Richard Christopher Carrington was born on 26 May 1826
in Chelsea, England.
The second son of a wealthy brewer, Carrington was originally expected to
pursue a career in the Church. In 1844 he began studies in theology
at Trinity College Cambridge, where he graduated in 1848. By then,
however, Carrington had found his true vocation in astronomy.
In 1849 he joined the Durham University Observatory, but resigned this
position in March 1852, using his family fortune to build his own house
and observatory at Redhill, Surrey. There, he engaged in both
daytime solar and nightime astronomical observations, until the
death of his father in 1858 forced him to take over the family
business.
He was elected to the Royal Astronomical Society in 1851, for which
he served as secretary from 1857 to 1862, and to the Royal Society in
1850. In 1865, having fallen into ill health, he sold the family brewery
and retired to an isolated spot at
Churt, Surrey, where he established a new observatory, but never really
resumed serious astronomical work. He died there on 27 November 1875.
Although his work on asteroids and planets while
at Durham University Observatory was enough
to secure membership in the Royal Astronomical Society,
Carrington's first major astronomical undertaking was the compilation,
between 1854 and 1857,
of his Catalogue of 3735 Circumpolar Stars.
Published in 1857,
Carrington's Catalogue was highly praised and earned him the Gold
Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1859.
Carrington is however primarily remembered for his pioneering work
on sunspots. Impressed by
Heinrich Schwabe's 1843 discovery of the sunspot
cycle, and appalled by the lack of systematic sunspots observations,
Carrington took it upon himself to pick up the subject where Schwabe
had left it. Improving on Schwabe's projection/drawing method,
Carrington drew and recorded the positions of sunspots from 1853 to
1861. Although he failed to cover a full sunspot cycle, as originally
intended, he nonetheless reaped a rich harvest from his observations,
including (1) the discovery of the Sun's differential rotation,
(2) the equatorward migration of spots in the course of the cycle
(both of these more-or-less simultaneously and independently discovered by
Gustav Spörer in Germany),
(3) the determination of the Sun's rotation axis with an accuracy hitherto
unprecedented,
and (4) the first and serendipitous observation of a white light
flare.
By the time Carrington published his massive 1863 sunspot tome, entitled
Observations of the Spots on the Sun...,
he was already recognized worldwide as
the British authority on sunspots. He carried out extensive correspondence
with sunspot observers across Europe, including
Heinrich Schwabe and
Rudolf Wolf. When Schwabe was awarded
the Royal Astronomical Society's Gold Medal in 1857, Carrington
personally delivered the medal to the aging German astronomer, and later
persuaded him to donate his extensive collection of sunspot drawings
to the Society's Archives.
Despites these successes, in the early 1860's
Carrington failed in his bid to secure
the directorship of Cambridge Observatory, in succession to his
former astronomy teacher James Challis. Bitterly disappointed,
Carrington shortly thereafter put an end to his astronomical work at Redhill.
Both his health and his marriage degraded from that point on,
culminating in November 1875 with the death of his wife from a
drug overdose. Ten days later, Carrington himself died, officially
of a brain hemorrhage.
Bibliography:
Porter, R. (ed.) 1994, The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists,
Oxford University Press.
Forbes, E.G., The Dictionary of Scientific Biographies,
1980-1990, new York
Meadows, A.J. 1970, Early Solar Physics, Pergamon.
Scheiner
Schwabe
Wolf
Spoerer
Hale
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