The Jesuit astronomer Christoph Scheiner
was born on July 25, 1575. He joined the Jesuit
order in 1595, and started his studies in 1601 at Ingolstadt
where he later taught mathematics from 1610 to 1616.
He moved to Innsbruck in 1616, was in Rome from 1624 to 1633, and
died in Niesse on June 18, 1650. The above portrait is from
the Stadt Müseum Ingolstadt.
The controversy between Scheiner and
Galileo over priority
in the discovery of sunspots was an important factor
(though not the only one) responsible for the degradation in the relationship
between Galileo and Roman members the Jesuit Order.
By his own account Scheiner began observing sunspots in March or April 1611,
together with his then assistant J.B. Cysat.
The first published account of his observations
are his Three letters on Solar Spots
(Tres epistolae de maculis solaribus), dated November 11, 1611,
addressed to Augsburg magistrate Mark Wesler (1558-1614) and
published in Augsburg in January 1612. These were followed
by three more letters in September 1612, again published via Wesler.
Scheiner was required
by his ecclesiastic superiors to write under the pseudonym
Appelles, to avoid possible embarrassment to the Jesuit order in
the event that his findings were to prove spurious.
Scheiner's original opinion was that sunspots were small planets
closely orbiting the Sun, a position convincingly refuted by
Galileo in his own 1632
Letters on Solar Spots.
Unlike Galileo, Scheiner pursued sunspot observations on a continuous
basis for more than 15 years. In the course of doing so he devised
techniques that greatly
improved the accuracy of observed sunspot positions, and designed
specialized solar observing instruments.
Results of his observations were
published in 1630 in his
Rosa Ursina, a book four years
in the making that opened with biting attack on Galileo, to which
the latter was to reciprocate in his
Dialogues.
Galileo
Harriot
Schwabe
Spoerer
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