George W. Myers graduated from the local University of Illinois with a degree in mathematics in 1888 and stayed as an instructor teaching both mathematics courses and the spring descriptive astronomy class. Myers along with several other mathematics professors wanted to develop an astronomy program that went beyond meeting the needs of civil engineers. To that end he worked to have the university construct a larger teaching observatory. That goal was accomplished in 1896 when the
University of Illinois Observatory was complete and Myers was named director as well as Professor of Astronomy and Mathematics. Myers conducted the first theoretical study of the eclipsing binary star
Beta Lyrae as part of his dissertation. He used a light curve created by Argelander in 1859 that was based on eye estimated of the brightness of the stars. Using the light curve, he was able to describe the system of two stars almost in contact and elongated. Using A.A. Belopolsky's radial-velocity measurements, he determined the semi-major axis of the orbits and that the two stars were 21 times and 9.5 times the mass of the sun. He went further, noting the strong absorptions lines in the spectrum, to suggest that the two stars orbited within an envelope of gas. Myers first presented the results on October 20, 1897, at the opening conference for
Yerkes Observatory, then published the results in the Astrophysical Journal. He identified both
Beta Lyrae and
Upsilon Pegasi with the piriform equilibrium figure of a rotating fluid mass discovered by
Henri Poincaré in 1885, known as the Poincaré Pear. ==Mathematics education at the University of Chicago==