Jean-Félix Adolphe Gambart

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Jean-Félix Adolphe Gambart (12 May 1800 – 23 July 1836) was a French astronomer.[1]

He was born in

Marseilles Observatory
and became the director in 1822.

During his career he recorded a number of observations of the satellites of Jupiter, and discovered a total of 13 comets.[1] In 1832 he observed the transit of Mercury across the Sun, noting that the planet appeared deformed as it approached the edge.

He suffered from tuberculosis, and in 1836 died from cholera in Paris, aged 36.

The crater Gambart on the moon is named after him.[1][2] He was also awarded the medal of the London Astronomy Society for his calculation of a cometary orbit.

References

  1. ^ (in Czech)
  2. ^ Crater Gambart on Moon Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature, IAU, USGS, NASA

Notes

  • Jean-Michel Faidit, Un astronome sétois : Jean-Félix Adolphe Gambart, (1800-1836), revue d'Archéologie et d'Histoire de Sète et de sa Région, 2008, pp. 39-45}