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|
Common Name
|
Lat
|
Long
|
Diam
|
Origin
|
T. Mayer |
15.6N |
29.1W |
33 |
Johann Tobias ~ (1723-1762), German astronomer,
cartographer and mathematician; first to determine the
libration of the Moon. |
Tacchini |
4.9N |
85.8E |
40 |
Pietro ~
(1838-1905), Italian astronomer; director of the
observatories at Modena, Palermo and the Collegio Romano. |
Tacitus |
16.2S |
19.0E |
39 |
Cornelius ~ (c. 55-120?), Roman politician, philosopher
and historian. |
Tacquet |
16.6N |
19.2E |
7 |
André ~, S.J. (1612-1660), Belgian Jesuit and
mathematician; his work helped pave that way for the
discovery of the calculus. |
Taizo |
16.6N |
19.2E |
6 |
Japanese male name. |
Talbot |
2.5S |
85.3E |
11 |
William Henry
Fox ~ (1800-1877), British astronomer, photographer,
physicist and archaeologist; a close friend of John Herschel
(q.v.), he wrote papers on
elliptic integrals, published the first book illustrated
with photographs, was one of the first to translate the
cuneiform writing from Nineveh, was an elected member of
Parliament and lectured on the optical phenomena of
crystals. |
Tamm |
4.4S |
146.4E |
38 |
Igor Yevgenyevich ~ (1895-1971), Soviet physicist;
awarded the 1958 Nobel Prize in physics for his research
into the "general characteristics of radiation emitted
by systems moving with super-light velocities with some
applications to plasma physics." |
Tannerus |
56.4S |
22.0E |
28 |
Adam Tanner, or ~ (1571-1632), Austrian Jesuit
theologian and educator; shaped many of the tenets of
Catholic theology during his era. While at the
University of Vienna, he published his greatest work,
"Universa theologia scholastica" (1626-27), and was
later appointed as chancellor of the University of
Prague by Ferdinand II. |
Taruntius
or Tarutius |
5.6N |
46.5E |
56 |
Lucius
Tarutius Firmanus, or Firman Lucii Tarucii, or ~ (?-fl. 86
B.C.), Roman philosopher, mathematician and chronologer;
computed the founding date of Rome as 21 April 753 B.C. to
the position of the celestial bodies for that date: "Jupiter
in Pisces; Saturn, Venus, Mars and Mercury in Scorpius; the
Sun in Taurus; and the Moon in Libra." (N.B., The crater
designation, "Taruntius," dates to Riccioli's
misspelling of Tarutius.) |
Tasso |
0.7S |
92.0E |
52 |
Torquato ~
(1544-1595), Italian poet and playwright; considered the
greatest of his country's poets of the late Renaissance.
Best remembered for his masterpiece La Gerusalemme
Liberata (Jerusalem Delivered, 1575). Among
Tasso's other works are some 2000 short poems, sonnets and
madrigals. |
Taylor |
5.3S |
16.7E |
42 |
Brook ~ (1685-1731), British mathematician; wrote on the
mathematical theory of perspective, as well as
magnetism, capillary actions, thermometers and calculus.
He invented the method for expanding functions in terms
of polynomials about an arbitrary point known as the
Taylor Series, which he published in Methodus in
crementorum directa et inversa (1715). |
Tebbutt |
9.6N |
53.6E |
31 |
John ~ (1834-1916), Australian astronomer and
meteorologist; discovered the Great Comet of 1861 (later
named Comet Tebbutt II 1861). Elected the first
president of the New South Wales branch of the British
Astronomical Association (1895). Constructed the first
of several observatories on the family property at the
"Peninsula," Windsor (1863), later improved with a
substantial brick observatory and library building
(1879). During his life, he published more than 370
articles, booklets, reports and journals, and also
regularly kept rainfall and flood level statistics for
his home region. |
Teisserenc |
32.2N |
135.9W |
62 |
Leon-Philippe
~ de Bort (1855-1913), French meteorologist; made nearly 600
unmanned balloon soundings between 1898 and 1904, obtaining
temperature profiles to an altitude of approximately 14 km.
Based on the temperature profiles from these soundings, he
identified an upper level inversion, thereby confirming the
existence of an atmospheric layer that he called the
"stratosphere."
