30852 Debye Asteroid and Grave of Peter J. W. Debye - Ithaca, NY
Posted by: Groundspeak Charter Member neoc1
N 42° 27.945 W 076° 28.792
18T E 378337 N 4702550
30852 Debye is a main belt asteroid. The grave of Dutch-American Nobel Laureate in Chemistry Peter Joseph William Debye is located in Pleasant Grove Cemetery in Ithaca, NY.
Waymark Code: WMW5ZK
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 07/14/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 0

30852 Debye is a main belt asteroid discovered on October 2, 1991 by F. Borngen and L. D. Schmadel at Tautenburg Observatory in Thuringia, Germany. It is named after Nobel Prize winning physical chemist Peter J.W. Debye.

The grave of Peter Joseph William Debye, and his wife Mathilde, is marked by a polished black granite marker which is inscribed:

DEBYE


PETER J.W.
1884 - 1966
MAASTRICHT - ITHACA

MATHILDE
1887 - 1977
FLACHSLANDEN - ITHACA

Peter Debye was born in Maastricht, Netherlands on March 24, 1884. He graduated with Aachen University of Technology in 1905 with a degree in electrical engineering. He earned a Ph.D. from the University of Munich in physics in 1908.

Debye did a great deal of ground breaking research on the dipole moments of asymmetric molecules. The SI unit for the magnitude of the dipole moment, the Debye, is named in his honor. He also did research in shielding of plasmas, semiconductors and electrolytes, the Debye shielding. He co-developed the Debye–Hückel equation for calculating activity coefficients that measures the deviations from ideal behavior of a mixture of chemical substances. The Debye function is used in the calculation of heat capacity of a substance.

In 1934 he moved to Berlin, where, succeeding Einstein, to become director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Physics (now the Max-Planck-Institut). In 1936 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work on "molecular structure through his investigations on dipole moments and the diffraction of X-rays and electrons in gases."

In 1940 he moved to the United States to become Professor of Chemistry at Cornell University. In 1946 he became an American citizen. He retired from teaching 1952, but continued doing research until his death on November 2, 1966.

Website of the Extraterrestrial Location: [Web Link]

Website of location on Earth: [Web Link]

Celestial Body: Asteroid

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