Craters (V)
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To Crater Catalog Index |
|
Crater Name
|
Lat
|
Long
|
Diam
|
Origin
|
Väisälä |
25.9N |
47.8W |
8 |
Yrjö ~
(1891-1971), Finnish astronomer, geodecist and
meteorologist; inventor of the aplanatic telescope, which
provides correction for spherical aberration and coma. |
Valier |
6.8N |
174.5E |
67 |
Max ~
(1895-1930), German author, astronomer and rocketry engineer
(born in Austria); influential in creating the Society for
Space Travel, whose core members (including Willy Ley and
Wernher von Braun [qq.v.]) later formed the amateur rocket
club Raketenflugplatz. Killed while experimenting
with a rocket car. |
Van Albada |
9.4N |
64.3E |
21 |
Gale Bruno ~ (1912-1972), Dutch astronomer. |
Van Biesbroeck |
28.7N |
45.6W |
9 |
George A. ~ (1880-1974), Belgian-American astronomer;
famed binary star observer. The American Astronomical
Society presents an annual award in his name "to a
living individual for long-term extraordinary or
unselfish service to astronomy, often beyond the
requirements of his or her paid position." |
Van de Graaff |
27.4S |
172.2E |
233 |
Robert Jemison ~ (1901-1967), American physicist;
developed an electrostatic particle accelerator used in
nuclear research now commonly referred to as the Van de
Graaff generator. |
Van der Waals |
43.9S |
119.9E |
104 |
Johannes Diderik ~ (1837-1923), Dutch physicist and
molecular scientist; awarded 1910 Nobel Prize in physics
for his studies of the physical state of liquids and
gases. |
Van den Bergh |
31.3N |
159.1W |
42 |
George ~
(1890-1966), Dutch astronomer. |
Van den Bos |
5.3S |
146.0E |
22 |
Willem Hendrik ~ (1896-1974), South African
astronomer. |
Van Gent |
15.4N |
160.4E |
43 |
R.H. ~
(1900-1947), Dutch astronomer and author. |
Van Maanen |
35.7N |
128.0E |
60 |
Adriaan ~ (1884-1946), Dutch-American astronomer; while
at Mount Wilson Observatory, he discovered the second
white dwarf, since named van
Maanen's star, with a density some 400,000 times
that of the Sun. |
Van Rhijn |
52.6N |
146.4E |
46 |
Pieter J. ~ (1886-1960), Dutch astronomer; a student
of Kapteyn (q.v.), whom he succeeded as professor of
astronomy at Groningen University. |
Van Vleck |
1.9S |
78.3E |
31 |
John Monroe ~ (1833-1912), American astronomer and
mathematician; longtime head of the department of
mathematics and astronomy at Wesleyan University
(Connecticut, U.S.A.). The university's observatory is
named in his honor. |
Van Wijk |
62.8S |
118.8E |
32 |
Uco ~
(1924-1966), Dutch-American astronomer and educator; the
physics and astronomy library at the University of Maryland
(U.S.A), where van Wijk was a longtime professor, is named
in his honor. |
van 't Hoff |
62.1N |
131.8W |
92 |
Jacobus Henricus ~ (1852-1911), Dutch chemist; awarded
the 1901 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his pioneering
work on chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in
solutions. |
Vasco da Gama |
3.6N |
83.9W |
83 |
Admiral Dom ~ (1469-1524), Portuguese navigator and
explorer; Admiral of the Indies, first count of
Vidigueira, sixth governor and second viceroy of India,
Knight Commander of the Military Order of Christ. |
Vashakidze |
43.6N |
93.3E |
44 |
Mikhail A. (1909-1956), Soviet astronomer. |
Vavilov |
0.8S |
137.9W |
98 |
Nikolai
Ivanovich ~ (1887-1943), Soviet botanist and geneticist,
director of the All-Union Institute of Plant Industry
(Russia); and Sergei Ivanovich (1891–1951), Soviet
physicist, director of the P. N. Lebedev Physical Institute,
Moscow. |
Vega |
45.4S |
63.4E |
75 |
Jurij Vega, or
Georg Freiherr von ~ (1756-1802), Slovenian mathematician,
author, military commander and educator; educated in Vienna,
Vega is best remembered for his tables of logarithms and
trigonometric functions. The Slovenian 50 tolar bank note
bears his portrait. |
Vendelinus |
16.4S |
