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Yrjö Väisälä
Finnish astronomer and physicist

Yrjö Väisälä

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Finnish astronomer and physicist
A.K.A.
Väisälä, Yrjö, Väisälä, Y., Y. Väisälä
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Kontiolahti, North Karelia, Western Finland Province, Finland
Place of death
Rymättylä, Finland Proper, South-Western Finland Regional State Administrative Agency, Finland
Age
79 years
Family
Siblings:
Kalle Väisälä Vilho Väisälä
Children:
Marja Väisälä
Yrjö Väisälä
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Yrjö Väisälä [ˈyrjø ˈʋæisælæ] (6 September 1891 in Utra, Kontiolahti, Grand Duchy of Finland – 21 July 1971 in Rymättylä, Finland) was a Finnish astronomer and physicist.

His main contributions were in the field of optics, but he was also very active in geodetics, astronomy and optical metrology. He had even an affectionate nickname of Wizard of Tuorla (Observatory/Optics laboratory), and there is a book with the same title in Finnish describing his works. His discoveries include 128 minor planets and 3 comets.

His brothers were mathematician Kalle Väisälä and meteorologist Vilho Väisälä. His daughter Marja Väisälä was also an astronomer and discoverer of minor planets.

Väisälä was also a fervent supporter of Esperanto, presiding the Internacia Scienca Asocio Esperantista ("International Association of Esperanto Scientists") in 1968.

Optician

He developed several methods for measuring the quality of optical elements, as well as a lot of practical methods of manufacturing said elements. This allowed the construction of some of the earliest high-quality Schmidt cameras, in particular a "field-flattened" version known as Schmidt-Väisälä camera. Contemporary to Bernhard Schmidt's design, but unpublished was also Prof. Yrjö Väisälä's identical design which he had mentioned in lecture notes in 1924 with a footnote: "problematic spherical focal surface".

Once he saw Schmidt's publication, he promptly went ahead and "solved" the field flattening problem by placing a doubly convex lens slightly in front of the film holder – back in the 1930s, astronomical films were glass plates (also see photographic plates). The resulting system is known as the Schmidt-Väisälä camera or sometimes as the Väisälä camera. (This solution is not perfect, as images of different colour end up at slightly different places.) Prof. Väisälä made a small test unit of 7 mirrors in a mosaic on stiff background steel frame, however it proved to be impossible to stabilize as "just adjust and forget" structure, and next time anybody tried it, was with active controls on Multiple Mirror Telescope.

Geodesy

A laboratory diary of Yrjö Väisälä. The text is written in 1929. On the pages seen here Väisälä describes the principle of 'a new telescope for photography'. Väisälä never published this concept and few years later Estonian Bernhard Schmidt invented the same construction which is now known as the Schmidt camera.

In the 1920s and 1930s Finland was doing its first precision triangulation chain measurements, and to create long-distance vertices Prof. Väisälä proposed usage of flash-lights on 5 to 10 kilometres (16,000 to 33,000 ft) altitude balloons, or on some big fireworks rockets. The idea was to measure the exact position of the flash against background stars, and by precisely knowing one camera location, to derive an accurate location for another camera. This required better wide-field cameras than were available, and was discarded.

Later, Prof. Väisälä developed a method to multiply an optical length reference using white light interferometry to precisely determine lengths of baselines used in triangulation chains. Several such baselines were created in Finland for second high-precision triangulation campaign in 1950s and 1960s.

Later GPS made these methods largely obsolete. A Väisälä interferometry baseline is still maintained by the Finnish Geodetic Institute in Nummela for the calibration of other distance measurement instruments.

Prof. Väisälä also developed excellent tools to measure earth rotational axis position by building so called zenith telescopes, and in the 1960s Tuorla Observatory was in the top rank of North Pole position tracking measurements.

In the 1980s radioastronomy was able to replace earth rotation tracking by referring things against "non-moving background" of quasars.

For these Zenith Telescopes, Prof. Väisälä made also one of the first experiments at doing mirrors of liquid mercury. (Such mirror needs extremely smooth rotational speeds which were achieved in the late 1990s.)

Astronomer

The big Schmidt-Väisälä telescope he built was used at the University of Turku for searching asteroids and comets. His research group discovered 7 comets and 807 asteroids.

