December 24, 2013 <Back to Index>
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Jean-Louis Pons (December 24, 1761 – October 14, 1831) was a French astronomer. Despite
humble beginnings and being self - taught, he went on to become the
greatest visual comet discoverer of all time: between 1801 and 1827
Pons discovered thirty - seven comets, more than any other person in history. Pons was born at Peyre, Hautes - Alpes, to a poor family; he received little formal education. In 1789, he began working for the Marseille observatory as a caretaker,
and gradually gained some experience in assisting the astronomers with
observations. He learned to make observations himself, showing a
remarkable ability to remember star fields and note changes in them. In
his early astronomical career, the unassuming and trusting Pons was
often the target of jokes perpetrated by more experienced astronomers. Franz Xaver von Zach once advised him to look for comets when sunspots were visible, though in doing so Zach may have inadvertently given Pons very good advice.
Pons made his first comet discovery, jointly attributed to
Charles Messier, on July 11, 1801. He appears to have used telescopes and lenses of his own design; his "Grand Chercheur" ("Great Seeker") seems to have been an instrument with large aperture and short focal length, similar to a "comet seeker". However, he was not an especially diligent recorder of his observations, and his notes were often extremely vague. In 1819, Pons became the director of the new observatory at Marlia near Lucca, which he left in 1825 to teach astronomy at La Specola, in Florence. He discovered four periodic comets, two of which, 7P/Pons - Winnecke and 12P/Pons - Brooks, bear his name. One observed on November 26, 1818 was named Comet Encke after Johann Franz Encke,
who calculated its orbit and its remarkably short period (Encke,
however, continued to refer to the comet as "Pons's Comet"). Pons also
co-discovered the comet formerly known as "Pons - Coggia - Winnecke - Forbes"
and today known as 27P/Crommelin after Andrew Crommelin, who calculated its orbit. Pons received the French Academy of Sciences's Lalande Prize in 1818 for his discovery of three comets in that year. By 1827, Pons's eyesight had begun to fail, and he retired from observing altogether shortly before his death. |