(Source: Hopkins, "Balloons as Upper Air Probes") |
Tempel |
3.9N |
11.9E |
45 |
Ernst Wilhelm Leberecht ~ (1821-1889), German
lithographer and astronomer; while working at the
observatories at Marseille (beginning in 1860), Brera
(Milan, 1871) and Arcetri (1874), he discovered numerous
nubelae, including the Merope Nebula (NGC 1435) in the
Pleiades on 19 October 1859. A total of 156 NGC entries
are attributed to Tempel, of which 123 are deep sky
objects. He is also credited with 13 original comet
discoveries and five independent co-discoveries, as well
as eight first rediscoveries of periodic comets. His
original independent discoveries include four
short-periodic comets. |
ten Bruggencate |
9.5S |
134.4E |
59 |
Dr. Paul ~ (1901-1961), German astronomer and physicist;
director of Observatory Greifswald. Directed the
construction of the observatory at Hainberg (1941) in
order to study solar activity. |
Tereshkova |
28.4N |
144.3E |
31 |
Valentina Vladimirovna ~ (1937- ); Russian cosmonaut; on
16 June 1963, she was launched into orbit aboard the
Soviet spacecraft Vostok 6, making 45 revolutions
around the Earth in a nearly 71-hour flight, becoming
the first woman in space. |
Tesla |
38.5N |
124.7E |
43 |
Nikola ~
(1856-1943), Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer,
and scientist; the telephone repeater, rotating magnetic
field principle, polyphase alternating-current system,
induction motor, alternating-current power transmission,
Tesla coil transformer, wireless communication, radio,
fluorescent lights, and more than 700 other patents are
among the inventions credited at least in part to him. |
Thales |
61.8N |
50.3E |
31 |
~ Of Miletos; Greek mathematician, astronomer and
philosopher; asserted that a physical element, water,
was the first principle of all things. Considered the
founder of the school of Ionic physical philosophy, also
credited with introducing the knowledge of geometry into
Greece. |
Theaetetus |
37.0N |
6.0E |
24 |
~ (c. 417
B.C.-c. 369 B.C.), Greek geometrician; his work on
irrational
lengths, thought by many to be the finest work included in
Euclid's Elements, is paramount among his many
contributions to mathematics. |
Thebit |
22.0S |
4.0W |
56 |
Abu-l-Hasan
Sabit ibn Kurra al-Harrani as-Sabi', or Thabit (or ~) ben
Korra (826-901), Iraqi astronomer. |
Theiler |
13.4N |
83.3E |
7 |
Max ~
(1899-1972), South African bacteriologist; awarded the 1951
Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his development
of a vaccine against yellow fever. |
Theon Junior |
2.3S |
15.8E |
17 |
~ Of
Alexandria (c. 335?-c. 405?), Greek mathematician and
astronomer; son of Theon Of Smyrna (q.v.). |
Theon Senior |
0.8S |
15.4E |
18 |
~ Of Smyrna
(c. 70?-c. 135?), Greek mathematician, philosopher and
astronomer; father of Theon Of Alexandria (q.v.). |
Theophilus |
11.4S |
26.4E |
110 |
~ (385-412),
Greek astronomer, Patriarch of Alexandria and Bishop of
Antioch. |
Theophrastus |
17.5N |
39.0E |
9 |
~ (c. 371 B.C.- c. 287 B.C.), Greek philosopher of the
Peripatetic school, botanist and natural historian;
favorite pupil of Aristotle, who named him his successor
in leadership of the Lyceum, and bequeathed to him his
library and manuscripts of his own writings. |
Thiel |
40.7N |
134.5W |
32 |
Walter ~ (1910-1943), German rocketry engineer; in
charge of rocket engine development during World War II
under Wernher Von Braun (q.v.). Killed in the first
British air raid on Peenemunde in October 1943. |
Thiessen |
75.4N |
169.0W |
66 |
E. ~ (1914-1961), German astronomer;
Also Reinhardt ~ (1867-1938), pioneering
coal petrologist and stratigraphic palynologist; devised
the Thiessen polygon method of weighted averages. |
Thomson |
32.7S |
166.2E |
117 |
Sir Joseph John ~ (1856-1940), British physicist;
awarded the 1906 Nobel Prize in Physics "in recognition
of the great merits of his theoretical and experimental
investigations on the conduction of electricity by
gases." His son, Sir George Paget Thomson (1892-1975),
was awarded the 1937 Nobel Prize in Physics with Clinton
Joseph Davisson "for their experimental discovery of the
diffraction of electrons by crystals." |
Tikhomirov |
25.2N |
162.0E |
65 |
Nikolaj I. ~ (1860-1930), Soviet chemical engineer. |
Tikhov |
62.3N |
171.7E |
83 |
Gavriil Adrianovich ~ (1875-1960), Soviet astrophysicist
and astrobiologist, born in Belarus; originated the idea
of the "feathering spectrograph" in astrophotography.
