Johannes Kepler
(1571-1630). Born
on 27 December 1571
in Weil der Stadt, near Stuttgart, in a modest family.
He graduated at age 20 from the University of Tuebingen, where
he studied mathematics
and astronomy under Michael Maestlin (1550-1631), an early
supporter of the Copernican system. In 1594, while engaged in
the final year of his studies in theology, he was given the
chair of mathematics at Graz, where he became increasingly absorbed
in astronomy. He was formally expelled from town in 1600
on account of his open adherence to
the Protestant faith. He first came to Prague in 1599 to work as an assistant to
Tycho Brahe,
and upon Tycho's untimely death in 1601 inherited his massive
stock of accurate planetary observations, as well as his job as
Imperial Mathematician to Rudolf II. In 1612, following the downfall
of Rudolf II he moved to Linz, in 1621 to Ulm, and in 1627 to Sagan.
On the move again because of religious persecution, he fell ill, and died
on 15 November 1630 in Regensburg.
Through a quarter century of
painstaking calculations Kepler brought the Copernican
system to its modern form by replacing Copernicus circular heliocentric
orbits by ellipses, with the Sun at one focus. The process through
which he arrived at his justly famous Laws of Planetary Motion was often
a contorted one, as Kepler's peculiar mixture of physical
insight and mystical inclinations lead him to seek causes
for the number and arrangement of planetary orbits, as opposed
to constructing purely mathematical descriptions. His first
such model involved the
nesting of the five regular solids
and was published in his 1596
Mysterium Cosmographicum.
While never relinquishing this idea, in his 1619
Harmonices Mundi
he also sought an explanation in terms of
musical harmonies. Hidden deep
in this work is the first statement of Kepler's so-called
Third Law, establishing the proportionality of the square of
planetary orbital periods to the cube of their mean distance
to the Sun.
Kepler's first two Laws of Planetary Motion were
first adumbrated in his 1609
Astronomia Nova,
but first laid out in detail
together with his Third Law in book IV of his monumental work
Epitoma astronomia Copernicanae,
published between 1617 and 1621. The underlying physical explanation
of his Laws would have to wait over half a century, until
Isaac Newton provided the answer
in terms of the theory of universal gravitation.
In 1627
Kepler also finally published
what was to be the crowning (but somewhat belated)
achievement of Tycho Brahe's career: the
Rudolphine Tables
of planetary positions. These made full use of Tycho's
store of accurate observations in conjunction with
Kepler's new model for planetary orbits.
On 28 May 1607 Kepler used his newly devised camera obscura to
observe the solar disk and saw sunspot, which he mistook for a transit
of Mercury, to the amazement of later astronomers who all agreed that of all
people, Kepler really should have known better. Because of Kepler's
position as Imperial Mathematician, his prompt and
enthusiastic public endorsement of
Galileo's telescopic discoveries did a lot
to publicize the latter's fame in northern Europe.
Kepler was a prolific author by any standards.
Besides
his astronomical books,
he is (by some) credited with having written the first
science fiction novel, his Somnium, published posthumously
in 1634 and describing a voyage to the Moon.
He wrote extensively on geometrical optics, and was the first to correctly
sort out once and for all
the production of real versus virtual images by mirrors and lenses.
He is also said to have
laid the foundations of cristallography in a little
book on snowflakes written as a New Years gift to his patron
Rudolf II in 1611.
Bibliography:
Caspar, M. 1959, Kepler, [1993 Dover reprint].
Beer, A., & Beer, P. (eds.) 1975, Kepler, vistas in
astronomy vol. 18, Pergamon Press.
Gingerich, O. 1989, Johannes Kepler, in
The General History of Astronomy, vol. 2A, eds. R. Taton and C. Wilson,
Cambridge University Press, pps. 54-78.
Copernicus
Tycho
Harriot
Galileo
Newton
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