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Hermann Carl Vogel ( Leipzig, 3 de abril de 1841 – 13 de agosto de 1907) fue un astrónomo alemán, 1 uno de los pioneros en el uso del espectroscopio en astronomía. Con este instrumento analizó la atmósfera de los planetas del Sistema Solar, siendo el primero en determinar el periodo de rotación del Sol usando el desplazamiento Doppler.
- Johann Carl Christoph Vogel
Hermann Carl Vogel (/ ˈ f oʊ ɡ əl /; German: [ˈfoːɡl̩]; 3 April 1841 – 13 August 1907) was a German astrophysicist. He was born in Leipzig, Kingdom of Saxony. From 1882 to 1907 he was director of the Astrophysical Observatory, Potsdam. He made extensive discoveries using spectral analysis of the stars.
3 de abr. de 2019 · Hermann Carl Vogel, a German astronomer, was born Apr. 3, 1841. Vogel was a pioneer in applying the new science of spectroscopy to analyzing the motion of celestial bodies. Johann Doppler had discovered his famous Doppler effect back in the 1840s, revealing that the wavelengths of sound are lengthened or shortened, depending on ...
Hermann Carl Vogel. 1906. Date of Birth. : April 3, 1841. Date of Death. : August 13, 1907. Hermann Vogel studied astronomy at the Universities of Leipzig and Jena and then directed a private observatory for four years.
Hermann Karl Vogel (born April 3, 1842, Leipzig—died Aug. 13, 1907, Potsdam, Ger.) German astronomer who discovered spectroscopic binaries — double-star systems that are too close for the individual stars to be discerned by any telescope but, through the analysis of their light, have been found to be two individual stars rapidly revolving ...
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Hermann Carl Vogel (Leipzig, 3 de abril de 1841-Potsdam, 13 de agosto de 1907) Astrónomo alemán. Reconocido como el primero en emplear el efecto Doppler para medir las velocidades angulares estelares.
Died Potsdam, Germany, 13 August 1907. German observational astronomer and spectroscopist Hermann Vogel was the first person to recognize a spectroscopic binary, that is, a pair of stars that reveal their mutual orbit through changes of their velocities along the line of sight viaa changing Doppler shift of their spectral features.