Developed a number of new instruments for celestial
observation and helped establish some of the central
principles of practical photographic photometry. |
Tiling |
53.1S |
132.6W |
38 |
Reinhold K. ~ (1893-1933), German rocketry scientist;
built the first German postal rocket (1931), which flew
a demonstration flight at Lake Dummer near Deelingen.
His experiments used solid fuels such as gunpowder. On
10 October 1933, Tiling and two co-workers were killed
after a powder explosion in his laboratory. |
Timaeus |
62.8N |
0.5W |
32 |
~, Plato's
renowned work (c. 400 B.C.) describes a cosmogony using both
the powers of 2 (left line) and the powers of 3 (right
line). |
Timiryazev |
5.5S |
147.0W |
53 |
Kliment
Arkadyevich ~ (1843-1920), Russian botanist, physiologist;
founded a faculty of vegetable physiology and a laboratory
at the Petrov Academy. Also wrote more than 50 publications,
including the well-known book "Vegetable Life." The
Timiryazev Academy of Agriculture and Horse-Breeding Museum
at Petrov is named in his honor. |
Timocharis |
26.7N |
13.1W |
33 |
~
(ca. 200 BC), Greek philosopher and astronomer; with
Aristillus, prepared the first true star catalog in the
third century B.C. |
Tiselius |
7.0N |
176.5E |
53 |
Arne Wilhelm Kaurin ~ (1902-1971), Swedish biochemist;
awarded the 1948 Nobel Prize in Chemistry "for his
research on electrophoresis and adsorption analysis,
especially for his discoveries concerning the complex
nature of the serum proteins." |
Tisserand |
21.4N |
48.2E |
36 |
François-Félix ~ (1845-1896), French astronomer;
director of the observatories at Toulouse (1873-1892)
and Paris (1892-1896). Advanced the science of celestial
mechanics by extending the Traité de Mécanique de
Céleste of Pierre-Simon Laplace (q.v.). |
Titius |
26.8S |
100.7E |
73 |
Johann D. ~ (1729-1796), German astronomer; discovered a
numerical relationship describing the relative distances
of the then-known planets from the sun. Another German
astronomer, Johann Bode (q.v.), popularized the
relationship and became associated with it. It is often
called Bode's law; occasionally, the Titius-Bode law. |
Titov |
28.6N |
150.5E |
31 |
German Stepanovich ~ (1935-2000), Soviet cosmonaut;
piloting Vostok 2 in August 1961, he became the
second man in space. |
Tolansky |
9.5S |
16.0W |
13 |
Samuel ~ (1907-1973), British physicist and educator;
analyzed spectra to investigate nuclear spin and
magnetic and quadrupole moments. Ascertained the spin of
Uranium-235, the isotope capable of fission in a nuclear
chain reaction. |
Tolstoy |
4.2S |
93.3E |
52 |
Leo
Nikolaevich ~ (1828-1910), Russian author; his War and
Peace and Anna Karenina are considered two of the
greatest works of literature. |
Torricelli |
4.6S |
28.5E |
22 |
Evangelista ~
(1608-1647), Italian physicist; secretary and companion of
Galileo during the last three months of his life.
Constructed the first mercury barometer. Also developed the
concepts of momentum and impetus, and solved Fermat's
triangle problem ("the Torricelli point"). |
Toscanelli |
27.4N |
47.5W |
7 |
Paolo Dal Pozzo ~ (1397-1482), Italian physician,
cartographer, cosmographer and mathematician; it is
believed that his map of the world was used by Columbus
on the 1492 voyage to America. |
Townley |
3.4N |
63.3E |
18 |
Sidney Dean ~ (1867-1946), American astronomer. |
Tralles |
28.4N |
52.8E |
43 |
Johann Georg ~ (1763-1822), German physicist and
educator. |
Triesnecker |
4.2N |
3.6E |
26 |
Franz von Paula ~, or Francis a Paula ~ (1745-1817),
Austrian Jesuit mathematician, geographer, astronomer
and educator; succeeded Father Max Hell (q.v.) as
director of the Vienna Observatory; later oversaw
construction of the "New Observatory" at Vienna.
