Station
Similar stations in HIP 10834
Surface Port - 223 Ls
The Void Walkers
Wrangel Enterprise
Surface Port - 223 Ls
The Void Walkers
William Sargent Orbital
Outpost (Civilian) - 428 Ls
The Void Walkers
Wolf Camp
Surface Port - 588 Ls
The Void Walkers
Saarinen Point
Surface Port - 589 Ls
The Void Walkers
van Royen Station
Outpost (Industrial) - 589 Ls
HIP 10834 Corp.
Brom Orbital
Starport (Coriolis) - 814 Ls
The Void Walkers
de Kamp Dock
Outpost (Civilian) - 2,717 Ls
The Void Walkers
Peary Prospect
Surface Port - 23,893 Ls
HIP 10834 Corp.
Bounds Prospect
Surface Port - 23,989 Ls
The Void Walkers
Barnard Dock
Starport (Coriolis) - 24,150 Ls
The Void Walkers
Brunner Hub
Outpost (Mining) - 24,151 Ls
The Void Walkers
Galpedia
Cuno Hoffmeister
Cuno Hoffmeister (2 February 1892 – 2 January 1968) was a German astronomer and founder of Sonneberg Observatory.
Born in Sonneberg in 1892 to Carl and Marie Hoffmeister, Cuno Hoffmeister obtained his first telescope in 1905 and became an avid amateur astronomer. After his father lost most of his money in 1914, Hoffmeister had to leave school in 1916 to start an apprenticeship in his father's company. During this time he continued to study spherical mathematics and trigonometry. In April 1915 Hoffmeister had the opportunity to substitute as the assistant of Ernst Hartwig at Remeis Observatory in Bamberg while the current holder of the position was drafted, mainly working on observations of meteors and variable stars. He held this position until the end of the war and then moved back to Sonneberg, where he made his Abitur in 1920. After studying at the University of Jena, while at the same time continuing to work in his job as a tradesman, Hoffmeister obtained his doctorate in 1927. During this time he had already started building what was to become Sonneberg Observatory. After his PhD, Hoffmeister moved back to Sonneberg and started expanding the observatory. Hoffmeister remained at the observatory until his death, even though the observatory lost most of its equipment after the second world war and he was disowned as the observatory became part of East Germany's academy of sciences. Hoffmeister served as the director of the observatory until his death. During his life Hoffmeister played a leading role in supporting amateurs in observations of noctilucent clouds, aurorae, and nightglow. Wilfried Schröder has described his role in a paper in "Sitzungsberichte der Leibniz Sozietät für Wissenschaft" in 2009.
Wikipedia text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply. Wikipedia image: File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske) / CC-BY-SA-3.0