a
result was able to make more accurate observations of
binaries. Renowned for his observational prowess, he was
often referred to as "Eagle-Eye Dawes." |
|
Dawson
|
67.4S |
134.7W |
45 |
Dr. Bernhard H. ~ (1890-1960), Argentinean
astronomer; noted variable star observer. For his
discovery of Nova Puppis 1942, he was presented the Nova
Award Medal. |
|
De Forest
|
77.3S |
162.1W |
57 |
Dr. Lee ~ (1873-1961), American inventor;
as an independent inventor, he received over 180 patents.
His most important work advanced the field of radio
broadcasting, including his invention of the Audion, a
triode vacuum tube incorporating a filament and a plate,
like ordinary vacuum tubes, but also a grid between the
filament and plate; the Audion strengthened the current
through the tube, amplifying weak telegraph and radio
signals. De Forest also developed a feedback circuit to
increase the output of a radio transmitter and produce
alternating current, as well as a method of placing
"sound on film" for motion pictures that became
standard in the industry. |
|
De Gasparis
|
25.9S |
50.7W |
30 |
Annibale ~ (1819-1892), Italian
astronomer; director of the Observatory of Naples (Capodimonte)
beginning in 1864. Discovered the asteroids 10 Hygeia and
11 Parthenope. |
|
de la Rue
|
59.1N |
52.3E |
134 |
Warren ~ (1815-1889), British astronomer,
scientist and inventor; a pioneer in celestial
photography, he adapted the wet-plate process to lunar
photography and invented a photoheliograph (1858), the
first device to produce good quality solar pictures. His
photographs of a solar eclipse in 1860 demonstrated that
prominences observed at the sun's edge are of solar
origin. De la Rue is known also for his research in
chemistry, solar physics, and electrical discharge through
gases. Among his inventions were an envelope-folding
machine (1851). |
|
De Moraes
|
49.5N |
143.2E |
53 |
A. ~ (1916-1970), Brazilian astronomer. |
|
De Morgan
|
3.3N |
14.9E |
10 |
Augustus ~ (1806-1871), British
mathematician and astronomer, born in India; the first
person to define and name "mathematical
induction" and developed De Morgan's Rule to
determine the convergence of a mathematical series. His
definition of a limit was the first attempt to define the
idea in precise mathematical terms. In addition, he also
devised a decimal coinage system, an almanac of all full
moons from 2000 B.C. to 2000 A.D., and a theory on the
probability of life events which is used by insurance
companies. His most important work, Formal Logic,
included the concept of the quantification of the
predicate, an idea that solved problems that were
impossible under the classic Aristotelian logic. |
|
de Roy
|
55.3S |
99.1W |
43 |
Felix ~ (1883-1942), Belgian astronomer;
observed and recorded more than 5,000 variable stars
during his career. |
|
de Sitter
|
80.1N |
39.6E |
64 |
Willem ~ (1872-1934), Dutch astronomer;
spent most of his career at the University of Leiden,
where he directed and expanded the astronomy program.
Worked extensively on the motions of the satellites of
Jupiter, determining their masses and orbits from decades
of observations. He redetermined the fundamental constants
of astronomy and determined the variation of the rotation
of Earth. He also performed statistical studies of the
distribution and motions of stars, but is best known today
for his contributions to cosmology. Awarded the 1931 Bruce
Medal. |
|
de Vico
|
19.7S |
60.2W |
20 |
Francesco ~ (1805-1848), Italian
astronomer and mathematician; as director of the
observatory of the Collegio Romano, he discovered the
comets 54P/de Vico-Swift (1844) and 122P/de Vico
(1846). |
|
De Vries
|
19.9S |
176.7W |
59 |
Hugo M. ~ (1848-1935), Dutch botanist;
best known for his studies on mutations. As professor of
botany at the University of Amsterdam, he was one of the
three scientists who independently rediscovered and
confirmed the laws of heredity as presented by Gregor
Mendel (q.v.). |
|
Debes
|
29.5N |
51.7E |
30 |
Ernest ~ (1840-1923), German cartographer;
creator of legendary maps, including a well-known atlas of
the Moon. |
|
Debye
|
49.6N |
176.2W |
142 |
Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus ~, or Peter
"Pie" ~ (1884-1966), Dutch physicist and
chemist; his first major scientific contribution (1912)
was the application of the concept of dipole moment to the
charge distribution in asymmetric molecules, developing
equations relating dipole moments to temperature,
dielectric constant, etc. In consequence, molecular dipole
moments are measured in debyes, a unit named in his
honor. Also in 1912, he extended Albert Einstein's (q.v.)
