- Source: Alvan Graham Clark
Alvan Graham Clark (July 10, 1832 – June 9, 1897) was an American astronomer and telescope-maker.
Biography
Alvan Graham Clark was born in Fall River, Massachusetts, the son of Alvan Clark, founder of Alvan Clark & Sons.
On January 31, 1862, while testing a new 18.5-inch (470 mm) aperture great refractor telescope in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, Clark made the first ever observation of a white dwarf star. This discovery of Sirius B, or affectionately "the Pup", proved an earlier hypotheses (Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel in 1844) that Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky with an apparent magnitude of −1.46, had an unseen companion disturbing its motion. Clark used the largest refracting telescope lens in existence at the time, and the largest telescope in the United States, to observe the magnitude 8 companion.
Clark's 18.5 inch refracting telescope was then delivered to his customer, the landmark Dearborn Observatory of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, where it is still being used today.
Alvan Graham Clark died in Cambridge, Massachusetts on June 9, 1897.
See also
List of astronomical instrument makers
References
"Alvan Clark, Astronomy, Biographies". AllRefer.com. Archived from the original on June 23, 2004.
The Dearborn Telescope
Sirius A & B: A Double Star System In The Constellation Canis Major
Northwestern University Astronomy and Astrophysics – History of Dearborn Observatory Archived July 13, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
Look south to see winter's brightest constellations
External links
Portraits of Alvan Graham Clark from the Lick Observatory Records Digital Archive, UC Santa Cruz Library's Digital Collections Archived April 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Sirius
- 31 Januari
- Daftar kawah di Bulan, C-F
- Daftar ahli botani berdasarkan singkatan penulis
- Alvan Graham Clark
- Alvan Clark
- Clark (lunar crater)
- Alvan Clark & Sons
- Gauss lens
- Double-Gauss lens
- Binary star
- White dwarf
- Sirius
- 1862 in science