61.6E |
131 |
Canon
Godefroid (or Gottfried) Wendelin, or ~ (1580-1667), Belgian
priest, cartographer and educator. |
Vening Meinesz |
0.3S |
162.6E |
87 |
Felix A. ~ (1887-1966), Dutch geophysicist and
geodesist; devised a pendulum apparatus, known as the
Vening Meinesz pendulum, by which it became possible to
measure gravity at sea with comparable accuracy as on
land. The European Geophysical Society presents an
annual award for distinguished research in geodesy in
his honor. |
Ventris |
4.9S |
158.0E |
95 |
Michael George Francis ~ (1922-1956), British
linguist; deciphered the ancient Mycenaean scripts known as
Linear B, which he determined were written in an archaic
form of the Greek language. |
Vera |
26.3N |
43.7W |
2 |
Latin female name. |
Vergil
or Virgil |
26.3S |
133.0E |
0 |
Publius
Vergilius Maro, or ~ (70 B.C.-19 B.C.), Roman epic poet; his
Aeneid, a national epic honoring Rome, is one of the
greatest poems in world literature. |
Vernadskii |
23.2N |
130.5E |
91 |
Vladimir Ivanovich ~ (1863-1945), Soviet mineralogist;
the Vernadskii Ridge Volcano in Russia's Kurile Islands
is named in his honor. |
Verne |
24.9N |
25.3W |
2 |
Latin male name; not to be confused with Jules Verne
(q.v.). |
Vertregt |
19.8S |
171.1E |
187 |
M. ~
(1897-1973), Dutch astrophysicist; his Principles of
Astronautics is considered the quintessential work on
the subject. |
Very |
25.6N |
25.3E |
5 |
Frank Washington ~ (1852-1927), American astronomer. |
Vesalius |
3.1S |
114.5E |
61 |
Andreas ~
(1514-1564), Belgian physician; pioneer in anatomical
research. |
Vestine |
33.9N |
93.9E |
96 |
Ernest Harry ~ (1906-1968), American geophysicist and
meteorologist. |
Vetchinkin |
10.2N |
131.3E |
98 |
Vladimir
Petrovich ~ (1888-1950), Soviet physicist and engineer; a
pioneer in aerodynamics and jet flight. |
Vieta |
29.2S |
56.3W |
87 |
François ~, Seigneur de La Bigottière (1540-1603),
French mathematician; regarded as the father of modern
algebra. |
Vil'ev
or Viljev |
6.1S |
144.4E |
45 |
Mikhail
Anatol'evich ~ (1893-1919), Russian astronomer; leading
observer of comets. |
Virchow |
9.8N |
83.7E |
16 |
Rudolph Ludwig
Karl ~ (1821-1902), German physician and pathologist;
regarded as the father of experimental pathology. |
Virtanen |
15.5N |
176.7E |
44 |
Artturi Ilmari ~ (1895-1973), Finnish agricultural
biochemist; awarded the 1945 Nobel Prize in chemistry
for "his research and discoveries in the field of
agricultural and nutrition chemistry, and particularly
his method of preserving animal fodder." |
Vitello
or Witelo |
30.4S |
37.5W |
42 |
Erazmus
Ciokek Witelo, or ~ (1230-1280), Polish physicist,
mathematician and philosopher; his Perspectiva is the
classic work on geometrical optics, reflection, and
refraction. |
Vitruvius |
17.6N |
31.3E |
29 |
Marcus
Vitruvius Pollio, or ~ (ca. 70-ca. 25 BC), Roman engineer
and architect; his De architectura ("On
Architecture") was the leading reference on architecture
until the Italian Renaissance. |
Viviani |
5.2N |
117.1E |
26 |
Vincenzo ~
(1622-1703), Italian mathematician; a pupil of Galileo and
Torricelli (qq.v.), he explained the celebrated problem of
how an angle could be trisected by the aid of the
equilateral hyperbola or the conchoid. |
Vlacq |
53.3S |
38.8E |
89 |
Adriaan ~ (1600-1667), Dutch publisher, bookseller and
mathematician; published a table of logarithms from 1 to
100,000 to 10 decimal places in Arithmetica
logarithmica, adding 70,000 values to those
previously formulated, and constructed advanced log
trigonometric tables. |
Vogel |
15.1S |
5.9E |
26 |
Hermann Karl ~ (1842-1907), German astronomer; director
of the Potsdam Observatory, he was one of the earliest
astronomers to devote himself almost exclusively to
spectroscopy. |
Volkov |
13.6S |
131.7E |
40 |
Vladislav Nikolayevich ~ (1935-1971), Soviet cosmonaut;
flight engineer on Soyuz 7 and Soyuz 11.