theory of specific heat to lower temperatures, using Max
Planck's (q.v.) quantum concept. in 1913, he
extended Niels Bohr's (q.v.) theory of atomic structure,
introducing elliptical orbits, a concept also introduced
by Arnold Sommerfeld (q.v.). In 1914-1915, he calculated
the effect of temperature on X-ray diffraction patterns of
crystalline solids with Paul Scherrer. In 1923, with his
assistant Erich Hückel, he developed an improvement of
Svante Arrhenius' (q.v.) theory of electrical conductivity
in electrolytic solutions. Awarded the 1936 Nobel Prize in
chemistry "for his contributions to the study of
molecular structure," primarily due to his work on
dipole moments and X-ray diffraction. |
|
Dechen
|
46.1N |
68.2W |
12 |
Ernst Heinrich Karl von ~ (1800-1889),
German geologist, mineralogist and cartographer; as
director of the Prussian state mining department, he
furthered the development of mining and metallurgical
works in Westphalia and northern Europe. Authored numerous
books on geology and mining, and published a geological
map of Germany. |
|
Defoe
|
6.0S |
80.5E |
18 |
Daniel ~, born Daniel Foe (c. 1661-1731),
British author; considered the founder of the English
novel. Author of Robinson Crusoe, he produced about
200 works of nonfiction prose in addition to nearly 2,000
short essays. |
|
Delambre
|
1.9S |
17.5E |
51 |
Jean-Baptiste Joseph ~ (1749-1822), French
mathematician, astronomer and author; in 1771, he tutored
the son of M. d'Assy, the Receiver-General of Finances; in
1788, d'Assy built an observatory for Delambre, in which
he composed his Tables du Soleil, de Jupiter, de
Saturne, d'Uranus et des satellites de Jupiter (1792).
He served at the Bureau des Longitudes from 1795 and
measured the arc of the meridian extending from Dunkirk to
Barcelona. In 1807, Delambre was appointed to the chair of
astronomy at the Collège de France in Paris, and also
served as treasurer to the Imperial University from 1808. |
|
Delaunay
|
22.2S |
2.5E |
46 |
Charles-Eugene ~ (1816-1872), French
astronomer; published the most comprehensive lunar theory
of his time, a two-volume treatise spanning 1800 pages.
Delaunay took nearly 20 years to perform his calculations,
which were published in 1860 and 1867. |
|
Delia
|
10.9S |
6.1W |
2 |
Greek female name. |
|
Delisle
|
29.9N |
34.6W |
25 |
Joseph-Nicolas ~ (1688-1768), French
astronomer; proposed that the series of colored rings
sometimes observed around the Sun is caused by diffraction
of sunlight through water droplets in a cloud. He also
worked to find the distance of the Sun from the Earth by
observing transits of Venus and Mercury across the face of
the Sun. Lived for 22 years in Russia, where he was the
founder of the Petersburg Observatory. |
|
Dellinger
|
6.8S |
140.6E |
81 |
John Howard ~ (1886-1962), American
physicist and radio pioneer; from 1907 to 1948, he held
successive posts at the National Bureau of Standards in
Washington, D. C., including physicist; chief, radio
section; and chief, Central Radio Propagation Laboratory.
During 1928-1929, he was also chief engineer of the
Federal Radio Commission. He served as a representative of
the United States Department of Commerce on the
Interdepartment Radio Advisory Committee from 1922 to
1948; and as a representative of the United States at
numerous international radio conferences. Dellinger was
appointed vice-president of the International Scientific
Radio Union in 1934. In 1950 he became chairman of Study
Group 6 on Radio Propagation of the International Radio
Consultative Committee. He was appointed chairman of the
Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics in 1941, and
held the same position on the Radio Technical Commission
for Marine Services beginning in 1947. |
|
Delmotte
|
27.1N |
60.2E |
32 |
Gabriel ~ (1876-1950), French astronomer. |
|
Delporte
|
16.0S |
121.6E |
45 |
Eugene J.; Belgian astronomer (1882-1955);
the celestial sphere is divided according to a plan he
prepared (Delimitation Scientifique des Constellations)
in 1930, with the boundaries fixed by the International
Astronomical Union along lines of right ascension and
declination. |
|
Deluc
|
55.0S |
2.8W |
46 |
Jean Andre ~ (1727-1817), Swiss
businessman, geologist and meteorologist; made numerous
scientific excursions in the Alps, on whose natural
history he became an authority. Deluc held the doctrine of
catastrophism to explain present geological formations,
opposing the view that present processes acted
continuously during past ages. |
|
Dembowski
|
2.9N |
7.2E |
26 |
Baron Ercole ~ (1815-1881), Italian
astronomer and nobleman; noted astronomer of Milan and a
famous observer of double stars. |
|
Democritus
|
62.3N |
35.0E |
39 |
~ of Abdera (460-370 B.C.E.), Greek
astronomer and philosopher; educated by the Magi in
astronomy and theology, he argued the eternity of existing
nature, of void space, and of motion. He acquired fame
with his knowledge of natural phenomena and predicted
changes in the weather, using this ability to make people
believe that he could predict future events. |
|
Demonax
|
77.9S |
60.8E |
128 |
~ (?-c. 100 B.C.), Greek philosopher, born
in Cyprus; among the most popular philosophers of his
time, he attempted to revive the philosophy of the Cynic
School in Athens. |
|
Denning
|
16.4S |
142.6E |
44 |
William F. ~ (1848-1931), British
astronomer; legendary comet and meteor shower observer.
