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Guillermo Haro: Who was the renowned Mexican astronomer and 'priest of the telescope'?

The philosopher turned stargazer would have been 105 years old today

Joe Sommerlad
Wednesday 21 March 2018 22:59 GMT
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Google Doodle: Guillermo Haro's 105th birthday

Today's Google Doodle celebrates what would have been the 105th birthday of Mexican astronomer Guillermo Haro (1913-88).

A native of Mexico City who grew up at the height of the Mexican Revolution, Haro originally graduated in philosophy from the country's National Autonomous University.

He subsequently turned his attention to stargazing under the influence of scientist and politician Luis Enrique Eroz, a fateful intervention that would change his life.

Haro began his career as assistant to Eroz at the Tonantzintla Observatory in San Andres Cholula in Puebla before relocating to the US between 1943 and 1945 to train at Harvard College Observatory and Case Institute of Technology.

He then returned to Mexico and was involved in the commissioning of the powerful Tonantzintla Schmidt telescope, which would prove an invaluable tool in advancing man's knowledge of the stars.

Haro subsequently broke new ground with the discovey of a new type of large planetary nebula - with Hawaiian colleague George Herbig - that were named Herbig-Haro objects in their honour.

He was also involved in the study of bright red and blue flare stars close to the Orion constellation.

In 1956, Haro listed 8,746 blue stars and 44 blue galaxies in the known universe and is otherwise credited with the discovery of T Tauri stars, a supernova, more than 10 novae and a comet.

Guillermo Haro's achievements saw him become the first Mexican to be elected to London's Royal Astronomical Society in 1959.

He went on to found both the Mexican Academy of Sciences - serving as its first president from 1960 - and the National Institute of Astrophysics, Optics and Electronics, which supports science graduates in their careers. That institution now runs an observatory named after him in the state of Sonora.

Guillermo Haro married twice - to Gladys Learn Rojas and more famously to journalist Elena Poniatowska - and had three children. He left behind as his legacy a pathway to the stars that thousands of others have since followed.

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