Leverrier, Urbain Jean Joseph
Related Category: Astronomy: Biographies
(ürbăN´ zhäN zhôzĕf´ ləvĕryā´), 181177, French astronomer who made calculations that led to the discovery of the planet
Neptune. In considering the perturbations of
Uranus, Leverrier made calculations indicating the presence of an unknown planet in an orbit outside that of Uranus. At the time, this was considered the crowning achievement of mathematical astronomy. The same conclusion had been reached by John Couch
Adams a little earlier but had not been published, so Leverrier was initially given sole credit for the discovery of Neptune, which was actually first observed, as a result of Leverrier's instructions, by Johann
Galle in 1846. After much controversy both Adams and Leverrier were honored as responsible for the planet's discovery. In 1854, Leverrier became director of the Paris Observatory.