First to confirm observation of several prominent meteor
showers, including the Iota Aquarids (1877), Phi
Sagittariids (1917) and Tau Herculids (1918). |
|
Desargues
|
70.2N |
73.3W |
85 |
Girard ~ (1591-1661), French nobleman,
mathematician and engineer; invented a new, non-Greek
system of doing geometry, now called 'projective' or
'modern' geometry. Desargues was a member of the part of
the Parisian mathematical circle surrounding Marin
Mersenne, which included Rene Descartes, Etienne Pascal
and his son, Blaise Pascal (qq.v.). |
|
Descartes
|
11.7S |
15.7E |
48 |
René ~ (1596-1650), French mathematician,
physicist and philosopher; developed a theory known as the
mechanical philosophy. In Traité de l'homme
("Treatise on Man," 1664) and Passions de l'âme
("Passions of the Soul," 1649), he expounded the
view that an animal was an automaton lacking both
sensation and self-awareness, and that only man was
endowed with a soul. His La géométrie includes
the first application of algebra to geometry from which we
now have Cartesian geometry. |
|
Deseilligny
|
21.1N |
20.6E |
6 |
Jules Alfred Pierrot ~ (1868-1918), French
selenographer. |
|
Deslandres
|
33.1S |
4.8W |
256 |
Henri Alexandre ~ (1853-1948), French
astrophysicist; worked at the Paris and Meudon
Observatories, directing the latter (1908-1926) and,
subsequently, both for three years after their merger.
Made significant contributions to the investigation of
molecular spectra, finding empirical laws that became more
useful after the development of quantum mechanics. He
named plages and filaments, and he showed that the latter
are the same structures as prominences. Awarded the 1921
Bruce Medal. |
|
Deutsch
|
24.1N |
110.5E |
66 |
Armin J. ~ (1918-1969), American
astronomer; developed the method of Doppler tomography, an
indirect imaging technique used in observing the periodic
brightness variations of stars. |
|
Dewar
|
2.7S |
165.5E |
50 |
Sir James ~ (1842-1923), British chemist;
best known for his work on the properties of matter at
very low temperatures and the liquefaction of gases. He
liquefied and solidified hydrogen and invented the Dewar
flask, a container for storing hot or cold substances such
as liquid air. It consists of two flasks, one inside the
other, separated by a vacuum. The vacuum greatly reduces
the transfer of heat. The common thermos bottle is an
adaptation of the Dewar flask. |
|
Diana
|
14.3N |
35.7E |
50 |
Roman goddess of wild animals and
the hunt; counterpart of Greek goddess Artemis (q.v.). |
|
Diderot
|
20.4S |
121.5E |
20 |
Denis ~ (1713-1784), French philosopher
and critic; best known for his work on the monumental Encyclopédie
(1745-1772), one of the seminal works of Enlightenment
thought. He and his fellow Encyclopedists were notorious
for their radical and often atheistical thought. |
|
Dionysius
|
2.8N |
17.3E |
18 |
St. Dionysius the Areopagite (A.D. 9-120),
Greek theologian and astronomer; one of the first Athenian
disciples of the Apostle Paul and the first bishop of
Athens. A number of works (including The Divine Names,
Mystical Theology, The Celestial Hierarchies, and The
Ecclesiastical Hierarchy) are often attributed to him
which have influenced basic Orthodox teaching. |
|
Diophantus
|
27.6N |
34.3W |
17 |
~ of Alexandria (c. 200-c. 284?), Greek
mathematician; often known as the 'father of algebra', is
best known for his Arithmetica, a work on the
solution of algebraic equations and on the theory of
numbers. The Arithmetica is a collection of 130
problems giving numerical solutions of determinate
equations (those with a unique solution), and
indeterminate equations. The method for solving the latter
is now known as Diophantine analysis. |
|
Dirichlet
|
11.1N |
151.4W |
47 |
Johann Peter Gustav Lejeune ~ (1805-1859),
French-German mathematician; his work on units in
algebraic number theory Vorlesungen über Zahlentheorie
(published 1863) contains important work on ideals. He
also proposed the modern definition of a function (1837).
