Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters

Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters (September 19, 1813July 18, 1890) was a German-American astronomer, and one of the first to find asteroids.

Christian Heinrich Friedrich Peters
Asteroids discovered: 48
72 FeroniaMay 29 1861
75 EurydikeSeptember 22 1862
77 FriggaNovember 12 1862
85 IoSeptember 19 1865
88 ThisbeJune 15 1866
92 UndinaJuly 7 1867
98 IantheApril 18 1868
102 MiriamAugust 22 1868
109 FelicitasOctober 9 1869
111 AteAugust 14 1870
112 IphigeniaSeptember 19 1870
114 KassandraJuly 23 1871
116 SironaSeptember 8 1871
122 GerdaJuly 31 1872
123 BrunhildJuly 31 1872
124 AlkesteAugust 23 1872
129 AntigoneFebruary 5 1873
130 ElektraFebruary 17 1873
131 ValaMay 24 1873
135 HerthaFebruary 18 1874
144 VibiliaJune 3 1875
145 AdeonaJune 3 1875
160 UnaFebruary 20 1876
165 LoreleyAugust 9 1876
166 RhodopeAugust 15 1876
167 UrdaAugust 28 1876
176 IdunaOctober 14 1877
185 EunikeMarch 1 1878
188 MenippeJune 18 1878
189 PhthiaSeptember 9 1878
190 IsmeneSeptember 22 1878
191 KolgaSeptember 30 1878
194 ProkneMarch 21 1879
196 PhilomelaMay 14 1879
199 ByblisJuly 9 1879
200 DynameneJuly 27 1879
202 ChryseïsSeptember 11 1879
203 PompejaSeptember 25 1879
206 HersiliaOctober 13 1879
209 DidoOctober 22 1879
213 LilaeaFebruary 16 1880
234 BarbaraAugust 12 1883
249 IlseAugust 16 1885
259 AletheiaJune 28 1886
261 PrymnoOctober 31 1886
264 LibussaDecember 22 1886
270 AnahitaOctober 8 1887
287 NephthysAugust 25 1889

He was born in Schleswig-Holstein, then part of Denmark but later part of Germany, and later studied under Carl Friedrich Gauss. He spoke many languages and spent time in Italy and Ottoman Turkey before going to the United States in 1854.

Working at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York (near Utica), he was a good finder of asteroids, finding 48 of them, beginning with 72 Feronia in 1861 and ending with 287 Nephthys in 1889.

He was involved in litigation in 1889 with his old assistant Charles A. Borst, and the "Great Star-Catalog Case" Peters v. Borst went before the Supreme Court of New York. The judge sided with Peters, but many astronomers and newspapers sided with Borst. Peters died not long after the trial end. After his death, the judgement was ultimately reversed on appeal and a new trial was ordered, but it never took place.

Besides asteroids, he co-found the Periodic comet 80P/Peters-Hartley, and also found different nebulae and galaxies.

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