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  1. Thomas Harriot ( / ˈhæriət /; [2] c. 1560 – 2 July 1621), also spelled Harriott, Hariot or Heriot, was an English astronomer, mathematician, ethnographer and translator to whom the theory of refraction is attributed. Thomas Harriot was also recognized for his contributions in navigational techniques, [3] working closely with John White to ...

  2. Thomas Street (astronomer) (1621–1689), English astronomer; Sir Thomas Street (1625–1696), English judge; Thomas Clark Street (1814–1872), Canadian politician; Tony Street (1926–2022), Australian politician; Fictional characters. Della Street, secretary of Perry Mason in the original novels and their radio and TV adaptations

  3. Thomas Digges ( / dɪɡz /; c. 1546 – 24 August 1595) was an English mathematician and astronomer. He was the first to expound the Copernican system in English but discarded the notion of a fixed shell of immoveable stars to postulate infinitely many stars at varying distances. [1] He was also first to postulate the "dark night sky paradox".

  4. 33 Thomas Street (formerly the AT&T Long Lines Building) is a 550-foot-tall (170 m) windowless skyscraper in the Tribeca neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City, New York, United States. It stands on the east side of Church Street, between Thomas Street and Worth Street. Designed in the Brutalist architectural style, it is a telephone ...

  5. 17th century astronomer. This page was last edited on 8 April 2024, at 13:45. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  6. David Dunlap Observatory, University of Toronto. Charles Thomas Bolton (April 15, 1943 – c. February 4, 2021) [1] was an American-Canadian astronomer who was one of the first in his field to present strong evidence of the existence of a stellar-mass black hole. [2] [3]

  7. The street is named after the Augustinian Abbey of St. Thomas, founded in 1175, near the later St. Catherine's church. [1] [2] The founder was William FitzAldelm, deputy and kinsman of King Henry II. The monastery was dedicated to Thomas Beckett (St. Thomas the Martyr), the English Archbishop of Canterbury who had recently been murdered in his ...