Christian Gärtner
Christian Gärtner (6 May 1705 – 31 December 1782) was a German telescope maker and astronomer, noted for his observation of the 1758 return of Halley's Comet.[1]
Gärtner was born at Tolkewitz near Dresden and even as a child had a passion for the stars. He earned his living as a cloth-bleacher and spent his income on astronomical equipment and books. Later, he learned to grind his own lenses and manufactured and sold telescopes.
In December 1758 (simultaneously with Johann Georg Palitzsch) Gärtner observed the return of Halley's Comet, predicted by Edmond Halley in 1705.
Gärtner died a pauper in 1782 and was buried in Leuben cemetery.
Eponymy
Gärtner is commemorated by a crater on the Moon and by 132445 Gaertner, an asteroid.
gollark: um.
gollark: Also, you force everyone in the region to go along with whatever you're doing, which has ethical issues.
gollark: There's a lot of violence involved in revolutions, you come out of them with your infrastructure or whatever damaged, and it's just generally not very good.
gollark: That is also not the same thing and you just edited your message.
gollark: Those are problematic.
References
- Jürgen Helfricht and Siegfried Koge (1990). Chr. Gärtner und J. G. Palitzsch — Bauernastronomen aus Tolkewitz und Prohlis bei Dresden. Pulsnitz: Publications of the Astronomical Observatory.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.