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Johannes Hevelius

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File:Johannes Helvelius.jpg
Johannes Hevelius

Johannes Hevelius (Latin), also called (in German) Johann Hewelke or Johannes Hewel, or Jan Heweliusz (Polish), (born January 28 1611 – died January 28 1687), was a councillor and mayor in Danzig (Gdańsk).The Polish astronomer[1] gained the reputation of "the founder of lunar topography".

Crüger's Azimuthal Quadrant according to Hevelius

Hevelius was born in 1611 in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and Hanse city of Gdańsk (Danzig) to a family of wealthy brewing merchants of Bohemian origins. His father was Abraham Hewelke (1576-1649). He studied jurisprudence at Leiden in 1630, then travelled in England and France, meeting Pierre Gassendi, Marin Mersenne and Athanasius Kircher. In 1634, he settled in his native town, and on March 21 1635, he married Katharine Rebeschke, a neighbor who was two years younger, owning two adjacent houses. The following year, Hevelius became a member of the beer brewing guild which he lead from 1643 onwards.

Hevelius' map of the moon

Throughout his life, he took a leading part in municipal administration, becoming Ratsherr (town councillor) in 1651 and later Bürgermeister (mayor) of Danzig, but from 1639 onwards, his chief interest became centered in astronomy. In 1641, he built an observatory on the roof of his three connected houses, providing it with a splendid instrumental outfit, including ultimately a tubeless telescope of 45 m (150 ft.) focal length, constructed by himself.

This private observatory was visited by a young Edmund Halley in May 1679, and on January 29, 1660 by King John II of Poland and Queen Maria Gonzaga.

Hevelius made observations of sunspots, 16421645, devoted four years to charting the lunar surface, discovered the Moon's libration in longitude, and published his results in Selenographia sive Lunae Descriptio (1647), a work which entitles him to be called the founder of lunar topography.

Four comets were discovered by him, in the years (1652, 1661 (probably the same as Ikeya-Zhang), 1672 and 1677. These discoveries led to his thesis of the revolution of such bodies in parabolic tracks round the sun.

Katharine, his first wife, died in 1662, and a year later Hevelius married Elisabeth Koopmann, the young daughter of a merchant (German Kaufmann). The couple had four children. Elisabeth supported him and also published two of his works after his death.

His observatory, instruments and books were maliciously destroyed by fire on September 26 1679. The catastrophe is described in the preface to his Annus climactericus (1685). He promptly repaired the damage, so far as to enable him to observe the great comet of December 1680. His health had suffered from the shock, and he died on his 76th anniversary, on January 28, 1687.

Among his works were:

  • Historiola Mirae (1662), in which he named the periodic variable star Omicron Ceti "Mira", or "the Wonderful"
  • Prodromus cometicus (1665)
  • Cometographia (1668)
  • Machina coelestis (first part, 1673), containing a description of his instruments; the second part (1679) is extremely rare, nearly the whole issue having perished in the conflagration of 1679
  • Annus climactericus (1685), descibes the fir of 1679, and includes observations made by Hevelius on the variable star Mira
  • Prodromus astronomiae (1690), his posthumously published catalogue of 1564 stars. Its value was much impaired by his preference of the antique pinnules to telescopic sights on quadrants. This led to an acrimonious controversy with Robert Hooke
  • Firmamentum Sobiescianum (1690), an atlas of 56 sheets, corresponding to his catalogue, contains seven new constellations delineated by him which are still in use (plus some now considered obsolete)

Hevelius had his book printed in his own house, at lavish expense, and himself not only designed but engraved many of the printing plates.

See also

Jan Heweliusz, ship