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A. Laurent : ウィキペディア英語版
A. Laurent

A. Laurent (or J. Laurent) was a French amateur astronomer who discovered the asteroid 51 Nemausa in 1858, for which he was a recipient of the Lalande Prize awarded by the French Academy of Sciences. His first name is apparently unknown, and even his first initial is somewhat unclear.
He never made any more asteroid discoveries and not much more seems to be known about him. He was described as a "very skillful young man" (''un jeune homme très habile'') by Édouard Stephan. He was described as a "distinguished pupil of the Marseille school", and as an amateur astronomer and an inspector of the assay office in Nîmes (''contrôleur du bureau de garantie de Nîmes'').
The asteroid was discovered using the private observatory at the house formerly occupied by Benjamin Valz, who left in 1836 to become the new director of the Marseille Observatory. He entrusted his former observatory to Laurent, who later found the asteroid. The house, at 32 rue Nationale in Nîmes (at that time known as rue de l'Agau), has a plaque commemorating the discovery.〔. Note the plaque can also be seen in Google Street View or similar.〕
Laurent was awarded the Lalande Prize of the French Academy of Sciences in 1858 for his discovery, jointly with five other asteroid and comet discoverers. In addition, asteroid 162 Laurentia was named in his honour.
==First name==
Nineteenth-century sources do not mention his first name, referring to him only as "M. Laurent", the standard French abbreviation for Monsieur Laurent.
His initial is given as "A." in the list of asteroid discoverers maintained by the Minor Planet Center,〔http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/lists/NumberedMPs000001.html〕 as well as in the ''Dictionary of Minor Planet Names'' by Lutz D. Schmadel at the entries for both 52 Nemausa and 162 Laurentia. At these entries Schmadel cites ''Astronomische Nachrichten'' articles which however do not mention the discoverer's initial. He also cites ''The Names of the Minor Planets'' () by Paul Herget of the Cincinnati Observatory, on pages 8 and 20, respectively; this was a predecessor publication to his own work and initially an important source for it.〔Schmadel, ibid, p. 10〕
On the other hand, a small set of astronomical charts known to have been drawn up by Laurent himself, as well as a hand-drawn star chart portraying the discovery of 51 Nemausa, show his name as J. Laurent (see images).
In 1857, it was reported that Valz had undertaken the publication of equinoxial charts, to be drawn up by Laurent. When Valz reported the discovery of Nemausa in a letter to the ''Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances de l'Académie des Sciences'', he cited this as the "first success" of these equinoxial charts. The equinoxial charts in question indicate the author as "J. Laurent" (see image) and this is also indicated in a library catalog.〔http://www.sudoc.fr/109430255〕〔https://www.worldcat.org/title/cartes-equinoxiales-epoque-1800-nos-2-3-4-14-15-dressees-a-lobservatoire-de-m-valz-a-nimes-en-1857/oclc/492553657〕 A notation (see image) at the top of a hand-drawn star chart in the Observatoire de Marseille - Patrimoines archives notes the discovery of the asteroid as follows: ''Némausa (51) dec. (= découverte ) à Nîmes par J. Laurent (22 janvier 1858)'', which means "51 Nemausa disc. (= discovered ) at Nîmes by J. Laurent (22 January 1858)".〔Note the same unusual-looking lowercase "d" also occurs on the prior page (image 85): "dressée le 16 fév 1858"(); on image 69 ("découvertes")(); on image 68 ("Goldschmidt")(); etc.)〕 Note Laurent's mentor Valz was director of the Marseille Observatory.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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