Aleksander Wolszczan
Aleksander Wolszczan was born in 1946. After the studies, he started to
work
as a researcher on the University of Nicolaus Copernicus. Wolszczan
started
to interest in radioastronomy in 1973, when he was in Bonn, Germany on a
scientific visit, because there's situated the biggest radiotelescope in
Europe.
In 1982 Wolszczan moved to the United States. Initially, he worked
on the Cornell University, later in Princeton and then as a professor on
he
Philadelphia Academy. He belonged to a group of researches, working on the
largest radiotelescope in the world, located in Arecibo, Puerto Rico.
Exactly in Arecibo, he discovered a pulsar PSR B1257+12, which has an own
planetary system. "Nature" informed about in 9th January 1992 about a
discovery of planets, which not belong to the Solar System. Initially,
some
people didn't agreed with his interpretation, so he published an issue to
remove all of the doubts.
More than four years later, Wolszczan was placed
on the list of 25 discoverers of the Universe, published by "Astronomy".
That discovery was compared with discovers of Uran, Neptun and Pluton.
July
1999 brought Wolszczan an acknowledgement of "Nature" for one of the
sixteen
fundamental works, published by the magazine. Wolszczan was nominated from
26 pretenders for the Inhabitant of Torun of the XX century.
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