Sigurd Einbu (November 5, 1866 – May 10, 1946) (spelled Enebue at birth), was a Norwegian self-taught astronomer from Lesjaskog, known to have discovered a nova in the stellar constellation Gemini on March 12, 1912. The nova was named Nova Geminorum 2.[1][2] Also in 1912 he introduced a new class of variable stars, the RV Tauri variable stars.[3] He spelled his family name Enebo during large parts of his scientific career, but in 1926 he changed it to Einbu according to the local pronunciation.

Einbu attended Hamar offentlige lærerskole, and worked as a teacher in Øyer, Vågå and Sel before returning to his home community Dombås. He took an interest in astronomy at an early age, but could not devote himself fully to astronomy until he was appointed statsstipendiat (Government scholar) in 1908. He was a founding member of Norsk Novaselskap. He established and ran a magnetic monitoring station at Dombås from 1916.

During his lifetime he was a people's educator and wrote frequently in newspapers and popular journals.

His childhood house Einbustugu has been moved from Lesjaskog to Dombås, and is today a museum in his memory.

Awards edit

Sigurd Einbu was awarded

Literature edit

  • Stjernegransking i gamall og ny tid. 1911 (Norwegian)
  • Vår sol. 1922 (Norwegian)
  • Gjennem stjerneverdenen. 1: Vor sol og dens følge. 1923 (Norwegian)
  • Vår måne. 1923 (Norwegian)
  • Gjennem stjerneverdenen. 2: Melkeveiens soler: (fiksstjernene). 1924 (Norwegian)
  • Beobachtungen veränderlicher Sterne I – XIV (German)
  • Bebodde verdener i nytt lys. 1928 (Norwegian)
  • Soler og atom. 1930 (Norwegian)
  • 250 in den Jahren 1903–1941 in Norwegen beobachtete Feuerkugeln: Errechnung der Radianten u. a.. 1942 (German)
  • Dovre kommune gjennom hundreåret 1837–1937. 1949 (Norwegian)
  • Lesja: litt frå den kommunale soga 1838–1938, og ymse anna. 1949 (Norwegian)
About Einbu
  • R. Tambs Lyche. "Sigurd Einbu: Minnetale" I: Det Kongelige norske videnskabers selskabs forhandlinger; vol. 19. 1946 (Norwegian)

References edit

  1. ^ "Notes and Queries". Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. 6: 146. April 1912. Bibcode:1912JRASC...6..144.
  2. ^ "Nova Geminorum 2 (Enebo); its Position for 1900.0, together with those for 102 Stars surrounding the Nova, as deduced from Measures on a Photograph taken at the University Observatory, Oxford". mnras.oxfordjournals.org. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2014-05-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Ebell, M. (1906). "Versammlung der Astronomischen Gesellschaft in Jena 1906 Sept. 12 bis 15". Astronomische Nachrichten. 172 (23): 365–374. Bibcode:1906AN....172..365E. doi:10.1002/asna.19061722303. (German)
  5. ^ http://www.nansenfondet.no/hmp_1.html Nansenfondet (Norwegian)

External links edit