Van Maanen’s Star: Difference between revisions
From All Skies Encyclopaedia
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==Etymology and History==  | 
  ==Etymology and History==  | 
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[[File:Eric vanMaanen.png|alt=screenshot(s) of text|thumb|van Maanen's note on the discovery of "his" star (screenshot)]]  | 
  [[File:Eric vanMaanen.png|alt=screenshot(s) of text|thumb|van Maanen's note on the discovery of "his" star (screenshot)]]  | 
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Appeared as “van Maanen’s Star” in a compendium of science abstracts in 1919 (for a paper by Cosserat),  | 
  Appeared as “van Maanen’s Star” in a compendium of science abstracts in 1919 (for a paper by Cosserat),   | 
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* Whitaker (1922, an Almanac!),   | 
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* Seares (1924),   | 
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Name appears in ~10 NASA ADS abstracts  | 
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* Luyten (1950),   | 
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* van de Kamp (1971),   | 
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* Burnham (1978),   | 
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* Spite & Lahmek (1982),   | 
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* Fernandez (1983).   | 
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* Wikipedia  | 
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==Mythology==  | 
  ==Mythology==  | 
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Revision as of 13:11, 5 July 2024
modern name for GJ 35 = HIP 3829, Third white dwarf identified, and first and nearest solitary white dwarf.
Etymology and History
Appeared as “van Maanen’s Star” in a compendium of science abstracts in 1919 (for a paper by Cosserat),
- Whitaker (1922, an Almanac!),
 - Seares (1924),
 - Luyten (1950),
 - van de Kamp (1971),
 - Burnham (1978),
 - Spite & Lahmek (1982),
 - Fernandez (1983).
 - “van Maanen’s Star” has own entry in Encyclopedia of Astronomy & Astrophysics (Murdin, 2001)
 - Appeared as "van Maanen" in Allen (1963) Allen's Astrophysical Quantities. Name appears in ~10 NASA ADS abstracts
 - Name is already in SIMBAD .
 - Wikipedia
 
Mythology
IAU Star Name
WGSN discussed the name in 2022 but decided (for the time being) not to name stars after people.




