Johann Gottfried Galle was born on June 9, 1812, in Papsthaus, Germany. He was a German astronomer and the very first to sight the planet Neptune and was conscious of at what he saw in the night sky. The detection of Neptune is one of the most extraordinary events of the century. Growing up, Galle attended a Gymnasium located in Wittenberg and from 1830-1833 he continued his studies at Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat, Berlin. Galle then became a teacher and taught physics and mathematics at the Gymnasium sited in Guben. Later on in life, he moved to the Gymnasium in Berlin. In 1835, Galle began working at the Berlin observatory as an assistant to Johann Franz Encke. While working at the observatory, he made good use of the Fraunhofer- refractor which …show more content…
Around in which the same time he received his Ph.D., he sent a copy of his doctoral thesis to Urbain Le Verrier. He did not receive a reply right away as he expected, but to his surprise a year later Galle gets a request from Verrier to hunt for an undiscovered planet in the conforming sky, filled with stars and other planets. With the help from his assistant, Henrich Louis, Galle discovered a star with roughly an 8th magnitude which was only 1 degree away from the point they had calculated. The next couple of days, Galle and Louis were able to measure the correct gesture of the celestial object (4 seconds of arc) was then finally classified as a planet. The planet was then named Neptune. Galle was elected as the heir to Fredrich Wilhelm Bessel as director of the Konigsberg Observatory in 1847. In advance to the enacted submission from Friedrich Wilhelm IV, Galle decided to withdraw his application at the start of 1848 because of a scheming against him controlled by Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi. In 1851, he became an astronomy professor and attentively worked at the Breslau observatory. He worked at Breslau for approximately over 45 years. Galle was elected Reactor for the