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William Henry Pickering

 
Scientist: William Henry Pickering
 

American astronomer (1858–1938)

Pickering, the younger brother of Edward Pickering, was also an astronomer. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, he studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he worked after graduating in 1879. In 1887 he moved to the Harvard College Observatory where his brother was director. He set up a number of observing stations for Harvard including that at Arequipa, Peru, in 1891 and Mandeville, Jamaica, in 1900. He took charge of the latter in 1911, converting it into his own private observatory following his retirement in 1924.

He also helped Percival Lowell set up his private observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and, also like Lowell, concerned himself with the trans-Neptunian planet. In 1919, on the basis of past records, he predicted that a new planet would be found near the constellation of Gemini but photographic surveys failed to confirm his prediction. When the planet was finally detected in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh, Pickering made a somewhat exaggerated claim to be its discoverer.

He made extensive observations of Mars and claimed, like Lowell, that he saw signs of life on the planet by observing what he took to be oases in 1892. He went further than Lowell however when in 1903 he claimed to observe signs of life on the Moon. By comparing descriptions of the Moon from Giovanni Riccioli's 1651 chart onward, he thought he had detected changes that could have been due to the growth and decay of vegetation.

He was more successful in 1899 when he discovered Phoebe, the ninth satellite of Saturn. This was the first planetary satellite with retrograde motion to be detected, i.e., with orbital motion directed in an opposite sense to that of the planets. His 1905 report of a tenth satellite, which he confidently named Themis, was not substantiated.

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Art Encyclopedia: Henry Pickering
 

( fl 1740-c. 1771). English painter. The life-size full-length portrait of Sir Wolstan Dixie, 4th Bart of Market Bosworth, Leics (1741; Nottingham, Castle Mus.), demonstrates how close his early style was to that of Thomas Hudson. This may be due to the fact that both artists shared the services of the drapery painter Joseph van Aken. Pickering was probably based in London in the 1740s, and in 1745 George Vertue noted that he had recently returned from Italy. In 1755 Pickering signed and dated his most ambitious picture, a large group portrait of Sir Wolstan Dixie with his Third Wife, Two Sons and Six Daughters (priv. col., see Waterhouse, p. 283). In the 1750s and 1760s he seems to have travelled in the north-west of England and North Wales, suggesting that by this date he was based in Manchester. Signed and dated pictures are known up to 1770, including portraits of other members of the Dixie family who were clearly his most important patrons. A pair of portraits of Captain Thomas Johnson, in naval uniform, and Mrs Thomas Johnson and her Daughter, in van Dyck costume (1759; Liverpool, Town Hall), show no real stylistic development from earlier pictures, and Pickering seems to have continued to rely on the help of professional drapery painters.

See the Abbreviations for further details.



 
Columbia Encyclopedia: William Henry Pickering
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Pickering, William Henry, 1858–1938, American astronomer, b. Boston, grad. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S., 1879). He taught at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1880–87) and at Harvard Observatory. Between 1878 and 1901 he led five solar eclipse expeditions and established several observatories and astronomical stations. Pickering discovered (1899) the ninth satellite of Saturn, called Phoebe, and also announced (1905) the finding of a tenth satellite, which was not confirmed until 1967. In 1919 he predicted the existence and the location of a ninth planet; Pluto, discovered in 1930 and long regarded as the ninth planet, is now considered a dwarf planet. His observations of the moon, including the study of lunar craters, is of lasting importance. He also accomplished important work in photographing the planets and measuring their brightness. His later researches were devoted to Mars. In addition to a number of papers in astronomical journals, his publications include The Moon (1903), Lunar and Hawaiian Physical Features Compared (1906), and Mars (1921).
 
Wikipedia: William Henry Pickering
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William Henry Pickering in 1909.

William Henry Pickering (February 15, 1858January 17, 1938) was an American astronomer, brother of Edward Charles Pickering.

Contents

Work

He discovered Saturn's ninth moon Phoebe in 1899 from plates taken in 1898. He also believed he had discovered a tenth moon in 1905 from plates taken in 1904, which he called "Themis". Unfortunately "Themis" does not exist.

Following George Darwin, he speculated in 1907 that the moon was once a part of the earth and that it broke away where now the Pacific Ocean lies. He also proposed some sort of continental drift (even before Alfred Wegener) and speculated that America, Asia, Africa, and Europe once formed a single continent, which broke up because of the separation of the moon. [1]

In 1908 he made a statement regarding the possibility of airplanes that had not yet been invented, saying that "a popular fantasy is to suppose that flying machines could be used to drop dynamite on the enemy in time of war".

He led solar eclipse expeditions and studied craters on the Moon, and hypothesized that changes in the appearance of the crater Eratosthenes were due to "lunar insects". [2] He claimed to have found vegetation on the moon.[3]

In 1919, he predicted the existence and position of a Planet X based on anomalies in the positions of Uranus and Neptune but a search of Mount Wilson Observatory photographs failed to find the predicted planet. Pluto was later discovered at Flagstaff by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930, but in any case it is now known that Pluto's mass is far too small to have appreciable gravitational effects on Uranus or Neptune, and the anomalies are accounted for when today's much more accurate values of planetary masses are used in calculating orbits. When the planet was named, he interpreted its symbol as a monogram referring to himself and Lowell by the phrase "Pickering-Lowell". [4]

Pickering constructed and established several observatories or astronomical observation stations, notably including Percival Lowell's Flagstaff Observatory. He spent much of the later part of his life at his private observatory in Jamaica. He produced a photographic atlas of the Moon: The Moon : A Summary of the Existing Knowledge of our Satellite — New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1903.

The craters Pickering on the Moon and Pickering on Mars are jointly named after him and his brother Edward Charles Pickering.

Notes

  1. ^ Pickering, W.H (1907), "The Place of Origin of the Moon - The Volcani Problems", Popular Astronomy: 274–287 
  2. ^ AAG: Reviews 12-2000
  3. ^ http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9B05E0D81439E133A2575AC0A9669D946095D6CF
  4. ^ Pickering W. H. (1930). "The discovery of Pluto". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91 (1): 0812–0817. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1931MNRAS..91..812P. 

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References


 
 

 

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Scientist. A Dictionary of Scientists. Copyright © Market House Books Ltd 1993, 1999, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
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