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  1. www.nature.com › articles › 145341c0No. 3670, NATURE

    NATURE MARCH 2, 1940, VoL. 145 discovered the minor planet Ceres. The search being continued, Olbers, on March 28, 1802, discovered Pallas, on September 1, 1804, Harding discovered Juno, and on ...

  2. 11 de jun. de 2023 · La comunidad científica dejó sin resolver la paradoja planteada por Heinrich Olbers hasta su último suspiro a los 81 años, el 2 de marzo de 1840. Muchas estrellas y galaxias sobre un fondo oscuro, según las imágenes del JWST. E. SA/Webb, NASA & CSA, A. Martel, CC BY Un enigma para Edgar Allan Poe

  3. Bremen, 2 March 1840) medicine, astronomy. Olbers was the eighth of the sixteen children of Johann Jürgen Olbers, a Protestant minister. He became interested in astronomy when he was about fourteen, but the Gymnasium in Bremen which he attended was a typical humanistic institution of that time where almost no mathematics or science was taught.

  4. Abstract. ON March 2 a century ago, the city of Bremen lost its most distinguished citizen, the physician and astronomer Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers, who died at the age of eighty-one years ...

  5. "Heinrich Olbers" published on by null. (1758–1840) German astronomerOlbers, 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.

  6. 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 ...

  7. 11 de oct. de 2019 · October 11, 2019. Heinrich Wilhelm Matthias Olbers, a German astronomer, was born Oct. 11, 1758. Olbers is known for two asteroids and a paradox. We begin with the asteroids. The first asteroid, Ceres, had been discovered by Giuseppe Piazzi on Jan. 1, 1801. Ceres was tracked for a short while, and then it disappeared behind the Sun.