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Karl Christian Bruhns

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Died
  
1881, Leipzig, Germany

Notable awards
  
Lalande Prize


Name
  
Karl Bruhns

Role
  
Astronomer

Karl Christian Bruhns

Born
  
22 November 1830 Plon, Holstein (
1830-11-22
)

Doctoral advisor
  
Johann Franz Encke

Academic advisor
  
Johann Franz Encke

Doctoral students
  
Hugo von Seeliger

Notable students
  
Hugo von Seeliger

Karl Christian Bruhns (22 November 1830 – 25 July 1881) was a German astronomer.

Biography

He was the son of a locksmith, and in 1851 went as locksmith and mechanic, first to Borsig, and then to Berlin with the firm of Siemens and Halske. In Berlin, he attracted the attention of Johann Encke, then director of the Berlin Observatory, by his remarkable powers as a computer. In 1852 Bruhns was appointed as assistant, and in 1854 as observer, in the Observatory, and in 1859 as instructor in the university. In 1860 he was called to the University of Leipzig as professor of astronomy and director of the new observatory to be constructed there, which, under his skilful direction, grew into one of the finest structures of its kind in Europe.

He is known as the discoverer of five comets, an able computer of cometary and planetary orbits, and for his important work in geodesy in connection with the European triangulation.

References

Karl Christian Bruhns Wikipedia