Alexandre Schaumasse
971 Alsatia | November 23, 1921 |
1114 Lorraine | November 17, 1928 |
Alexandre Schaumasse (1882 – 1958) was a French astronomer.
His discoveries include the periodic comet 24P/Schaumasse, and the two non-periodic comets C/1913 J1 (Schaumasse) or 1913 II, and C/1917 H1 (Schaumasse) or 1917 II. He also discovered two asteroids.
Gaston Fayet, director of the Observatory in Nice, gave him the responsibility of the Chercheur de comètes (Comet finder), a 25 cm (F/D 7.2) refractor offered by Germany to France after the first World War. However, it appears he never made any serious observations with this instrument due to its "abundance of aberrations", according to fellow astronomer Robert Jonckhèere. The two instruments he used most were the Grand Equatorial Coudé (with which he recorded most of his observations), and the Petit Equatorial (current dome Charlois).
He was severely wounded in 1914 while serving in the French army during World War I, and spent at least a year in hospital.
He was awarded the Valz Prize (Prix Valz) for 1917 by the French Academy of Sciences.[1] The building that houses Chercheur de comètes, built in 1931, now bears his name (Schaumasse dome).
References
- ↑ "Prizes in Astronomy". Popular Astronomy 26: 352. 1918.
External links
- Nice Observatory brief biography (French)
- History of the Schaumasse telescope of the Observatory of Nice
- Double stars discovered at the Observatory of Nice - Robert Jonckheere, Journal des Observateurs, Vol. 27, p.1
- Discovery of the asteroid 1928 WA (1114 Lorraine)
- Ephemeris of the Comet 1917 b (Schaumasse)