The telescope and celestial mechanics
The telescope was invented at the beginning of the 17th century in the
Netherlands, but the use of it for astronomical observations was popularised
by Galileo (1564-1642) through the publishing of Sidereus Nuncius
in 1610. This short book showed the reader mountains in the Moon,
faint stars that formed the Milky Way and four natural satellites of Jupiter.
Soon after that the discoveries of Saturn’s strange shape, for which
its rings are responsible, the phases of Venus, and sunspots were made,
but not all of them can be attributed to Galileo. All in all, thanks to
the telescope, it was proved that there are other centres of motion (for
example Jupiter for its moons), and thus new arguments appeared supporting
Copernicus’s system, and supporting the idea that celestial bodies are
probably formed from a material that is not significantly different from
earth. When in 1665 Robert Hooke presented
his observations of the Moon with the use of a telescope, he stated what
follows: ‘...it being very probable, that the Moon has a principle of
gravitation, it affords an excellent distinguishing Instance in the search
after the cause of gravitation, or attraction ... for ... the Moon has
an attractive principle, whereby it is not only shap'd round, but does
firmly contain and hold all its parts united, though many of them seem
as loose as the sand on the Earth ... therefore some ... principle must
be thought of, that will agree with all the secundary as well as primary
Planets.’ In other words, it became clear
that the whole universe is formed by the same forces.
The nature of these forces was discovered by Isaac Newton (1642-1727), who published in 1687 Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy, or Principia. In this work he presents the fundaments of mechanics and proves that Kepler’s laws result from the law of universal gravitation. Newton also proved that comets are celestial bodies that move in conic sections. Having followed this trail, Edmond Halley (c. 1656-1742) correctly predicted the return of a comet that was observed in 1531, 1607, and 1682. Halley’s prediction proved correct in 1758 and became a great success of Newton’s sky mechanics. In the 18th century it became a fully developed theory, the basis of which was not geometry, as it was even in the case of Newton, but mathematical analysis. It was thanks to works by Jean le Rond d’Alembert (1717–1783), Alexis Clairaut (1713–1765), Leonhard Euler (1707–1783), Joseph Louis Lagrange (1736–1813), Pierre Simon de Laplace (1749–1827) and others that this theory became increasingly successful and explained more and more precisely motions of celestial bodies in the Solar System. Another great success of the sky mechanics was the discovery of Neptune in 1846, which was achieved on the basis of calculations by Urbain Jean Joseph Le Verrier (1811-1877) and, independently, by John Couch Adams (1819-1892).
Together with the
progress of the theory, development of methods of
observation took place. Galileo’s telescope produced an upright image,
but in 1611 Kepler proposed a different design with a larger field of vision
and producing an inverted image. In the first half of the 17th century
a Keplerian telescope was used to increase the accuracy of positional measurements:
the eyepiece micrometer was invented. Traditional astrometry, in which
the measurements were made with the use of instruments designed for naked
eye observations, and which was still cultivated after Tycho Brahe by an
astronomer from Gdańsk, namely Johannes Hevelius (1611-1689), was discarded.
One of the most important successes of the new observational astronomy
was the identification of light aberration phenomenon (a direct confirmation
of the heliocentric motion of Earth postulated by Copernicus) in 1728 by
an Englishman, James Bradley (1693-1762). One hundred years later astrometry
achieved another spectacular success: in 1836-1837 Wilhelm Struve (1793-1864)
and F. W. Bessel (1784-1846) for the first time measured the distance to
the nearby stars.
In 1660s a Scot, James Gregory, and Newton independently proposed a new type of telescope – a reflector. One hundred years later this device was successfully used by William Herschel (1738-1822) in his astronomical studies. Herschel himself constructed reflectors with diameters of 18 inches and 4 feet in diameter mirrors. Herschel became famous owing to his discovery of Uranus in 1781, but his equally important achievement was pointing out to astronomers new directions of study mainly thanks to his systematic observations of nebulae, star clusters and double stars. These studies were later continued by his son, John Herschel (1792-1871) with reference to the southern sky.
Further reading
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