|
Crater Name
|
Lat
|
Long
|
Diam
|
Origin
|
W. Bond |
65.4N |
4.5W |
156 |
William Cranch ~ (1789-1859), American clockmaker and
astronomer; first director of the Harvard
Observatory. In 1848, together with his son, George
Phillips Bond (q.v.), he discovered Saturn's moon
Hyperion. |
Walker |
26.0S |
162.2W |
32 |
Joseph A. ~ (1921-1966), American test pilot; as Chief
Research Pilot for NASA during the mid-1960s, he
made the first X-15 flight on 25 March 1960, and was
the first man to pilot the Lunar Landing Research
Vehicle (LLRV) that was used to develop piloting and
operational techniques for Moon landings. An
excellent biography of Walker may be found on the
NASA website. |
Wallace |
20.3N |
8.7W |
26 |
Alfred Russel ~ (1823-1913); British surveyor,
botanist and natural historian. |
Wallach |
4.9N |
32.3E |
6 |
Otto ~ (1847-1931), German chemist; he received the
Nobel Prize in 1910 for his work on alicyclic
compounds. |
Walther
or Walter |
33.1S |
1.0E |
128 |
Bernard Walther, or
Walter (1430-1504), German astronomer. |
Wan-Hoo |
9.8S |
138.8W |
52 |
Wan-hu, or ~ (?-c. 1500)
visionary Chinese rocket pioneer; legend holds that
Wan-hu devised a wicker chair with two kites and 47
large gunpowder rockets attached to it which he
purported would propel him into the heavens. The rockets
were ignited simultaneously by 47 assistants, after
which came a tremendous roar accompanied by billowing
clouds of smoke. When the smoke cleared, the flying
chair and Wan-Hu were gone. |
Wargentin |
49.6S |
60.2W |
84 |
Pehr Wilhelm ~ (1717-1783), Swedish astronomer and
statistician. |
Warner |
4.0S |
87.3E |
35 |
Worcester Reed ~ (1846-1929), American inventor and
mechanical engineer; designed the 36-inch telescope
for the University of California Lick Observatory
and later built telescopes for use in Canada and
Argentina. The American Society of Mechanical
Engineers annually bestows an award in his name for
outstanding contributions to the permanent
literature of engineering. |
Waterman |
25.9S |
128.0E |
76 |
Alan T. ~ (1892-1967), American physicist, first
director of the National Science Foundation; in
December 1963, U.S. President Lyndon Johnson awarded
him the nation's highest civilian award, the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. The U.S. Congress
established an annual award in his honor to
recognize an outstanding young researcher in any
field of science or engineering supported by the
NSF. |
Watson |
62.6S |
124.5W |
62 |
James Craig ~ (1838-1880), Canadian-born American
astronomer; director of the Detroit Observatory
(1863-1879) and founding director of the University
of Wisconsin's Washburn Observatory (1879-1880).
Discovered 22 asteroids, including six in one year. |
Watt |
49.5S |
48.6E |
66 |
James ~ (1736-1819), Scottish engineer and inventor;
his refinement of the steam engine helped bring
about the Industrial Revolution. |
Watts |
8.9N |
46.3E |
15 |
Chester Burleigh ~ (1889-1971), American astronomer. |
Webb |
0.9S |
60.0E |
21 |
Reverend Thomas William ~ (1806-1885), British
astronomer; known as "the father of amateur
astronomy." |
Weber |
50.4N |
123.4W |
42 |
Wilhelm Eduard ~ (1804-1891), German physicist and
astronomer; his vital work on the ratio between the
electrodynamic and electrostatic units of charge was
crucial to Maxwell in his electromagnetic theory of
light. |
Wegener |
45.2N |
113.3W |
88 |
Alfred Lothar ~ (1880-1930), German geophysicist and
meteorologist; first scientist to postulate the
theory of "continental drift." His "The Origin of
Continents and Oceans" (1915) is the landmark work
on this subject. |
Weierstrass |
1.3S |
77.2E |
33 |
Karl Theodor Wilhelm ~ (1815-1897), German scholar and
mathematician. |
Weigel |
58.2S |
38.8W |
35 |
Erhard ~ (1625-1699), German mathematician and
philosopher. |
Weinek |
27.5S |
37.0E |
32 |
Ladislaus ~ (1848-1913), Czech astronomer; ninth
director of the Klementinum observatory in Prague.
