James W. Christy

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James Christy (left) and Robert Harrington in 1978.
James Christy (left) and Robert Harrington in 1978.

James Walter Christy (born 1938) is an American astronomer.

Working at the United States Naval Observatory, he discovered in 1978 that Pluto had a moon, which he named Charon.

The discovery was made by carefully examining an enlargement of a photographic plate of Pluto and noticing it had a very slight bulge on one side. By examining images taken over several successive days, he was able to convince himself that it was a moon. The photographic evidence was considered convincing but not conclusive; however, based on the orbit determined, a series of mutual eclipses of Pluto and Charon was predicted and observed, which provided confirmation.

In more modern telescopes, such as the Hubble Space Telescope or ground-based telescopes using adaptive optics, separate images of Pluto and Charon can very easily be resolved.

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