Dirichlet is also well known for his papers on conditions
for the convergence of trigonometric series and the use of
the series to represent arbitrary functions. |
|
Dobrovolski
|
12.8 S |
129.7E |
38 |
Georgi Timofeyevich ~ (1928-1971), Soviet
aeronautical engineer, air force pilot and cosmonaut, born
in Ukraine; following a successful mission aboard Soyuz
11, which included a rendezvous with the Salyut 1
space station, Commander Dobrovolski died with crewmates
Vladislav Volkov and Viktor Patsayev (qq.v.) when a minor
malfunction in a door seal caused the cabin to
depressurize prior to reentry. The Dobrovolski Solar
Observatory at Auckland, New Zealand, was named in his
honor. |
|
Dörffel,
or Doerffel
|
69.1S |
107.9W |
68 |
Georg Samuel ~ German astronomer
(1643-1688); studied and worked under Erhard Weigel (q.v.)
at Jena, along with Gottfried Kirch. Following Kirch's
discovery of the Comet Of 1680, Dörffel made his own
observations and devised his theory of parabolic orbits
for comets. |
|
Dollond
|
10.4S |
14.4E |
11 |
John ~ (1706-1761), British optician;
inventor of the achromatic lens for telescopes. His sons,
Peter and John, continued the family optics business and
sold a variety of scientific instruments. |
|
Donati
|
20.7S |
5.2E |
36 |
Giovanni Battista ~ (1826-1873), Italian
astronomer; a pioneer in the spectroscopic study of the
stars and the Sun, he served as director of the Florence
Observatory from 1864. He was the first to obtain and
analyze the spectrum of a comet, concluding that the
composition of comets is, at least in part, gaseous. He
discovered six new comets, among them Donati's Comet,
which he first saw on 2 June 1858. |
|
Donna
|
7.2N |
38.3E |
2 |
Italian female name; literally
"woman." |
|
Donner
|
31.4S |
98.0E |
58 |
Anders ~ (1873-1949), Finnish astronomer;
professor of astronomy and director of the Helsinki
University observatory. |
|
Doppelmayer
|
28.5S |
41.4W |
63 |
Johann Gabriel ~ (1671-1750), German
mathematician, astronomer; created the Atlas coelestis,
an early cosmologic atlas which included ten star maps and
a long series of diagrams that show the motion of the
bodies of the solar system. |
|
Doppler
|
12.6S |
159.6W |
110 |
J. Christian ~ (1803-1853), Austrian
physicist and mathematician; theorized that sound waves
from a moving source would be compressed or expanded, or
that the frequency would change (the "Doppler
Effect"). Fizeau (q.v.) generalized Doppler's work
and discovered that it also applied to light. This
discovery contributed greatly to proving the Universe was
expanding. |
|
Douglass
|
35.9N |
122.4W |
49 |
Andrew Ellicott ~ (1867-1962), American
astronomer, meteorologist and botanist; while working at
Lowell Observatory (Flagstaff, Arizona), he perfected the
tree-ring dating method, which he named "dendrochronology."
