Herbert Hall Turner FRS (13 August 1861, Leeds– 20 August 1930, Stockholm) was a British astronomer and seismologist.
British astronomer and seismologist
Herbert Hall Turner
Born
(1861-08-13)13 August 1861
Died
20 August 1930(1930-08-20) (aged69)
Nationality
British
Awards
Bruce Medal (1927)
Scientific career
Fields
astronomy seismology
Biography
Herbert Hall Turner was educated at the Leeds Modern School, Clifton College,[1] Bristol and Trinity College, Cambridge.[2] In 1884 he accepted the post of Chief Assistant at the Royal Greenwich Observatory and stayed there for nine years. In 1893[3] 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.[4]
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: " 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:-
"On the correction of the Equilibrium theory of tides for the continents (with G H Darwin, Proc.RS. vol lx)
"Report of observations of total solar eclipse of Aug 29 1886" (Phil Trans. vol 180A),
"On Mr Edgeworth's method of reducing observations relating to several quantities" (Phil. Mag. Vol24).
"On observations for coincidence of collimators at Royal Observatory Greenwich" (M,N. Vols xlv and liii).
"On the variations of level against of the Transit Circle at Royal Observatory Greenwich" (M.N. Vol.xlvii).
"On the longitude of Paris" (M.N. vol li).
"on stellar Photography" (M.N. Vols xlix and liv)
On the R-D discordnace (M.N. vol Liii p.374 and 424, vol Liv p.486, Mem Part. 3. vol ii);
On new forms of levels (M.N. Vol Lii).
Conference of the Cape (1880) and Greenwich (1880)
Star Catalogues (Mem. Rs.F.S, vol Li).Turner at the Fourth Conference International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research at Mount Wilson Observatory, 1910
On the reduction of measures of photographic plates (N.N. vol LiV)
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
Savilian Professor of Astronomy in the University of Oxford[9]
Foundation Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge
1st Class Math, with Exhibition, and 1st Class Physics, with Amott Exhibition and Medal, University of London, 1880
Mathematical Scholarship and 1st Class Experimental Physics, University of London, 1882
Second Wrangler and Sheepshanks Astronomical Exhibitioner, Cambridge, 1882
1st Class Math. Tripos, 3rd part, and 2nd Smith's Prize
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