Walter Baade

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Asteroids discovered: 10
930 Westphalia March 10, 1920
934 Thüringia August 15, 1920
944 Hidalgo October 31, 1920
966 Muschi November 9, 1921
967 Helionape November 9, 1921
1036 Ganymed October 23, 1924
1103 Sequoia November 9, 1928
1566 Icarus June 27, 1949
5656 Oldfield October 8, 1920
(7448) 1948 AA January 14, 1948

Wilhelm Heinrich Walter Baade (March 24 1893 - June 25 1960) was a German astronomer who emigrated to the USA in 1931.

Contents

Biography

Along with Fritz Zwicky, he proposed that supernovae could create neutron stars.

He took advantage of wartime blackout conditions during World War II, which reduced light pollution at Mount Wilson Observatory, to resolve stars in the center of the Andromeda galaxy for the first time, which led him to define distinct "populations" for stars (Population I and Population II).

He discovered that there are two types of Cepheid variable stars, and identified the Crab Nebula as the remnant of the supernova of the year 1054, and identified the optical counterparts of various radio sources.

He discovered 10 asteroids, including notably 944 Hidalgo (long orbital period) and the Apollo-class asteroid 1566 Icarus (whose perihelion is closer than that of Mercury) and the Amor asteroid 1036 Ganymed.

Honors

Awards

Named after him

Books

Walter Baade: A Life in Astrophysics, Donald E. Osterbrock, ISBN 0-691-04936-X

External links

Obituaries

et:Walter Baade es:Walter Baade fr:Walter Baade gl:Walter Baade it:Walter Baade ja:ウォルター・バーデ ru:Бааде, Вальтер sk:Wilhelm Heinrich Walter Baade sl:Walter Baade sv:Walter Baade zh:沃尔特·巴德