PV
Peter Van
Celebrity
Birth Date: Dec. 26, 1901
Birth Time: 2 p.m.
Birth City: Kampen, Overijssel, Netherlands
Capricorn
Degree : 4º7'11.13"
Sun Sign*
Gemini
Degree : 26º15'6.04"
Moon Sign
Purnavasu
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 16º0'40.4"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
PV
Dec. 26, 1901
2 p.m.
Kampen, Overijssel, Netherlands
Celebrity
Capricorn
Degree : 4º7'11.13"
Sun Sign*
Gemini
Degree : 26º15'6.04"
Moon Sign
Purnavasu
Pada : 2
Nakshatra
Taurus
Degree : 16º0'40.4"
Ascendant
Updated at Apr 25, 2024
Created by admin.astronidan
Welcome to Peter Van's Kundali Profile page! This page is a hub for exploring the astrological reports, calculations, and different versions of Peter Van's Kundali (if available). You can also discover associated life events, attributes, and Kundalis of other persons associated with Peter Van.

Available Reports

Astrological reports assoicated with this Kundali

Kundali Details

Birth details and configuration for astrological analysis

Birth Details

Gender Male
Weekday Thursday
Date Dec. 26, 1901
Time 2 p.m.
Daylight Saving No
City Kampen, Overijssel, Netherlands
Geo-location 52ºN33'18.0",
Timezone Europe/Amsterdam

Residence Details

City Kampen, Overijssel, Netherlands
Timezone Europe/Amsterdam

Time/Correction

Time (Europe/Amsterdam) Dec. 26, 1901, 01:40:28 PM
Time (UTC) Dec. 26, 1901, 01:40:28 PM
Time (LMT) Dec. 26, 1901, 02:04:07 PM
Time (Julian) 2415745.06976852
LMT Correction 0.3942 Hrs
Ayanmsha True Chitra - 22º28'18.66"

Birth Place

Birth location on map - Lat: 52ºN33'18.0" Lon: 5ºN54'40.0"

Life Attributes

List of attributes/tags and tag associated with this kundali.

Vocation

Science | Astronomy Writers | Textbook/ Non-fiction

Notable

Extraordinary Talents | For Music Famous | First in Field Famous | Top 5% of Profession

Traits

Mind | Education extensive

Life Story

Story of person and major life events assoicated with this Kundali

Dutch-American astronomer, best known for his exoplanet quest. He was the son of Lubbertus van de Kamp (1873, Ijsselmuiden - ) and Engelina Cornelia Adriana van der Wal (1876, Alkmaar - 9 August 1938, Kampen), who married 7 March 1901 in Kampen. His brother Jacob van de Kamp (5 June 1904 1 PM, Kampen - 22 November 1973, Basking Ridge) became a noted Dutch-American chemist. Peter studied astronomy at age 17 in Utrecht (1918) and got his first job at the Kapteyn Astronomical Institute in Groningen under his promoter Pieter Johannes van Rhijn. In 1923 he studied at the Leander McCormick Observatory at the University of Virginia for a year's residence supported by the Draper Fund of the National Academy of Sciences. He assisted Samuel Alfred Mitchell with his extensive stellar parallax program and Harold Alden with the lengthy Boss star project. The following year Van de Kamp went to the Lick Observatory in California as a Kellogg fellow. June 1925 he received his Ph.D. in astronomy from the University of California at age 23. The next year on 26 November he also received a PhD from the University of Groningen under Pieter van Rhijn. Van de Kamp returned to McCormick on 1 October 1925 to take up the position left vacant by Harold Alden, who had just taken up the directorship of the Yale University Observatory Southern Station in Johannesburg, South Africa. His work consisted of assisting with the parallax program and continuing the proper motion work that he and Alden had begun. Van de Kamp and Alexander N. Vyssotsky spent eight years measuring 18,000 proper motions. He did additional, smaller projects individually, including an investigation for general and selective absorption of light within the Milky Way. From 1937 till 1972, Peter van de Kamp was director of the astronomical Sproul Observatory in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, United States. Under his lead, the observatory made numerous claims of planetary systems of several nearby the sun in our Milky Way stars based on astrometry, studying parallax and proper motions of stars, using photographic plates made with the 24 inch refractor telescope. In an article received on 21 June 1963 and published September 1963 by The Astronomical Journal, van de Kamp claimed that a giant planet, about 11 times the mass of Jupiter, was in a 24-year orbit around the Barnard's Star. But in 1973, a year after his retirement from Swarthmore, it was discovered that the measurement apparatus contained a systematic artefact, that was misinterpreted by Van de Kamp as the effects of supposed planets on their stars. In 1972 Van de Kamp retired from Swarthmore and returned to the Netherlands. Here he became Fulbright Professor to the University of Amsterdam. Although Van der Kamp eventually did not succeed in proving the existence of the by him supposed "large numbers" of extrasolar bodies larger than Jupiter and smaller than stars, his quest for evidence of other planets beyond our solar system was joined by others and resulted in the discovery of exoplanets and brown dwarfs. He won several prices and the on 24 September 1960 discovered asteroid 1965 was named after him. He died on 18 May 1995 in Middenbeemster, near Amsterdam. In his orbituary, Sarah Lee Lippincott said: Peter van de Kamp always expressed the belief that Astronomy was a marvelous synthesis of art and science, and he patterned his successful life in that fashion. Link to Wikipedia

Life Events

List of life events assoicated with this Kundali profile
S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Published/Released

Nov. 30, 1926

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 30 November 1926 in Groningen (Thesis: De Zonsbeweging met betrekking tot apparent zwakke sterren) .

2

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1941

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1941 (Mean secular parallaxes of faint stars)

3

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1952

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1952 (Basic Astronomy)

4

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1954

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1954 (The Nearest Stars)

5

Published/Released

Jan. 1, 1962

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1962 (De onmetelijke ruimte)

6

Published/Released

Sept. 1, 1963

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released September 1963 (Astrometric Study of Barnard's Star from Plates Taken with the 24-inch Sproul Refractor) .

7

Published/Released

April 1, 1977

Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 9 April 1977 in Swarthmore (Interview by David DeVorkin) .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Unspecified

May 18, 1995

Death, Cause unspecified 18 May 1995 in Middenbeemster .

S.No. Event Type Event Date Event Description
1

Other Misc.

Sept. 24, 1960

Other Misc. 24 September 1960 (1965 van de Kamp (2521 P–L) astreroid discovered) .

Calculations & Features

Calculation and analytics assoicated with this Kundali