- Paczynski, Bohdan
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▪ 2008Polish-born American astrophysicistborn Feb. 8, 1940 , Wilno, Pol. [now Vilnius, Lith.]died April 19, 2007 , Princeton, N.J.pioneered a novel method for carrying out astronomical observations of distant objects that produce little or no light of their own. The technique makes use of a phenomenon called gravitational microlensing—the focusing of light from a distant object as the light passes through the gravitational field of a nearer object lying directly along the same line of sight. A survey called the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment, which he helped establish in the early 1990s, was able to detect small planetlike bodies in orbit around distant stars. Paczynski also made important contributions to the study of stellar evolution, and he was an early proponent of the subsequently confirmed view that the sources of little-understood powerful gamma-ray bursts must lie outside the Milky Way Galaxy. Paczynski was raised in Warsaw and as a young teenager had the opportunity to study binary stars at Warsaw University Observatory, where he earned a Ph.D. (1964) in astronomy. Paczynski conducted research and taught at the Institute of Astronomy, Warsaw, later renamed the Copernicus Astronomical Center, from 1962 to 1982, when he joined the faculty at Princeton University. Though he became a U.S. citizen in 1991, Paczynski maintained strong professional ties with astronomers in Poland. Paczynski was a member of the American Astronomical Society and of the Polish Astronomical Society. He was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1999.
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Universalium. 2010.