He was born in Frankfurt, the son of a Jewish merchant. He went to Paris and studied art and painted a number of paintings before turning his attention to astronomy.
In April 1861 he announced the discovery of a ninth moon of Saturn between Titan and Hyperion, which he named "Chiron". However, he was mistaken: this moon did not exist. Today, "Chiron" is the name of an entirely different object, the unusual asteroid/comet 2060 Chiron.
He is credited with being the first to record and observe (in 1820) the shadow bands that appear in the minutes just before a total solar eclipse.
He won the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1861. Goldschmidt, a crater on the Moon is named after him, and so is the asteroid 1614 Goldschmidt.
1802 births | 1866 deaths | German astronomers | German painters | Lists of asteroids | Asteroid discoverers
Hermann Mayer Salomon Goldschmidt | Hermann Mayer Salomon Goldschmidt | Hermann Mayer Salomon Goldschmidt | ヘルマン・ゴルトシュミット
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