Determined or corrected the longitude and latitude of
various places from the best available data, and
completed Metzburg's triangulation of lower Austria,
using it as a basis for the production of a new map of
that country. |
Trouvelot |
49.3N |
5.8E |
9 |
Étienne
Léopold ~ (1827-1895), French artist, entomologist and
astronomer; became famous for his illustrations of
astronomical details of the sun and of Venus, which led him
to a faculty position at Harvard University in Astronomy. |
Trumpler |
29.3N |
167.1E |
77 |
Robert Julius ~ (1866-1956), Swiss-born American
astronomer; moved to the US in 1915 and worked at the
Lick Observatory, where while observing a solar eclipse,
he was able to confirm Einstein's theory of relativity
(1922). Made extensive studies of galactic star
clusters, and demonstrated the presence throughout the
galactic plane of interstellar material that absorbs
light (1930). Reduced and corrected Shapley's
determination of the distance to the center of the Milky
Way to be 30,000 light-years from Earth. |
Tsander |
6.2N |
149.3W |
181 |
Friedrich A.; Soviet rocketry scientist (1887-1933);
with Konstantin Tsiokolvskiy (q.v.), published the first
formal description of the concept of "lightsail"
spacecraft (1924). |
Tseraskiy
or Tseraskii |
49.0S |
141.6E |
56 |
Vitol'd Karlovic Ceraskij, or Cerasky, or ~ (1849-1925),
Polish-born Russian physicist, astronomer and educator. |
Tsinger |
56.7N |
175.6E |
44 |
Nikolai Yakovlevich ~ (1842-1918), Russian astronomer
and land surveyor. |
Tsiolkovskiy
or Tsiolkovskii |
21.2 S |
128.9E |
185 |
Konstantin E. ~ (1857-1935), Soviet astrophysicist and
educator; considered the Father of Astronautics, his
Investigating Space with Rocket Devices, published
in the late 1800s, described many of the principles of
modern space flight and described in detail the use of
rockets for launching orbital space ships. Among his
ideas were the use of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen
as rocket fuel, and multi-stage rocket design for
achieving interplanetary flight. |
Tsu Ch'ung Chi |
17.3N |
145.1E |
28 |
~ (430-501), Chinese mathematician and mathematician; He
gave the rational approximation 355/113 to
which is correct to six decimal places. He also proved
that 3.1415926 <
< 3.1415927 and determined the precise time of
the solstice by measuring the length of the Sun's shadow
at noon on days near the solstice. |
Tucker |
5.6S |
88.2E |
7 |
Richard Hawley ~ (1859-1952), American astronomer and
educator; the descendent of a legendary family of
mariners, he served as an astronomer at Dudley
Observatory (Albany, N.Y.) and the Argentine National
Observatory (Cordoba). In 1893, he was offered a place
on the staff of Lick Observatory (California) to take
charge of the Meridian Circle program of determining
precise star positions. He was granted a three-year
leave to head an expedition to Argentina (1908) in order
to obtain accurate observations of star positions in the
southern part of the sky for incorporation in the
General Catalogue then under preparation at Dudley
Observatory. Under Tucker's direction, the expedition
set a standard never surpassed for the number of
accurate observations in a short time; although the
program was planned to require three years, it was
completed in 22 months, during which 87,000 precise
observations were made of the positions of 15,000 stars.
The heaviest load of observing was carried by Tucker,
who personally made 20,800 observations. (Source:
University of California.) |
Turner |
1.4S |
13.2W |
11 |
Herbert Hall ~ (1861-1930), British astronomer and
seismologist; after serving as chief assistant at the
Royal Greenwich Observatory for nine years, he spent
most of his career as Savilian professor of astronomy at
Oxford University. A leader in the worldwide effort to
produce an astrographic chart of the sky, he developed
improved methods for obtaining both positions and
magnitudes from photographic plates. Credited with
coining the term parsec. Awarded the Bruce Medal
in 1927. |
Tycho |
43.4S |
11.1W |
102 |
Tyge Brahe, Latinized as ~ (1546-1601), Danish
astronomer; under the patronage of King Frederick II of
Denmark, he built a castle called Uraniborg on the
little island of Hveen in the Sont near Copenhagen, the
first true astronomical observatory ever constructed.
There, Tycho used a quadrant circle to sight the planets
and stars. His large, accurate instruments yielded
measurements which were accurate to within four minutes
of arc. He compiled an extensive table of planetary
positions and a star catalogue, and made the most
accurate naked eye astronomical measurements of his day.
Brahe developed his own "geoheliocentric theory" of
planetary motions, in which the Sun orbited the Earth
and the other planets orbited the Sun. He hired Kepler
(q.v.) as an assistant to analyze the vast bulk of data
which had been collected. |
Tyndall |
34.9S |
117.0E |
18 |
John ~ (1820-1893), British physicist; best known for
discovering the Tyndall effect , in which a beam of
light becomes visible when passing through a colloid. |
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