Title page of the small pamphlet published in 1611 by
Johann Goldsmid, better known by his latinized name Fabricius.
He was born on 8 January 1587 at Resterhave, in East Frisia (Northwestern
Germany). His father was David Fabricius (1564-1617), a Lutheran pastor,
astrologer and able astronomer
who in 1596 discovered the variability of
the star Mira Ceti. Between 1604 and 1610 Fabricius the son studied medicine
first at Helmstedt, then Wittenberg,
then at Leyden where he first engaged in telescopic observations.
He first saw sunspost on 27 February 1611, (9 March on the Gregorian
calendar, not yet adopted in East Frisia) and shortly thereafter
teamed up with his father for further observations. The Fabricius
correctly interpreted the day-to-day motion of sunspots as an indication
of the Sun's axial rotation, and the young Fabricius completed in June
of the same year a
short account of their observations and interpretation,
which was published in June 1611 under the title
de Maculis in Sole observatis et apparente earum cum Sole
conversione, Narratio (``Account of Spots observed on the Sun and of
their apparent rotation with the Sun''),
and was sold at the Frankfurt book fair the following autumn.
Like Thomas Harriot,
the Fabricius son-father team first observed sunspots
directly through their telescope shortly after sunrise or before sunset.
Their
harrowing account of their observations is worth quoting:
(excerpt from the translation in the paper by Mitchell cited below):
"... Having adjusted the telescope, we allowed the sun's rays
to enter it, at first from the edge only, gradually approaching the center,
until our eyes were accustomed to the force of the rays and we could observe
the whole body of the sun. We then saw more distinctly and surely the things
I have described
[sunspots].
Meanwhile clouds interfered, and also
the sun hastening to the meridian destroyed our hopes of longer observations;
for indeed it was to be feared that an indiscreet examination of a lower
sun would cause great injury to the eyes, for even the weaker rays of the
setting or rising sun often inflame the eye with a strange redness,
which may last for two days, not without affecting the appearance of
objects.''
They soon adopted instead Kepler's camera obscura technique, where
an image of the Sun is formed through a pinhole opening in a darkened room
and observed in projection.
Johann Fabricius died on 19 March 1616, and his father, who did
not pursue sunspot observations, was killed the following year by an enraged
parsoner he had attacked from the pulpit over a stolen goose.
Contemporarie such as
Kepler, Simon Marius, and Maestlin were aware
of the Fabricius' early sunspot work, and Kepler in particular
repeatedly refers to it in various of his writings.
However,
the priority controversy between
Galileo and
Scheiner took center stage
and the contribution of the Fabricius was all but forgotten until a
hundred years later, when a copy of Fabricius' small pamphlet
was rediscovered and publicized in 1723.
Bibliography:
Mitchell, W.M. 1916, The history of the discovery of
solar spots, in Popular Astronomy, 24, 22-ff.
Christianson, J.R. 2000, On Tycho's Island,
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
Galileo
Scheiner
Harriot
Kepler
Hevelius
|