Johann Hieronymus Schroeter was born on 30 August 1745 in Erfurt, Germany.
In 1764 he began his studies in Law at Göttigen University,
during
which he developed an extracurricular interest in
mathematics and astronomy. Upon graduation he embarked on a high
level administrative career that occupied him fully for the following ten
years. Schroeter's astronomical leanings were rekindled via his interest in
music, which led to his acquaintance with the Herschel family,
and with their son William (formerly Wilhelm) in England,
who was to become the foremost astronomer of the eighteenth century.
Schroeter began his full fledged astronomical life in 1772, upon
founding of his Observatory in the small town of Lilienthal.
Financially secured through his appointment as district governor
and judge, he carried out planetary and solar observations almost
continuously for the rest of his life.
Many of his telescopes were purchased from
William Herschel in England, with whom he
also exchanged scientific correspondence.
Schroeter's Lilienthal observatory was for a time home to the largest
telescope in continental Europe.
In 1810 the Napoleonic invasion of Northern Germany brought dire times
to Lilienthal, in particular in 1813,
when retreating French imperial troops destroyed a good part of the town.
Although Schroeter's observatory and instruments were left untouched, he
lost many of his observational notebooks
and unpublished scientific manuscripts,
destroyed along with the Lilienthal town hall.
Schroeter died in Lilienthal on 29 August 1816.
Schroeter was primarily interested in solar and planetary
astronomy. He was the first, in 1787, to notice and comment upon
the solar surface feature now known as granulation
(see slide 3 of the
HAO slide set). He also gave detailed descriptions of light
bridges over the umbrae of sunspots. He carried out many observations
of Venus and tried to determine its rotation period. His two
volumes on Lunar topography reached levels of detail that
were to remain for many years unsurpassed.
On 20 September 1800 Schroeter presided over the founding
of the first astronomical society, with members distributed
all over Europe. One of the foremost aim of the Society was to
organize a systematic observing program to detect a planet
between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, the presence of which
being suggested by the Titius-Bode numerical relationship
popularized in 1772 by Johann Elert Bode,
a friend of Schroeter. By 1807 various members of the society had
discovered the four large asteroids Ceres, Pallas, Vesta and Juno.
Schroeter's reputation in planetary astronomy was sufficient to
attract Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel (1784-1846) to Lilienthal,
where he remained for a few years as an assistant.
Bibliography:
Berry, A. 1898, A short history of astronomy, [1961 Dover
reprint],
Gerdes, D. (ed.) 1995, Johann Hieronymus Schroeter: Beobachtungen
über die Sonnenfackeln und Sonnenflecken, Heimatverein Lilienthal.
Scheiner
Hevelius
Herschel
Schwabe
Wolf
|