Norman Robert Pogson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asteroids discovered: 8 | |
---|---|
42 Isis | May 23, 1856 |
43 Ariadne | April 15, 1857 |
46 Hestia | August 16, 1857 |
67 Asia | April 17, 1861 |
80 Sappho | May 2, 1864 |
87 Sylvia | May 16, 1866 |
107 Camilla | November 17, 1868 |
245 Vera | February 6, 1885 |
Norman Robert Pogson (March 23, 1829–June 23, 1891) was a British astronomer.
He was born at Nottingham, England. By the time he was 18 years old, he had computed the orbits of two comets.
He became an assistant at Radcliffe Observatory in Oxford, England in 1851. In 1860 he travelled to Madras, India, becoming the government astronomer. At the Madras Observatory he produced the Madras Catalogue of 11,015 stars. He also discovered five asteroids and six variable stars.
His most notable contribution was to note that in the stellar magnitude system introduced by the Greek astronomer Hipparchus, stars of the first magnitude were about a hundred times as bright as stars of the sixth magnitude. His suggestion in 1856 was to make this a standard, so each decrease in magnitude represented a decrease in brightness equal to the fifth-root of 100 (or about 2.512). The Pogson Ratio became the standard method of assigning magnitudes.
The magnitude relation is given as follows:
- m2 − m1 = − 2.5log10(L2 / L1)
where m is the stellar magnitude and L is the luminosity, for stars 1 and 2.
In 1868 and 1871, Pogson joined the Indian solar eclipse expeditions.
During his career he discovered a total of eight asteroids and 21 variable stars. He headed the Madras Observatory for 30 years until his death.
[edit] Honors
The following celestial features are named after him:
- Asteroid 1830 Pogson.
- Pogson crater on the Moon.
[edit] References
- Magnitudes of Thirty-six of the Minor Planets for the first day of each month of the year 1857, N. Pogson, MNRAS 17 pp 12 1856 in which Pogson first introduced his magnitude system