Frontispiece of Scheiner's Rosa Ursina,
published in Bracciano between 1626 and 1630,
reproduced from The history of the discovery of the solar
spots, in Popular Astronomy, 24, W.M. Mitchell, 1916.
Partly as a backlash following Galileo's condemnation,
the massive volume
(780 pages) did not draw very positive reviews following
its publication, nor did it
go down too well in history, largely because
of the various vociferous attacks on Galileo scattered throughout
Book I.
The book was not without merit, however. In it Scheiner uses
his observations of
sunspot paths across the solar disk
to convincingly demonstrate that the Sun's rotation
axis is inclined with respect to the Earth's
orbital plane. This observation was taken up as his own
by Galileo in his
Dialogues as a further argument for the heliocentric hypothesis,
which was to further provoke Scheiner into accusations of plagiarism.
In addition, the book has proven very useful as a
store of sunspot data for
to the period immediately preceding the Maunder minimum. Scheiner's
later book, Prodromus pro Sole Mobile,
a rabid criticism of Galileo's 1632 Dialogues, was withheld from
publication during Scheiner's lifetime,
apparently because it was deemed overly distasteful
by his ecclesiastic superiors.
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Bibliography:
Mitchell, W.M. 1916, The history of the discovery of the solar
spots, in Popular Astronomy, 24, 22-ff.
Eddy, J.A., Gilman, P.A., & Trotter, D.E. 1977, Science,
198, 824-829
Scheiner
Galileo
Hevelius
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