Paul Herget
Paul Herget was an American astronomer and director of the Cincinnati Observatory. He established the Minor Planet Center in 1947, after World War II.
Career
Herget taught astronomy at the University of Cincinnati. He was a pioneer in the use of machine methods, and eventually digital computers, in the solving of scientific and specifically astronomical problems.During World War II he applied these same talents to the war effort, helping to locate U-boats by means of the application of spherical trigonometry.
After the war, Herget established the Minor Planet Center in 1947. He was also named director of the Cincinnati Observatory. The Minor Planet Center was eventually relocated in 1978 to the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where it still operates.
Herget is also credited with helping design the shape of the Pringles potato-based chip.
Awards and honors
- In 1965 he was awarded the James [Craig Watson Medal] by the National Academy of Sciences for, "his scientific accomplishments in celestial mechanics and orbit computation, and particularly for his contributions to the knowledge of the orbits of asteroids".
- Asteroid 1751 Herget, discovered by astronomers with the Indiana Asteroid Program at Goethe Link Observatory in 1955, was named in his honor. The official was published by the Minor Planet Center on February 20, 1971.
- On August 1, 1978, asteroid 1755 Lorbach, discovered by Marguerite Laugier at Nice in 1936, was, Anne Lorbach Herget.