Collaborated with Kuestner in the discovery of polar
motion; published a lunar atlas based on photographs
from the Lick Observatory. |
Weiss,
or Weiß |
31.8S |
19.5W |
66 |
Edmund ~ (1837-1917), Czech-born German astronomer,
mathematician and physicist. |
Werner |
28.0S |
3.3E |
70 |
Johann ~ (1468-1528), German astronomer, mathematician
and geographer. |
Wexler |
69.1S |
90.2E |
51 |
Harry ~ (1911-1962), American meteorologist; as
research director, he helped guide the creation of
the Mauna Loa Observatory (Hawaii). |
Weyl |
17.5N |
120.2W |
108 |
Hermann (Peter) ~
(1885-1955), German mathematician; evolved the concept
of continuous groups
using matrix
representations, as well as creating the modern
science of quantum mechanics. |
Whewell |
4.2N |
13.7E |
13 |
William ~ (1794-1866), British moral philosopher,
mineralogist, mystic, educator and polymath; widely
regarded as the father of the modern philosophy of
science. |
White |
44.6S |
158.3W |
39 |
Lt. Col. Edward Higgins ~ II (1930-1967), American
astronaut, Air Force fighter pilot and test pilot;
among the second group of men selected as
astronauts. First American to "walk in space" during
Gemini IV mission (1965). Perished in a fire
aboard Apollo 1 during a launch pad training
session along with crewmates Virgil I. Grissom and
Roger Chaffee (qq.v.). |
Wichmann |
7.5S |
38.1W |
10 |
Moritz Ludwig Georg ~ (1821-1859), German astronomer. |
Widmanstätten |
6.1S |
85.5E |
46 |
Aloys B. von ~ (1753-1849), German physicist. |
Wiechert |
84.5S |
165.0E |
41 |
Emil ~ (1861-1928), Prussian physicist and
geophysicist; among his accomplishments were
advances in the science of seismology. |
Wiener |
40.8N |
146.6E |
120 |
Norbert ~ (1894-1964), American mathematician; first
proposed the building of digital computers in 1940.
His work in the area of communication theory led to
the development of cybernetics, the study of control
and communication in animals and machines, and also
formed the basis for the branch of artificial
intelligence research based on the processes of the
human mind. |
Wildt |
9.0N |
75.8E |
11 |
Rupert ~ (1905-1976), German-born American educator,
astronomer and astrophysicist. |
Wilhelm |
43.4S |
20.4W |
106 |
Wilhelm IV, Landgrave of
Hesse-Kassel (1532-1592), German nobleman, astronomer
and patron of the sciences. |
Wilkins |
29.4S |
19.6E |
57 |
Hugh Percy ~ (1896-1960), British lunar observer and
cartographer. |
Williams |
42.0N |
37.2E |
36 |
Arthur Stanley ~ (1861-1938), British astronomer. |
Wilsing |
21.5S |
155.2W |
73 |
Johannes ~ (1856-1943), German astrophysicist and
astronomer; a pioneer of radio astronomy, with his
colleague Julius Scheiner (q.v.). |
Wilson |
69.2S |
42.4W |
69 |
Alexander ~ (1714-1786), Scottish astronomer and
type designer;
Also Charles T.R. ~ (1869-1959),
Scottish physicist, inventor of the cloud chamber;
awarded Nobel Prize in 1927 for devising method of
perceiving paths taken by electrically charged
particles. |
Winkler |
42.2N |
179.0W |
22 |
Johannes ~ (1897-1947), German rocketry
scientist. |
Winlock |
35.6N |
105.6W |
64 |
Joseph ~ (1826-1875), American astronomer and
educator; a charter member of the National Academy
of Sciences, he succeeded George Bond (q.v.) as
director of Harvard College Observatory. |
Winthrop |
10.7S |
44.4W |
17 |
John ~ (1714-1779),
