Vesto Slipher

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Vesto Slipher bigraphy, stories - American astronomer

Vesto Slipher : biography

November 11, 1875 – November 8, 1969

Vesto Melvin Slipher (November 11, 1875 – November 8, 1969) was an American astronomer. His brother Earl C. Slipher was also an astronomer and a director at the Lowell Observatory.

Slipher was born in Mulberry, Indiana, and completed his doctorate at Indiana University in 1909. He spent his entire career at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, where he was promoted to assistant director in 1915, acting director from 1916, and finally director from 1926 until his retirement in 1952. He used spectroscopy to investigate the rotation periods of planets and the composition of planetary atmospheres. In 1912, he was the first to observe the shift of spectral lines of galaxies, making him the discoverer of galactic redshifts.Slipher first reports on the making the first Doppler measurement on September 17, 1912 in in the inaugural volume of the Lowell Observatory Bulletin, pp.2.56-2.57. In his report Slipher writes: "The magnitude of this velocity, which is the greatest hitherto observed, raises the question whether the velocity-like displacement might not be due to some other cause, but I believe we have at present no other interpretation for it." Three years later, Slipher wrote a review in the journal Popular Astronomy, Vol. 23, p. 21-24 , in which he states, "The early discovery that the great Andromeda spiral had the quite exceptional velocity of – 300 km(/s) showed the means then available, capable of investigating not only the spectra of the spirals but their velocities as well." Slipher reported the velocities for 15 spiral nebula spread across the entire celestial sphere, all but three having observable "positive" (that is recessional) velocities. He discovered the sodium layer in 1929.http://www.albany.edu/faculty/rgk/atm101/sodium.htm He was responsible for hiring Clyde Tombaugh and supervised the work that led to the discovery of Pluto in 1930.

Edwin Hubble was generally incorrectly credited with discovering the redshift of galaxies;This had actually been observed by Vesto Slipher in the 1910s, but the world was largely unaware. Ref: Slipher (1917): Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., 56, 403. these measurements and their significance were understood before 1917 by James Edward Keeler (Lick & Allegheny), Vesto Melvin Slipher (Lowell), and William Wallace Campbell (Lick) at other observatories.

Combining his own measurements of galaxy distances with Vesto Slipher’s measurements of the redshifts associated with the galaxies, Hubble and Milton Humason discovered a rough proportionality of the objects’ distances with their redshifts. This redshift-distance correlation, nowadays termed Hubble’s law, was formulated by Hubble and Humason in 1929 and became the basis for the modern model of the expanding universe.

Slipher died in Flagstaff, Arizona and is buried there in Citizens Cemetery.

Awards

  • Lalande Prize (1919)
  • Gold Medal of the Paris Academy of Sciences (1919)
  • Henry Draper Medal of the National Academy of Sciences (1932)
  • Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (1932)
  • Bruce Medal (1935)
  • The crater Slipher on the Moon is named after Earl and Vesto Slipher, as is the crater Slipher on Mars and the asteroid 1766 Slipher, discovered September 7, 1962, by the Indiana Asteroid Program.

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