August Nathanael Grischow

August Nathanael Grischow (29 September 1726 in Berlin – 4 June 1760 in Saint Petersburg) was a German mathematician and astronomer.

August Nathanael Grischow
Born(1726-09-29)29 September 1726
Died4 June 1760(1760-06-04) (aged 33)
NationalityGerman
Scientific career
Fieldsastronomy, mathematics

Life

He was the son of the mathematician and meteorologist. From 1745 until 1749 Augustin Nathanael Grischow was Director of the old Berlin Observatory.[1] In 1749 he became a Member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences. In 1750 he became Professor of Optics at the Berlin Academy of Arts. In 1751 he gave up this post in order to become Professor of Astronomy and Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg. There he concerned himself mainly with the theory of the parallax of celestial objects, primarily the Moon.

Publikations

  • Methodus investigandi parallaxin lunae et planetarum.
  • Observationes circa longitudinem penduli simplices institutae. 1760
gollark: The timeline is probably a few hundred years to run out of uranium.
gollark: *Technically* with a finite amount you'll eventually run out, but advancing technology should mean it would be easy to replace it anyway.
gollark: You don't need to. There's enough uranium.
gollark: We have enough for 70 years of current production available, and the many, many ways to get more or use existing stuff more efficiently have just been ignored because they aren't needed now.
gollark: Uranium is plentiful!

References

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