American scientist and astronomer; sometimes called the
founder of seismology, was the first important scientist
to teach at Harvard. |
Wohler |
38.2S |
31.4E |
27 |
Friedrich ~ (1800-1882),
German chemist, student of Berzelius (q.v.); his
synthesis of urea, the first synthesis of an organic
compound from inorganic material, opened a new era in
organic chemistry and contributed greatly to the theory
of isomers. |
Wolf |
22.7S |
16.6W |
25 |
Maximilian Franz Joseph
Cornelius ~ (1863-1932), German astronomer; a pioneer in
astrophotography, he founded and directed the Königstuhl
Observatory at Heidelberg and served as professor of
astrophysics. Discovered the first Trojan asteroid,
Achilles, as well as thousands of nebulae and galaxies,
and suggested the idea of the modern planetarium. |
Wollaston |
30.6N |
46.9W |
10 |
William Hyde ~
(1766-1828), British chemist, physicist and optician;
developed a method for the processing of platinum ore,
which led him to the discovery of the chemical elements
palladium and rhodium. |
Woltjer |
45.2N |
159.6W |
46 |
Jan ~ (1891-1946), Dutch astronomer. |
Wood |
43.0N |
120.8W |
78 |
Robert Williams ~ (1868-1955), American physicist and
optician; the "Wood Light," more commonly known as
the "black light" for generating ultraviolet
radiation, was named for him. Developed a color
photography process, as well as methods of infrared
and ultraviolet photography. |
Wr'oblewski |
24.0S |
152.8E |
21 |
Sigmund von ~ (1845-1888), Polish physicist. |
Wright |
31.6S |
86.6W |
39 |
Frederick E. ~ (1878-1953), American astronomer;
Also Thomas ~ (1711-1786), British
astronomer; suggested that nebulae could be distant
systems similar the our galaxy. |
Wrottesley |
23.9S |
56.8E |
57 |
John ~, the second Baron
Wrottesley (1798-1867), English astronomer. |
Wurzelbauer |
33.9S |
15.9W |
88 |
Johann Philipp von ~ (1651-1725), German astronomer. |
Wyld |
1.4S |
98.1E |
93 |
James H. ~ (1913-1953), American rocketry scientist. |
Xenophanes |
57.5N |
82.0W |
125 |
~ of Colophon (570-475
BCE), Greek elegiac and satirical poet and philosopher. |
Xenophon |
22.8S |
122.1E |
25 |
~ (c. 430-354 B.C.), Greek natural philosopher and
historian. |
Yablochkov |
60.9N |
128.3E |
99 |
Pavel Nikolayevich ~ (1847-1894), Russian electrical
engineer and inventor; devised the first arc lamp. |
Yakovkin |
54.5S |
78.8W |
37 |
A. A. ~ (1887-1974), Soviet astronomer and
selenologist. |
Yamamoto |
58.1N |
160.9E |
76 |
Issei ~ (1889-1959), Japanese astronomer; director of
the Kwasan Observatory, renowned observer of
meteors. As a professor at Kyoto University, he
founded the Tenmon Doukoukai (Astronomy
Association) in 1920, which became the Oriental
Astronomical Association in 1932. |
Yangel |
17.0N |
4.7E |
8 |
Mikhail Kuzmich ~ (1911-1971), Soviet educator and
rocketry scientist; served as chief designer at KB
Yuzhnoe, a major developer of rocket and space
technology, from 1954-1971. |
Yerkes |
14.6N |
51.7E |
36 |
Charles Tyson ~ (1837-1905), American investment
banker and traction magnate; financed the building
of the Chicago streetcar system and the London
Underground. Provided funding for the building of
the Yerkes Observatory at the University of Chicago. |
Yoshi |
24.6N |
11.0E |
1 |
Japanese male name. |
Young |
41.5S |
50.9E |
71 |
Thomas ~ (1773-1829), British physicist; determined