Douglass wrote a total of 159 articles, many of which
focus upon the cyclic phenomena or tree-rings. |
|
Dove
|
46.7S |
31.5E |
30 |
Heinrich Wilhelm ~ (1803-1879), German
physicist and meteorologist; often referred to as the
father of meteorology, he formulated meteorological laws
of gyration. His major work was The Distribution of
Heat Over the Surface of the Globe. |
|
Doyle
|
2.0N |
84.5E |
32 |
Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan ~ (1859-1930),
Scottish novelist; creator of "Sherlock Holmes." |
|
Draper
|
17.6N |
21.7W |
8 |
Henry ~ (1837-1882), American physician
and astronomer; made the first photograph of an
astronomical nebula, recording the Great Nebula of Orion
on 30 September 1880; the first stellar spectrum
photograph, which he took of Vega in August 1872; the
first wide-angle photograph of a comet's tail; and the
first spectrum of a comet's head, both of these with
Tebbutt's Comet in 1881. In addition, Draper obtained many
high-quality photographs of the Moon in 1863, a benchmark
spectrum of the Sun in 1873, and spectra of the Orion
Nebula, the Moon, Jupiter, Mars, Venus, and numerous
bright stars. He also invented the slit spectrograph and
pushed the state of the art in photography, instrumental
optics, and telescope clock drives. (Source:
Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers) |
|
Drebbel
|
40.9S |
49.0W |
30 |
Cornelius ~ (1572-1633), Dutch alchemist
and inventor; invented a force pump for a fountain, as
well as a clockwork device that could allegedly keep going
for one hundred years. While serving in the Court of
England's King James I, he introduced the compound
microscope, a thermometer and a telescope, as well as a
still for obtaining fresh water from brine; wind-powered
musical instruments and toys; an incubator; and a
thermostatically-controlled oven. His most notable
invention, however, was an early version of a submarine. |
|
Dreyer
|
10.0N |
96.9E |
61 |
John Louis Emil ~ (1852-1926), British
astronomer, born in Copenhagen; an assistant at Dunsink
Observatory (1878-1882) before moving to Armagh
Observatory, Northern Ireland, where he became Director in
1882, where he concentrated on the compilation of The
Second Armagh Catalogue of Stars and what became his
most important contribution to astronomy, The New
General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars
(known commonly as the "NGC"). In this catalog,
which to this day remains the standard reference used by
astronomers the world over, he listed 7840 objects. He
followed it with two supplementary Index Catalogues (1895,
1908) which contained an additional 5386 objects. It is
the order in which they appear in these catalogs that
defines the name of many prominent galaxies, nebulae and
star clusters. |
|
Drude
|
38.5S |
91.8W |
24 |
Paul Karl Ludwig ~ (1863-1906), German
physicist; performed pioneering work on the optics of
absorbing media and connected the optical with the
electrical and thermal properties of solids. His
well-known textbook on optics, Lehrbuch der Optik,
is considered a standard work on the subject. |
|
Dryden
|
33.0S |
155.2W |
51 |
Dr. Hugh Latimer ~ (1898-1965), American
physicist and engineer; director of the National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) from 1947 until the
creation of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA), for which he served as Deputy
Administrator. Previously, he was Associate Director of
the National Bureau of Standards, where he had served
since 1918 in scientific research. |
|
Drygalski
|
79.3S |
84.9W |
149 |
Erich D. von ~ (1865-1949), German
geographer, geophysicist and polar explorer; led the
German Antarctic expedition aboard the Gauss to
explore the unknown area of the Antarctic lying south of
the Kerguelen Islands (1901-1903). Despite being trapped
by ice for nearly 14 months, Drygalski and his crew
discovered Kaiser Wilhelm II Land. |
|
Dubyago
|
4.4N |
70.0E |
51 |
Dimitrii Ivanovich ~ (1849-1918), Russian
astronomer;
Also Alexander Dmitriyevich ~ (1903-1959),
Soviet astronomer; author of The Determination of
Orbits. |
|
Dufay
|
5.5N |
169.5E |
39 |
Jean C. B. ~ (1896-1967), French
astronomer; author of the essential texts Galactic
Nebulae and Interstellar Matter and Introduction to
Astrophysics: The Stars. |
|
Dugan
|
64.2N |
103.3E |
50 |
Raymond S. ~ (1878-1940), American
astronomer; professor of astronomy at Princeton
University. Discovered Asteroid 508 Princetonia (1903). |
|
Dumas
|
5.3S |
81.7E |
16 |
Alexandre ~ père (1802-1870), French
novelist; best known for The Three Musketeers and The
Count of Monte Cristo. |
|
Dunér,
or Duner
|
44.8N |
179.5E |
62 |
Nils Christoffer ~ (1839-1914), Swedish
astronomer, astrophysicist and Arctic explorer; professor
of astronomy at Uppsala Observatory, Sweden. |
|
Dunthorne
|
30.1S |
31.6W |
15 |
Richard ~ (1711-1775), British astronomer;
planned and funded the building of the observatory at St.
John's College, Cambridge, donating the instruments
himself. He carried out observations of the transits of
Venus in 1761 and 1769, and prepared new lunar tables. |
|
Dyson
|
61.3N |
121.2W |
63 |
Sir Frank Watson ~ (1868-1939), British
astronomer; astronomer royal of Scotland (1905–10) and
of England (from 1910). As director (1910–33) of
Greenwich Observatory he greatly expanded its research
activities and inaugurated (1928) the wireless
transmission of Greenwich time. Noted for his study of
solar eclipses, he was an authority on the spectrum of the
corona and on the chromosphere. |
|
Dziewulski
|
21.2N |
98.9E |
63 |
Władysław ~ (1878-1962), Polish
astronomer; professor of astronomy at Batory University in
Vilna and Copernicus University in Torun. The planetarium
at Torun is named in his honor. |