'Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers' (
October 11,
1758–
March 2,
1840) was a
German astronomer,
physician and
physicist.
Career
He was born in
Arbergen, near
Bremen, and studied to be a
physician at
Göttingen. After his graduation in
1780, he began practicing
medicine in
Bremen,
Germany. At night he dedicated his time to
astronomical observation, making the upper story of his home into an
observatory. He also devised the first satisfactory method of calculating cometary orbits.
In
1802, Olbers discovered and named the
asteroid Pallas. In
1807 he discovered the asteroid
Vesta, which he allowed
Carl Friedrich Gauss to name. As the word "asteroid" was not yet coined, the literature of the time referred to these
minor planets as
planets in their own right. He proposed that the
asteroid belt, where these objects lay, were the remnants of a
planet that was destroyed. This theory is now discarded by most of the scientific community.
On
March 6 1815, Olbers also discovered a periodic
comet named after him (formally designated
13P/Olbers).
Olbers was deputed by his fellow-citizens to assist at the
baptism of
Napoleon II of France on June 9, 1811, and he was a member of the ''corps legislatif'' in
Paris 1812-1813. He died in Bremen at the age of eighty-one. He was twice married, and one son survived him.
Olbers' paradox, described by him in 1823 (and then reformulated in 1826), is the
paradoxical observation that the night sky is dark, when in an infinite and eternal
static universe it would be bright.
Honors
The following celestial features are named for him:
★
13P/Olbers is a periodic
comet.
★
Asteroid 1002 Olbersia.
★
Olbers crater on the
Moon.
★ Olbers, a 200km-diameter dark albedo feature on Vesta's surface
References
★
The Origin of the Asteroids: Olbers versus Regner, , C. J., Cunningham, Star Lab Press, , ISBN 0-9708162-5-1
★ - see, for instance,
"Olbers," ''Britannica''