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  1. Olbers, Heinrich Wilhelm Matthéus (1758–1840) Heinrich Olbers was a German physician and skilled amateur astronomer who discovered the asteroids Pallas (1802) and Vesta (1807), rediscovered Ceres based on a position predicted by Carl Gauss , and found five comets (in 1798, 1802, 1804, 1815, and 1821) one of which (that of 1815) bears his name.

  2. Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers. 1758-1840. German astronomer and physician who developed a method for calculating cometary orbits. He suggested a theory for why the tails of comets point away from the sun and discovered the second and third known asteroids—Pallas (1802) and Vesta (1807). Astronomers at the time assumed an infinite universe ...

  3. 1 de mar. de 2018 · March 2 marks the passing of Heinrich Olbers. Olbers was a German physician and amateur astronomer who devised a simple method to calculate the orbits of comets and discovered two large asteroids, Vesta and Pallas. He also believed the asteroids were remnants of a wrecked planet that orbited the Sun between Mars and Jupiter.

  4. Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers. Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers. Asteroids discovered: 2. 2 Pallas. March 28 1802. 4 Vesta. March 29 1807. Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers ( October 11, 1758 – March 2, 1840) was a German astronomer, physician and physicist .

  5. Quick Reference. (1758–1840) German astronomer. Olbers, who was born at Arbegen in Germany, was a physician who practiced medicine at Bremen. He became a good amateur astronomer, and converted part of his house into an observatory. He became interested in searching for a planet in the ‘gap’ between Mars and Jupiter, and rediscovered the ...

  6. El nombre de Olbers, por cierto, tal vez te suene: se trata del astrónomo alemán Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers, de quien hemos hablado anteriormente en El Sistema Solar, ya que fue el descubridor, entre otras cosas, de los asteroides Palas y Vesta en su labor como uno de los veinticuatro miembros de la Himmelspolizei, la “Policía del Cielo” cuyo objetivo era precisamente el descubrimiento del ...

  7. 3 de mar. de 2011 · Nuestro buen Heinrich Olbers, por cierto, simplemente dio una explicación alternativa al planteamiento de de Chéseaux, pero el argumento de Olbers es tan fácil de imaginar visualmente que, supongo, cautivó la imaginación de los científicos de tal modo que la paradoja acabó quedándose con su nombre.