For this rather massive photographic survey work, Prof. Väisälä developed also a protocol of taking two exposures on same plate some 2–3 hours apart and offsetting those images slightly. Any dot-pairs that differed from background were moving, and deserved follow-up photos. This method halved the film consumption compared to method of "blink comparing", where plates get single exposures, and are compared by rapidly showing first and second exposures to human operator. (Blink-comparing was used to find e.g. Pluto.)

Discoveries

Yrjö Väisälä is credited by the Minor Planet Center with the discovery of 128 asteroids during 1935–1944. He used to name them with the names of his personal friends that had birthdays. One of them was the professor Matti Herman Palomaa (fi), after whom an asteroid 1548 Palomaa was named. For this reason the Palomar Mountain Observatory in California has never had an asteroid bearing its name – the rules for naming asteroids state that the names have to differ from each other with more than one letter.

Besides minor planets, he has also discovered 3 comets. The parabolic comet C/1944 H1 observed in 1944 and 1945, as well as the two short period comets, 40P/Vaisala 1, a Jupiter-family comet, and C/1942 EA, a Halley-type and near-Earth comet. Together with Liisi Oterma he co-discovered the Jupiter-family comet 139P/Väisälä-Oterma, which was first classified as asteroid and received the provisional designation "1939 TN".

List of 128 discovered asteroids 
1391 Carelia1398 Donnera1405 Sibelius1406 Komppa1407 Lindelöf
1421 Esperanto1424 Sundmania1446 Sillanpää1447 Utra1448 Lindbladia
1449 Virtanen1450 Raimonda1451 Granö1453 Fennia1454 Kalevala
1460 Haltia1462 Zamenhof1463 Nordenmarkia1471 Tornio1472 Muonio
1473 Ounas1477 Bonsdorffia1478 Vihuri1479 Inkeri1480 Aunus
1483 Hakoila1488 Aura1492 Oppolzer1494 Savo1495 Helsinki
1496 Turku1497 Tampere1498 Lahti1499 Pori1500 Jyväskylä
1503 Kuopio1518 Rovaniemi1519 Kajaani1520 Imatra1521 Seinäjoki
1523 Pieksämäki1524 Joensuu1525 Savonlinna1526 Mikkeli1527 Malmquista
1529 Oterma1530 Rantaseppä1532 Inari1533 Saimaa1534 Näsi
1535 Päijänne1536 Pielinen1541 Estonia1542 Schalén1548 Palomaa
1549 Mikko1551 Argelander1552 Bessel1567 Alikoski1631 Kopff
1646 Rosseland1656 Suomi1659 Punkaharju1677 Tycho Brahe1678 Hveen
1696 Nurmela1699 Honkasalo1723 Klemola1740 Paavo Nurmi1757 Porvoo
1883 Rimito1928 Summa1929 Kollaa1947 Iso-Heikkilä2020 Ukko
2067 Aksnes2091 Sampo2096 Väinö2194 Arpola2204 Lyyli
2243 Lönnrot2258 Viipuri2292 Seili2299 Hanko2333 Porthan
2379 Heiskanen2397 Lappajärvi2454 Olaus Magnus2464 Nordenskiöld2479 Sodankylä
2486 Metsähovi2502 Nummela2512 Tavastia2535 Hämeenlinna2638 Gadolin
2639 Planman2678 Aavasaksa2679 Kittisvaara2690 Ristiina2715 Mielikki
2716 Tuulikki2733 Hamina2737 Kotka2750 Loviisa2802 Weisell
2820 Iisalmi2826 Ahti2885 Palva2898 Neuvo2962 Otto
2972 Niilo3037 Alku3099 Hergenrother3166 Klondike3212 Agricola
3223 Forsius3272 Tillandz3281 Maupertuis3522 Becker3606 Pohjola
3897 Louhi4181 Kivi4266 Waltari4512 Sinuhe5073 Junttura
5153 Gierasch(6073) 1939 UB6572 Carson

Honors and awards

The University of Turku Astronomy department is known as VISPA: Väisälä Institute for Space Physics and Astronomy in honour of its founder.

The lunar crater Väisälä is named after him, and so are the minor planets 1573 Väisälä and 2804 Yrjö.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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