the wavelengths of members of the visible spectrum
using diffraction experiments. |
Zach |
60.9S |
5.3E |
70 |
Freiherr Franz Xaver von
~ (1754-1832), German astronomer (born in Hungary);
court astronomer at Gotha. He helped organize the first
international scientific program, along with Schröter,
Olbers, Harding, von Ende and Gildemeister (qq.v.), to
search for a planet between Mars and Jupiter. |
Zagut |
32.0S |
22.1E |
84 |
Abraham ben-Samuel ~ (?-c. 1450), Spanish-Jewish
astronomer. |
Zähringer |
5.6N |
40.2E |
11 |
Josef ~ (1929-1970), German physicist. |
Zanstra |
2.9N |
124.7E |
42 |
Herman ~ (1894-1972), Dutch-American theorist and
astrophysicist; "Zanstra’s method," a method of
measuring the temperature of a hot photoionizing
star in a gaseous nebula, was a pioneering work in
quantum mechanics. |
Zasyadko |
3.9N |
94.2E |
11 |
Alexander Dmitrievich ~ (1779-1837), Russian artillery
engineer; developed techniques for mass production
of rockets and led the formation of the first
missile unit in the Russian army. |
Zeeman |
75.2S |
133.6W |
190 |
Pieter ~ (1865-1943), Dutch physicist; his discovery
of the magnetic splitting of spectral lines earned
him a Nobel Prize in physics (1902). |
Zelinskii |
28.9S |
166.8E |
53 |
Nikolai Dimitrievich ~
(1860-1953), Soviet academic and organic chemist; the
Institute of Organic Chemistry at the Russian Academy of
Sciences in Moscow is named in his honor. |
Zeno |
45.2N |
72.9E |
65 |
~ of Citium (c. 333-264 B.C.); Greek philosopher (born
in Cyprus); founder of the Stoic school of
philosophy. |
Zernike |
18.4N |
168.2E |
48 |
Frits ~ (1888-1966),
Dutch mathematical physicist, optician and astronomer;
his discovery of the phase-contrast phenomenon helped
earn him the Nobel Prize in 1953. |
Zhiritskii |
24.8S |
120.3E |
35 |
Georgiy S. ~ (1893-1966), Soviet rocketry scientist. |
Zhukovskii
or Zhukovskiy |
7.8N |
167.0W |
81 |
Nikolay Egorovich ~ (1847-1921), Russian physicist,
educator and mathematician; the founder of the
Russian schools of hydromechanics and aeromechanics,
he is also regarded as the father of Russian
aviation. |
Zinner |
26.6N |
58.8W |
4 |
Ernst ~ (1886-1970), German astronomer and horologist;
professor of astronomy at the University of Munich.
Renowned collector of rare books on astronomy,
horology (the science of measuring time) and the
history of science. |
Zola 1 |
0.8S |
87.0E |
17 |
Emile ~ (1840-1902), French novelist and critic;
founder of naturalist movement in literature. |
Zollner |
8.0S |
18.9E |
47 |
Johann Karl Friedrich ~
(1834-1882), German astrophysicist and astronomer. |
Zsigmondy |
59.7N |
104.7W |
65 |
Richard Adolf ~ (1865-1929), Austrian chemist; awarded
the Nobel Prize for chemistry in 1925 for his work
on the heterogeneous nature of colloidal solutions. |
Zucchius |
61.4S |
50.3W |
64 |
Niccolo Zucchi, S.J., or
~ (1586-1670), Italian Jesuit, mathematician and
astronomer; first to use an eye lens to view the image
produced by a concave mirror in a reflecting telescope. |
Zupus |
17.2S |
52.3W |
38 |
Giovanni Battista Zupi,
or ~ (c. 1590-1650), Italian astronomer. |
Zwicky |
15.4S |
168.1E |
150 |
Fritz ~ (1898-1974), Swiss-American astrophysicist; as
professor of astronomy at Caltech, he was first to
consider gravitational lensing by extragalactic
objects. |