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| image = Julia Margaret Cameron - John Herschel (Metropolitan Museum of Art copy, restored).jpg |
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Revision as of 06:09, 9 February 2016
Sir John p Herschel, 1st Bt | |
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Born | Slough, Buckinghamshire, England | 7 March 1792
Died | 11 May 1871 | (aged 79)
Resting place | Westminster Abbey |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | St John's College, Cambridge Eton College |
Known for | The invention of photography |
Spouse | Margaret Brodie Stewart |
Awards | Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society Smith's Prize (1813) Copley Medal (1821) Lalande Medal (1825) Royal Medal (1836, 1840) Knight of the Royal Guelphic Order |
Scientific career |
Sir John Frederick William Herschel, 1st Baronet KH FRS (7 March 1792 – 11 May 1871)[1] was an English polymath, mathematician, astronomer, chemist, inventor, and experimental photographer, who also did valuable botanical work.[1] He was the son of Mary Baldwin and astronomer William Herschel, and the father of twelve children.[1]
Herschel originated the use of the Julian day system in astronomy. He named seven moons of Saturn and four moons of Uranus. He made many contributions to the science of photography, and investigated colour blindness and the chemical power of ultraviolet rays; his Preliminary Discourse (1831), which advocated an inductive approach to scientific experiment and theory building, was an important contribution to the philosophy of science.[2]
Early life and work on astronomy
Herschel was born in Slough, Buckinghamshire, the son of Mary Baldwin and William Herschel. He studied shortly at Eton College and St John's College, Cambridge, graduating as Senior Wrangler in 1813.[4] It was during his time as an undergraduate that he became friends with Charles Babbage and George Peacock.[1] He took up astronomy in 1816, building a reflecting telescope with a mirror 18 inches (460 mm) in diameter and with a 20-foot (6.1 m) focal length. Between 1821 and 1823 he re-examined, with James South, the double stars catalogued by his father. For this work, in 1826 he was presented with the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society (which he won again in 1836), and with the Lalande Medal of the French Academy of Sciences in 1825, while in 1821 the Royal Society bestowed upon him the Copley Medal for his mathematical contributions to their Transactions. Herschel was made a Knight of the Royal Guelphic Order in 1831.[1]
He served as President of the Royal Astronomical Society three times: 1827–29, 1839–41 and 1847–49.[5][6]
His A preliminary discourse on the study of natural philosophy, published early in 1831 as part of Dionysius Lardner's Cabinet cyclopædia, set out methods of scientific investigation with an orderly relationship between observation and theorising. He described nature as being governed by laws which were difficult to discern or to state mathematically, and the highest aim of natural philosophy was understanding these laws through inductive reasoning, finding a single unifying explanation for a phenomenon. This became an authoritative statement with wide influence on science, particularly at the University of Cambridge where it inspired the student Charles Darwin with "a burning zeal" to contribute to this work.[7][8]
Herschel published a catalogue of his astronomical observations in 1864, as the General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters, a compilation of his own work and that of his father's, expanding on the senior Hershel's Catalogue of Nebulae. A further complementary volume was published posthumously, as the General Catalogue of 10,300 Multiple and Double Stars.
He also conceptualized a practical contact lens design in 1823.
Visit to South Africa
Declining an offer from the Duke of Sussex that they travel to South Africa on a Navy ship, Herschel and his wife paid £500 for passage on the S.S. Mountstuart Elphinstone, which departed from Portsmouth on 13 November 1833. The voyage to South Africa was made in order to catalogue the stars, nebulae, and other objects of the southern skies.[1] This was to be a completion as well as extension of the survey of the northern heavens undertaken initially by his father William Herschel. He arrived in Cape Town on 15 January 1834 and set up a private 21 ft (6.4 m) telescope at Feldhausen at Claremont, a suburb of Cape Town. Amongst his other observations during this time was that of the return of Comet Halley. Herschel collaborated with Thomas Maclear, the Astronomer Royal at the Cape of Good Hope and the members of the two families became close friends. During this time, he also witnessed the Great Eruption of Eta Carinae (December, 1837).
In addition to his astronomical work, however, this voyage to a far corner of the British empire also gave Herschel an escape from the pressures under which he found himself in London, where he was one of the most sought-after of all British men of science. While in southern Africa, he engaged in a broad variety of scientific pursuits free from a sense of strong obligations to a larger scientific community. It was, he later recalled, probably the happiest time in his life.
