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Paul W. Merrill

American astronomer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul W. Merrill
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Paul Willard Merrill (August 15, 1887 – July 19, 1961) was an American astronomer whose specialty was spectroscopy.[1] He was the first person to define S-type stars, in 1922.[2]

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Career

Merrill received his Ph.D. at the University of California (now UC Berkeley) in 1913. He spent the bulk of his career at Mount Wilson Observatory, from which he retired in 1952. He studied unusual stars, particularly long-period variable stars, using spectroscopy. He also studied the interstellar medium, including diffuse interstellar bands. Shortly before he retired, he succeeded in detecting technetium in the variable star R Andromedae and other red variables. Since technetium has no stable isotopes, it must have been produced recently in any star in which it is found, and this is direct evidence of the s-process of nucleosynthesis.[3][4]

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Honors

Awards and honors

Named after him

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References

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