Johannes Hevelius [Hewelke] (1611-1687), from a portrait
in his 1647 Selenographia.
He was born on 28 January
1611 in Gdansk, Poland [later known as Danzig, then Gdansk again]. He studied
Law at Leiden in 1630, then spent the years
1632-1643 traveling to Switzerland, London, and Paris,
where he came in
contact with various astronomers, including Pierre Gassendi (1592-1655).
In 1634 he returned to Gdansk to
complete his Law studies while working in his family's brewing business.
He started to fully devote himself to astronomy in 1639, tapping
into his family wealth to construct a private observatory in his house.
His work was also sponsored by the Polish King Jan III Sobieski, through
a generous pension.
He died in Gdansk on January 28 1687, the day of his 76th birthday.
Hevelius was said to have
exceptionally keen eyesight, to the point of being able to see
stars of the seventh magnitude.
Following the lead of
Tycho Brahe,
Hevelius constructed
very large measuring instruments,
and managed to improve the accuracy of measured naked-eye
stellar positions down to 1 minute of arc on a routine basis, in
doing so exceeding even Tycho in accuracy. With the assistance
of his second wife Elisabetha,
he compiled a star catalog of unprecedented
accuracy, but of a lot of his data were lost in 1679 when,
on September 26, his house and
observatory were destroyed by fire. His Celestial Atlas, the
labor of his life, was finally edited and published posthumously by
Elisabetha in 1690.
In the early 1670s Hevelius was drawn in what became a heated
controversy
with John Flamsteed (1646-1719) and later Robert Hooke (1635-1703),
who advocated the use of
telescope and micrometers for accurate determinations of stellar positions.
The debate came to a draw in 1679, when young Edmund Halley (1656-1742),
commissioned by the Royal Society,
visited Hevelius in Gdansk. Halley could but confirm to the Royal Society
that Hevelius' position determination were as accurate as anything
he could achieve with the state-of-the-art micrometric telescope he
had taken along from England.
Hevelius was an accomplished and respected astronomer. He was elected
to the Royal Society in 1664, and in
1666 was offered the directorship of the newly erected
Paris observatory, an offer he declined and which eventually led to the
appointment of Giovanni Domenico Cassini.
Hevelius carried out numerous lunar, planetary
and solar
observations. On 22 November 1644 he succeeded in observing the phases
or Mercury.
His solar observations were published as appendices to his
1647 Selenographia, his 1668
Cometographia, as well as to his 1679 Machinae
Coelistis. Hevelius used his sunspots observations to determine
the solar rotation period to a much better accuracy than his predecessors.
He also coined the name faculae for the bright regions surrounding
sunspots, a name that survives to this day.
His sunspot observations, covering the
time period 1642-1679, are of particular importance
as they span the
first part of the
Maunder Minimum
of solar activity, as well as
the time period immediately preceding it.
Bibliography:
Hevelius, J. 1647,
Selenographia: sive, Lunae Descriptio [Facsimile, Johnson
Reprint Corporation, New York, 1967].
Szanser, A.J. 1976, Quarterly J. of the Royal Astronomical Society,
17, 488-498.
Tycho
Herschel
Schroeter
Schwabe
Wolf
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