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Edmond Halley
Second Astronomer Royal
Born: 8 November 1656 Haggerston, Middlesex (now part of London) England
Died: 14 January 1742
Buried: St Margaret's Churchyard, Lee (near Greenwich), London, England
Astronomer Royal: 1720 - 1742
Edmond Halley, b. Nov. 8 (Oct. 29, O.S.), 1656, d. Jan. 14, 1742, was an
English astronomer who discovered the proper motion of stars and the periodicity
of comets. His activities also ranged from studying archaeology to serving as
deputy comptroller of the mint at Chester. He was an integral part of the
English scientific community at the height of its creativity.
A graduate of Oxford, he became a member of the Royal Society at the age of
22. From the island of Saint Helena, he catalogued (1676-78) the positions of
about 350 Southern Hemisphere stars and observed a transit of Mercury; he urged
that the latter phenomenon and future transits of Venus be used to determine the
distance of the Sun. He worked out a theory of cometary orbits, concluded that
the comet of 1682 (which still bears his name) was periodic, and correctly
predicted that it would return in 76 years. In 1710, comparing current star
positions with those listed in Ptolemy's catalog, he deduced that the stars must
have a slight motion of their own, and he detected this proper motion in three
stars.
Halley was appointed Savilian professor of geometry at Oxford in 1704, and in
1720 he succeeded John Flamsteed as astronomer
royal. At the Greenwich Observatory he used the first transit instrument and
devised a method for determining longitude at sea by means of lunar
observations.
Halley played an active role in the events and controversies of his time. He
both morally and financially supported Isaac Newton,
pacified the astronomer Johannes Hevelius regarding the disputed accuracy of
methods for measuring stellar positions, and infuriated Flamsteed by scheming
with Newton to publish Flamsteed's observations long before they were complete.
Halley was a major astronomer. He began observing seriously already as an
undergraduate and published a paper on theoretical astronomy in the
Philosophical Transactions at that time. He is known today primarily for A
Synopsis of the Astronomy of Comets, 1705, but he made other important
contributions: the catalogue of the southern skies (Catalogus stellarum
australium, 1678), the method of measuring the astronomical unit via transits of
Venus, the establishment of stellar motion and the secular acceleration of the
moon.
- He published important editions of Apollonius and of other ancient
geometricians as well as papers in pure mathematics.
- He is considered the founder of geophysics, especially for his paper on
trade winds and his work on tides.
- He was one of the pioneers in social statistics by calculating annuities
from the mortality tables of Breslau (1693).
- He was constantly concerned with the magnetism of the earth, and developed
a general theory about this. He also experimented at determining the law of
magnetic poles.
- He was concerned as well with weather, and published on the relation of
barometric pressure to the weather.
Why is the comet named after Halley?
![[Image of Halley nucleus]](http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/banner/small_halley.gif) Edmond
Halley was using Isaac Newton's ideas of gravitation to analyze the motion of
bodies in the solar system. He noticed that the records for the bright comets of
1531, 1607, and 1682 showed that all three comets had very similar orbits. He
drew the bold conclusion that all three were really the same comet, trapped by
the gravitational pull of the outer planets, and predicted that the comet would
return in 1758-59. The comet was found again on Christmas night 1758 and was
then named in the late astronomer's honour.
Halley's Comet has been know since at least 240 BC (and possibly 1059 BC).
Its most famous appearance was in 1066 AD when it was seen right before the
Battle of Hastings. It was named after Halley, who calculated its orbit.
Halley's Comet put on bright shows in 1835 and in 1910. Its return in
1986 was accompanied by space missions including the Giotto
mission to Halley's Comet.
Links
Comprehensive guide to Halley
More Edmond Halley links
The other Haley and his Comets
Bill Haley and the Comets famous Rock around the Clock can be seen here.
The Bill
Haley and the Comets recording of "Rock Around the Clock," which
topped the charts for eight weeks in 1955, is remembered as the beginning of the
rock era. Though it also represented Haley's
peak as a performer, his career had begun some time before and would continue
for a long time after. Born in Michigan, Haley
began leading Western swing bands under various names in the late '40s, slowly
starting to incorporate elements of R&B. Soon after he began recording for
Essex in the early '50s, his backup band was named the
Comets.
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