Herbert Hall Turner Explained

Birth Date:13 August 1861
Birth Place:Leeds, England
Death Place:Stockholm, Sweden
Prizes:Bruce Medal (1927)

Herbert Hall Turner (13 August 1861 – 20 August 1930) was a British astronomer and seismologist.

Biography

Herbert Hall Turner was educated at the Leeds Modern School, Clifton College,[1] Bristol and Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1884 he accepted the post of Chief Assistant at the Royal Greenwich Observatory and stayed there for nine years. In 1893[2] he became Savilian Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Radcliffe Observatory at Oxford University, a post he held for 37 years until his sudden death in 1930.[3]

He was one of the observers in the Eclipse Expeditions of 1886 and 1887. In seismology, he is credited with the discovery of deep focus earthquakes. He is also credited with coining the word parsec.

His 1897 Royal Society candidature citation read:[4]

Secretary of the Royal Astronomical Society. Was Chief Assistant at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich 1884-1894. Author of various papers among which may be mentioned:-

He co-edited the first official history of the Royal Astronomical Society along with John Louis Emil Dreyer, History of the Royal Astronomical Society 1820–1920 (1923, reprinted 1987).[5]

He died of a brain haemorrhage in 1930 at a conference in Stockholm. He had married Agnes Margaret Whyte in 1899; they had one daughter, Ruth.

A few months before Turner's death in 1930, the Lowell Observatory announced the discovery of a new planet, and an eleven-year-old Oxford schoolgirl, Venetia Burney, proposed the name Pluto for it to her grandfather Falconer Madan, who was retired from the Bodleian Library.[6] Madan passed the name to Turner, who cabled it to colleagues at the Lowell Observatory in the United States.[7] The new planet was officially named "Pluto" on 24 March 1930.[8]

His portrait, by Catharine Dodgson, hangs at New College, Oxford, at which he held a Professorial Fellowship attached to the Savilian Professor of Astronomy.

Honours

Lectures

In 1913 and 1915 he was invited to deliver the Royal Institution Christmas Lecture on A Voyage in Space and Wireless Messages from the Stars.

Awards

Named after him

Works

Notes and References

  1. "Clifton College Register" Muirhead, J.A.O. p52: Bristol; J.W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society; April, 1948
  2. Book: Chairs and Professors of Universities in the United Kingdom. Who's Who Year-book for 1905. 1908. 132. https://books.google.com/books?id=3sY0AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA132.
  3. Herbert Hall Turner. Popular Astronomy . 1931PA.....39...59C. Cannon . Annie J. . 1931 . 39 . 59 .
  4. https://catalogues.royalsociety.org/CalmView/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=EC%2F1897%2F25
  5. Web site: Royal Astronomical Society (RAS). Encyclopædia Britannica.
  6. News: The girl who named a planet. BBC News. P. Rincon. Pluto: The Discovery of Planet X. 2006-01-13. 2007-04-12.
  7. Web site: The Planet 'Pluto' . K. M. . Claxton . 2011-11-29 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111128044646/http://fredpratt.tripod.com/PR/pluto.html . 28 November 2011 .
  8. News: The Trans-Neptunian Body: Decision to call it Pluto. The Times. 27 May 1930. 15.
  9. Book: Turner, Herbert Hall. Astronomical Discovery. 1904. Edward Arnold, London. 225.
  10. Web site: Library and Archive Catalogue. Royal Society. 17 June 2022.