Pierre Jules César Janssen was born in Paris on 22 February 1824.
An accident at a young age left him unable to walk, which prevented him
from attending school. He began working as a bank clerk at age
16, and began studying mathematics in his spare time. He eventually
entered the Sorbonne, graduating in 1852 with degrees in mathematics and
physical sciences, and obtaining his doctorate in 1860. Remaining
at the Paris university, he first
worked at the faculty of medicine on the design of medical instruments,
then became professor of Physics at the school of architecture.
He was elected to the Académie des Sciences in 1868,
and in 1876 took the helm of the newly founded Observatoire
de Meudon (near Paris),
a position he held until his death in Paris on 23 December 1907.
In 1862, impressed and fascinated by the spectroscopic work of
Gustav Kirchhoff
and Robert Bunsen, Janssen began his studies of the solar spectrum.
His first important contribution was to demonstrate that some of the
dark lines observed in the solar spectrum were caused by water vapor
in the Earth's atmosphere. He made lasting contributions in solar
spectroscopy, in particular in the observation of solar prominences.
Following his observations of the 1868 solar eclipse in India,
he suggested that some of the unknown spectral lines observed above
the solar limb were due to a hitherto unknown chemical element.
J. Norman Lockyer
independently and simultaneously arrived
at same conclusion, and both men are now credited with the discovery
of Helium.
Janssen never let his infirmity get in his way.
He traveled to
the summits of the Mont Blanc in the French Alps, and to the Faulhorn
in the Bernese Oberland, to carry out spectroscopic observations
above the bulk of the Earth's atmosphere. He also made extensive
use of hot air balloons for the same purpose,
including a particularly daring flight to escape the
1870 siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian war,
and to observe a solar eclipse on December 22
at Oran, Algeria
(which he finally could not observe because of bad weather!).
Janssen was also an early pioneer in the use of
photography in solar physics.
His extensive series of photographs of the solar
surface were published in 1904 in his Atlas de Photographies Solaires.
This work established the standards of solar photography, and
the quality of Janssen's solar photographs was to remain unsurpassed
for nearly half a century.
Bibliography:
Abbott, D. (ed.) 1984, The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists:
Astronomers, London: Blond Educational.
Cassini
Kirchhoff
Lockyer
Secchi
Young
Lyot
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