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{{short description|None}} {{More citations needed|date=July 2012}} '''[[Timeline]] of [[stellar astronomy]]''' * 1200 BC — Chinese star names appear on [[oracle bone|oracle bones]] used for divination. * 134 BC — [[Hipparchus]] creates the [[apparent magnitude|magnitude scale of stellar apparent]] [[luminosity|luminosities]] * 185 AD — [[Chinese astronomy|Chinese astronomers]] become the first to observe a [[supernova]], the [[SN 185]] * 964 — [[Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi]] (Azophi) writes the ''[[Book of Fixed Stars]]'', in which he makes the first recorded observations of the [[Andromeda Galaxy]] and the [[Large Magellanic Cloud]], and [[List of Arabic star names|lists numerous stars]] with their positions, magnitudes, brightness, and colour, and gives drawings for each [[constellation]] * 1000s (decade) — The [[Islamic astronomy|Persian astronomer]], [[Al-Biruni]], describes the [[Milky Way]] [[galaxy]] as a collection of numerous [[Nebula|nebulous]] stars * 1006 — [[Ali ibn Ridwan]] and Chinese astronomers observe the [[SN 1006]], the brightest stellar event ever recorded * 1054 — Chinese and Arab astronomers observe the [[SN 1054]], responsible for the creation of the [[Crab Nebula]], the only [[nebula]] whose creation was observed * 1181 — Chinese astronomers observe the [[SN 1181]] supernova * 1580 — [[Taqi ad-Din Muhammad ibn Ma'ruf|Taqi al-Din]] measures the [[right ascension]] of the stars at the [[Constantinople observatory of Taqi ad-Din]] using an "observational clock" he invented and which he described as "a [[mechanical clock]] with three dials which show the hours, the minutes, and the seconds" * 1596 — [[David Fabricius]] notices that [[Mira]]'s brightness varies * 1672 — [[Geminiano Montanari]] notices that [[Algol]]'s brightness varies * 1686 — [[Gottfried Kirch]] notices that [[Chi Cygni]]'s brightness varies * 1718 — [[Edmund Halley]] discovers stellar [[proper motion]]s by comparing his astrometric measurements with those of the Greeks * 1782 — [[John Goodricke]] notices that the brightness variations of Algol are periodic and proposes that it is partially eclipsed by a body moving around it * 1784 — [[Edward Pigott]] discovers the first [[Cepheid variable]] star * 1838 — [[Thomas James Henderson|Thomas Henderson]], [[Friedrich Struve]], and [[Friedrich Bessel]] measure stellar [[parallax]]es * 1844 — Friedrich Bessel explains the wobbling motions of [[Sirius]] and [[Procyon]] by suggesting that these stars have dark companions * 1906 — [[Arthur Eddington]] begins his statistical study of stellar motions * 1908 — [[Henrietta Leavitt]] discovers the Cepheid [[period-luminosity relation]] * 1910 — [[Ejnar Hertzsprung]] and [[Henry Norris Russell]] study the relation between magnitudes and [[spectral type]]s of stars * 1924 — [[Arthur Eddington]] develops the [[main sequence]] mass-luminosity relationship * 1929 — [[George Gamow]] proposes [[hydrogen]] [[nuclear fusion|fusion]] as the energy source for stars * 1938 — [[Hans Bethe]] and [[Carl von Weizsäcker]] detail the [[proton–proton chain]] and [[CNO cycle]] in stars * 1939 — [[Rupert Wildt]] realizes the importance of the negative hydrogen [[ion]] for stellar opacity * 1952 — [[Walter Baade]] distinguishes between Cepheid I and Cepheid II variable stars * 1953 — [[Fred Hoyle]] predicts a [[carbon]]-12 resonance to allow stellar [[Triple-alpha process|triple alpha reactions]] at reasonable stellar interior temperatures * 1961 — [[Chūshirō Hayashi]] publishes his work on the Hayashi track of fully convective stars * 1963 — [[Fred Hoyle]] and [[William A. Fowler]] conceive the idea of supermassive stars * 1964 — [[Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar]] and [[Richard Feynman]] develop a general relativistic theory of stellar pulsations and show that supermassive stars are subject to a general relativistic instability * 1967 — [[Eric Becklin]] and [[Gerry Neugebauer]] discover the [[Becklin-Neugebauer Object]] at 10 micrometres * 1977 — (May 25) The ''[[Star Wars (film)|Star Wars]]'' film is released and became a worldwide phenomenon, boosting interests in stellar systems. * 2012 — (May 2) First visual proof of existence of black-holes. [[Suvi Gezari]]'s team in [[Johns Hopkins University]], using the Hawaiian telescope [[Pan-STARRS|Pan-STARRS 1]], publish images of a [[supermassive black hole]] 2.7 million light-years away swallowing a [[red giant]].<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Matson |first=John |url=http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=black-hole-swallows-star |title=Big Gulp: Flaring Galaxy Marks the Messy Demise of a Star in a Supermassive Black Hole |magazine=Scientific American |access-date=2012-07-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1038/nature10990|title=An ultraviolet–optical flare from the tidal disruption of a helium-rich stellar core|year=2012|last1=Gezari|first1=S.|last2=Chornock|first2=R.|last3=Rest|first3=A.|last4=Huber|first4=M. E.|last5=Forster|first5=K.|last6=Berger|first6=E.|last7=Challis|first7=P. J.|last8=Neill|first8=J. D.|last9=Martin|first9=D. C.|last10=Heckman|first10=T.|last11=Lawrence|first11=A.|last12=Norman|first12=C.|last13=Narayan|first13=G.|last14=Foley|first14=R. J.|last15=Marion|first15=G. H.|last16=Scolnic|first16=D.|last17=Chomiuk|first17=L.|last18=Soderberg|first18=A.|last19=Smith|first19=K.|last20=Kirshner|first20=R. P.|last21=Riess|first21=A. G.|last22=Smartt|first22=S. J.|last23=Stubbs|first23=C. W.|last24=Tonry|first24=J. L.|last25=Wood-Vasey|first25=W. M.|last26=Burgett|first26=W. S.|last27=Chambers|first27=K. C.|last28=Grav|first28=T.|last29=Heasley|first29=J. N.|last30=Kaiser|first30=N.|journal=Nature|volume=485|issue=7397|pages=217–220|pmid=22575962|arxiv=1205.0252|bibcode=2012Natur.485..217G|s2cid=205228405|display-authors=1}}</ref> ==See also== {{Portal|Star}} * [[Timeline of astronomy]] == References == {{reflist}} {{Star}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Timeline Of Stellar Astronomy}} [[Category:Astronomy timelines|Stellar astronomy]]
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