He was aboard Soyuz 11 when an air valve opened
accidentally during descent, killing Volkov and
crewmates Viktor Patsayev and Georgi Dobrovolsky
(qq.v.). |
Volta |
53.9N |
84.4W |
123 |
Count Allessandro ~ (1745-1827), Italian physicist;
known for his pioneering work in electricity, he
developed the so-called voltaic pile, a forerunner of
the electric battery. The electrical unit known as the
volt was named in his honor. |
Voltaire |
11.9S |
100.3E |
0 |
~, nom de
plume of Francois Marie Arouet (1694-1778), French
philosopher, poet, critic and satirist; perhaps best known
for Candide. |
Volterra |
56.8N |
132.2E |
52 |
Vito ~ (1860-1940), Italian mathematician; his most
famous work was done on integral equations and
functional analysis. |
Von Békésy |
51.9N |
126.8E |
96 |
Georg ~ (1899-1972), Hungarian otological physicist;
awarded the 1961 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for his fundamental discoveries concerning the dynamics
of the inner ear. |
Von Behring |
7.8S |
71.8E |
38 |
Geheimrat Emil Adolf ~ (1854-1917), German
bacteriologist; discovered the serum to provide
immunization from diptheria, for which he was awarded
the 1901 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. |
Von Braun |
41.1N |
78.0W |
60 |
Wernher ~
(1912-1977), legendary German-American rocket pioneer; as
technical director of the German rocket research center at
Peenemünde, he was instrumental in the successful
development of the V-2 liquid fuel rocket and also for other
rocket weapons. Following World War II, von Braun was
brought to the United States, where he was technical adviser
at the White Sands Proving Grounds (New Mexico) and project
director at Fort Bliss (Texas). In 1950, he became chief of
the guided missile development division at Redstone Arsenal,
then served as director of the development operations
division of the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (now the
Marshall Space Flight Center, Alabama), where he developed
rockets for the manned lunar program. He was named as
deputy associate administrator of the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration in 1970. |
Von der Pahlen |
24.8S |
132.7W |
56 |
Baron Emanuel (1882-1952), German astronomer. |
Von Karman |
44.8S |
175.9E |
180 |
Theodore ~ (1881-1963), American aeronautical scientist
(born in Hungary); noted for his work in fluid
mechanics, he designed an early version of the
helicopter. His important theory of boundary layers and
his related studies of fluid flow at high subsonic,
trans-sonic, and supersonic speeds were significant to
post-World War II progress in all areas of flight. |
Von Neumann |
40.4N |
153.2E |
78 |
John Louis ~
(1903-1957), Hungarian mathematician, chemical engineer,
educator and promoter of the stored program concept for
computers; his logical design of the "computing machine" at
the Institute for Advanced Studies, known as the von Neumann
Architecture, became the prototype of most of its
successors. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers presents an annual award in his honor "for
outstanding achievements in computer-related science and
technology." |
Von Zeipel |
42.6N |
141.6W |
83 |
Edvard Hugo ~ (1873-1959), Swedish astronomer and
astrophysicist; professor of astronomy at Uppsala
University. The Von Zeipel Method is one of the core
principles of celestial mechanics. |
Voskresenskiy |
28.0N |
88.1W |
49 |
Leonid Alexandrovich ~ (1913-1965), Soviet rocketry
scientist; specialist in rocket technology testing. |
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