Last Updated: Jun 24th, 2008 - 23:17:34
Summary: A brief biography of David (1564-1617) and Johannes (1587-1616) Fabricius.
David Fabricius was a Lutheran pastor and
astronomer in the little town of Osteel, East Frisia (northwest
Germany). He was a correspondent of Johannes Kepler and the discoverer of the
first known variable star (1596). Early in 1611, his son Johannes,
a university student, returned from the Netherlands with one or
more telescopes, and he and his father turned these instruments to
the heavens. On 9 March, at dawn, Johannes directed the telescope
at the rising sun and saw several dark spots on it. He called his
father, and together the two investigated this new
phenomenon. They directed their instruments to the edge of the
Sun, and when their eyes adjusted to the brightness slowly moved
toward the Sun's center. This method was, of course, very painful,
and the two quickly switched to the projection method by means of
a camera obscura.
Over the next several months they tracked spots as
they moved across the Sun's face and found that a dozen or so days
after they had disappeared from the western edge of the Sun they
reappeared on the eastern edge. Johannes wrote a tract on sunspots, De Maculis in Sole
Observatis, et Apparente earum cum Sole Conversione
Narratio ("Narration on Spots Observed on the Sun and their
Apparent Rotation with the Sun"), the dedication of which was
dated 13 June 1611. It was printed in Wittenberg (the site of the
premier Lutheran university, where Johannes was apparently
continuing his studies) in time for the autumn book fair in
Frankfurt. In the tract Johannes rehearsed the observations made
by him and his father, without giving times or dates or showing a
picture of the spots, and then stated his opinion that they were
on the Sun and that the Sun therefore probably rotated on its axis
(an notion already suggested by Giordano
Bruno and Johannes
Kepler.
Johannes's style was
florid, and only a small part of the tract actually dealt with his
observations and diffidently stated conclusions. Because of the
lack of a powerful patron interested in scientific matters who
might have called the little book to the attention of influential
people, it drew very little attention, and by the time e.g.,
Kepler had become aware of its existence the book was eclipsed by
Christoph Scheiner's first
publication on sunspots (January 1612). Johannes's diffidence may
have been caused by a disagreement with his father about the
nature of sunspots. In December 1611, David Fabricius wrote to
Michael Maestlin (Kepler's old teacher) that he did not believe
the spots were on the Sun's body, although the center of their
motions clearly lay in the Sun. Neither father nor son were
important participants in the 1612/13 debate on the nature of
sunspots.
Little else is known about
Johannes Fabricius, except that he died in 1616, at the young age
of 29. A year later the father was killed when an irate peasant,
whom he had accused of stealing a goose, hit him over the head
with a shovel.
Glossary
camera obscura: - A darkened boxlike device
in which images of external objects, received through an
aperture, are exhibited in their natural colors on a surface
arranged to receive them.
References-
Rosen, Edward. (1967). Kepler's Somnium. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
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