Walter Adams

(1955 RY )
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NOW @ 16 LEO 32

Discovery Chart

14.9.1955 00:00 Brooklyn 24e45 59n26 observations 1


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Named in memory of Walter S. Adams (1876–1956), whose spectroscopic studies of sunspots and stars led to the discovery, with A. Kohlschütter, of a spectroscopic method for determining stellar distances, the relative intensities of spectral lines being used to determine absolute magnitudes of both giant and main-sequence stars. Adams identified Sirius B as the first white-dwarf star known, and his measurement of its gravitational redshift was taken as confirming evidence for the general theory of relativity. He served as director of the Mount Wilson Observatory from 1923 to 1946. (M 15089) _ _.


Discovered on 14-9-1955 in Brooklyn by Indiana University

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