Paul Henry and Prosper Henry
125 Liberatrix | 11 September 1872 | Prosper Henry |
126 Velleda | 5 November 1872 | Paul Henry |
127 Johanna | 5 November 1872 | Prosper Henry |
141 Lumen | 13 January 1875 | Paul Henry |
148 Gallia | 7 August 1875 | Prosper Henry |
152 Atala | 2 November 1875 | Paul Henry |
154 Bertha | 4 November 1875 | Prosper Henry |
159 Aemilia | 26 January 1876 | Paul Henry |
162 Laurentia | 21 April 1876 | Prosper Henry |
164 Eva | 12 July 1876 | Paul Henry |
169 Zelia | 28 September 1876 | Prosper Henry |
177 Irma | 5 November 1877 | Paul Henry |
186 Celuta | 6 April 1878 | Prosper Henry |
227 Philosophia | 12 August 1882 | Paul Henry |
Paul-Pierre Henry (Paul Henry) (21 August 1848 – 4 January 1905) and his brother Prosper-Mathieu Henry (Prosper Henry) (10 December 1849 – 25 July 1903) were French opticians and astronomers.
They made refracting telescopes and instruments for observatories, and were involved in the origin of the Carte du Ciel project.
Between the two of them, they discovered a total of 14 asteroids. The Minor Planet Center credits their discoveries under "P.P. Henry" and "P.M. Henry", respectively. The lunar crater Henry Frères is named after them jointly, as is Henry Crater on Mars. They were jointly awarded the first Valz Prize in 1877 for their sky charts designed to facilitate the search for minor planets.[1][2]
Obituaries
Paul Henry
- AN 167 (1905) 223/224 (in German)
- MNRAS 65 (1905) 349
- Obs 28 (1905) 110
- PASP 17 (1905) 77 (one paragaraph)
Prosper Henry
- AN 163 (1903) 381/382 (in French)
- MNRAS 64 (1904) 296
- Obs 26 (1903) 396 (one paragraph)
- PASP 15 (1903) 230
References
- ↑ "The Valz Prize". Popular Astronomy. 1913. p. 384.
- ↑ Ernest Maindron (1880). "Les Foundations d Prix a l'Academie des Sciences". La Revue Scientifique. pp. 87–88.
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