Difference between revisions of "October 25, 2014"
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<strong>Related Links</strong><br /> | <strong>Related Links</strong><br /> | ||
− | <em>[ | + | <em>[[21st Century Atlas of the Moon|21st Century Atlas]]</em> chart L8.<br /> |
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+ | <p><b>Yesterday's LPOD:</b> [[October 24, 2014|5° Beyond the Limb]] </p> | ||
+ | <p><b>Tomorrow's LPOD:</b> [[October 26, 2014|Still Balmy After All These Years]] </p> | ||
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Latest revision as of 08:35, 28 October 2018
Two Carpenters
image by Tiziano Niero, Mira (VE), Italy
What is the plain, Anglo-Saxon name Carpenter doing in the midst of these ancient Greeks and more recent Frenchmen? The latter are all mathematicians, and the Greeks were astronomers. Carpenter was also an astronomer - both of them. The name Carpenter was originally bestowed to honor a nineteenth century British astronomer, James Carpenter, who was a pioneer in spectral observations but is remembered now as the co-author of the Nasmyth and Carpenter classic, The Moon: Considered as a Planet, a World, and a Satellite. In 1985 the IAU added the name Edwin Carpenter (1898 - 1963) as a co-honoree. Dr. Carpenter was chairman of the University of Arizona Department of Astronomy from 1936 to 1963. I met him when I became an astronomy student at UA in 1960. I was grateful to him for allowing me to use the 4.3" James telescope, a wonderful Clark refractor that I learned to observe with. He also permitted me to help with the Steward Observatory 36" during public nights, which led to occasional views of the Moon, Saturn and Jupiter with a huge telescope that I controlled. Like a number of fresh craters in the north polar area, Carpenter has two central peaks - perhaps one for each Carpenter.
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Yesterday's LPOD: 5° Beyond the Limb
Tomorrow's LPOD: Still Balmy After All These Years
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