Samuel Heinrich Schwabe was
born on 25 October 1789 in Dessau, near Berlin. He began pharmaceutical
studies in Berlin, in the course of which he
became interested in astronomy and botany. He returned to Dessau in
1812 to take over his family's pharmacy, while pursuing astronomical and
botanical researches as
an amateur. His first telescope was won at a lottery in 1825, but the
following year he ordered a more powerful one through
Fraunhofer.
Becoming increasingly absorbed his astronomical
studies, he sold the family business in 1829. Schwabe died in Dessau
on 11 April 1875.
Schwabe observational work was aimed originally
at discovering possible intramercurial
planets. Starting on October 11 1825,
he observed the Sun virtually every day that the weather
allowed, and did so continuously
for 42 years. In doing so he accumulated volumes of sunspot drawings, the idea
being to detect his hypothetical planet as it passed across the solar disk,
while avoiding confusion with small sunspots. In 1843 Schwabe still had
not discovered any new planet, but instead his 17 years of nearly continuous
sunspot observations revealed a 10-year periodicity in the number of sunspots
visible on the solar disk. That same year Schwabe published this interesting result in
the Journal Astronomische Nachrichten, but it attracted little attention
until 1851 when his
sunspot data
was included by
Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859)
in volume III of his monumental Kosmos.
Curiously,
Schwabe's astronomical researches initially
won him greater recognition in England than
in Germany. In February 1857 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal
Astronomical Society, and in 1868 he was elected to the Royal Society.
While Schwabe's fame as an astronomer rests chiefly on his discovery
of the sunspot cycle, he is also credited with the first description and
drawing, in 1831, of Jupiter's great red spot.
Bibliography:
Schwabe, S.H. 1843, Astronomische Nachrichten, 20,
no. 495, 234-235
Erfurth, H. 1989, in Samuel Heinrich Schwabe: Apotheker, Astronom,
Botaniker, Dessau: Museum fur Naturkunde und Vorgeschichte.
Scheiner
Schroeter
Fraunhofer
Wolf
Hale
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