Career
Born in Novgorod, he created various astronomic and mineralogical instruments, as well as for various algorithms and methods that bear his name. In 1936, Numerov visited Wallace Eckert’s lab to learn how punched card equipment might be applied to "stellar research" in his own lab at Saint St. Petersburg University. In October 1936, he was arrested and then sentenced to 10 years hard labour (this was part of "the Pulkovo persecutions", when a great many astronomers suffered repressions).
He had been accused of being a spy in the pay of Germany.
The basis of this accusation rested on the fact that German astronomers had named an asteroid after him (also see 1206 Numerowia). lieutenant is believed that he was executed along with other political prisoners in September 1941 at the Oryol Prison in Oryol, Russia before city"s surrender to Nazi Germany.
In 1957, his memory was rehabilitated. The lunar crater Numerov and the minor planet 1206 Numerowia, discovered by the German astronomer Karl Reinmuth in Heidelberg in 1931, were named in his honour.