In an extraordinary departure from astronomy, he combined his talents with those of his wife, Margaret, and between 1834 and 1838 they produced 131 botanical illustrations of fine quality, showing the Cape flora. Herschel used a camera lucida to obtain accurate outlines of the specimens and left the details to his wife. Even though their portfolio had been intended as a personal record, and despite the lack of floral dissections in the paintings, their accurate rendition makes them more valuable than contemporary collections. Some 112 of the 132 known flower studies were collected and published as Flora Herscheliana in 1996.
As their home during their stay in the Cape, the Herschels had selected 'Feldhausen'("Field Houses"), an old estate on the south-eastern side of Table Mountain. Here John set up his reflector to begin his survey of the southern skies. Herschel, meanwhile, read widely. Intrigued by the ideas of gradual formation of landscapes set out in Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology, he wrote to Lyell on 20 February 1836 praising the book as a work that would bring "a complete revolution in [its] subject, by altering entirely the point of view in which it must thenceforward be contemplated" and opening a way for bold speculation on "that mystery of mysteries, the replacement of extinct species by others." Herschel himself thought catastrophic extinction and renewal "an inadequate conception of the Creator" and by analogy with other intermediate causes, "the origination of fresh species, could it ever come under our cognizance, would be found to be a natural in contradistinction to a miraculous process".[9][10] He prefaced his words with the couplet:
- He that on such quest would go must know not fear or failing
- To coward soul or faithless heart the search were unavailing.
Taking a gradualist view of development and referring to the evolution of language and world, he commented
Words are to the Anthropologist what rolled pebbles are to the Geologist — battered relics of past ages often containing within them indelible records capable of intelligent interpretation — and when we see what amount of change 2000 years has been able to produce in the languages of Greece & Italy or 1000 in those of Germany France & Spain we naturally begin to ask how long a period must have lapsed since the Chinese, the Hebrew, the Delaware & the Malesass [Malagasy] had a point in common with the German & Italian & each other — Time! Time! Time! — we must not impugn the Scripture Chronology, but we must interpret it in accordance with whatever shall appear on fair enquiry to be the truth for there cannot be two truths. And really there is scope enough: for the lives of the Patriarchs may as reasonably be extended to 5000 or 50000 years apiece as the days of Creation to as many thousand millions of years.[11][12]
The document was circulated, and Charles Babbage incorporated extracts in his ninth and unofficial Bridgewater Treatise, which postulated laws set up by a divine programmer.[9] When HMS Beagle called at Cape Town, Captain Robert FitzRoy and the young naturalist Charles Darwin visited Herschel on 3 June 1836. Later on, Darwin would be influenced by Herschel's writings in developing his theory advanced in The Origin of Species. In the opening lines of that work, Darwin writes that his intent is "to throw some light on the origin of species — that mystery of mysteries, as it has been called by one of our greatest philosophers," referring to Herschel.
Herschel returned to England in 1838, was created a baronet, of Slough in the County of Buckingham,[1] and published Results of Astronomical Observations made at the Cape of Good Hope in 1847. In this publication he proposed the names still used today for the seven then-known satellites of Saturn: Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Titan, and Iapetus.[13] In the same year, Herschel received his second Copley Medal from the Royal Society for this work. A few years later, in 1852, he proposed the names still used today for the four then-known satellites of Uranus: Ariel, Umbriel, Titania, and Oberon.
Photography
Herschel made numerous important contributions to photography. He made improvements in photographic processes, particularly in inventing the cyanotype[14] process and variations (such as the chrysotype), the precursors of the modern blueprint process. In 1839, he made a photograph on glass, which still exists, and experimented with some color reproduction, noting that rays of different parts of the spectrum tended to impart their own color to a photographic paper. Herschel made experiments using photosensitive emulsions of vegetable juices, called phytotypes and published his discoveries in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London in 1842.[15] He collaborated in the early 1840s with Henry Collen, portrait painter to Queen Victoria. Herschel originally discovered the platinum process on the basis of the light sensitivity of platinum salts, later developed by William Willis.[16]
Herschel coined the term photography in 1839[citation needed]. He may, however, have been preceded by Brazilian Hércules Florence, who used the French equivalent, photographie, in private notes which one historian dates to 1834.[citation needed] Herschel was also the first to apply the terms negative and positive to photography.[1]
He discovered sodium thiosulfate to be a solvent of silver halides in 1819,[17] and informed Talbot and Daguerre of his discovery that this "hyposulphite of soda" ("hypo") could be used as a photographic fixer, to "fix" pictures and make them permanent, after experimentally applying it thus in early 1839. His ground-breaking research on the subject was read at the Royal Society in London in March 1839 and January 1840.
General
Herschel wrote many papers and articles, including entries on meteorology, physical geography and the telescope for the eighth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica.[1] He also translated the Iliad of Homer.
He invented the actinometer in 1825 to measure the direct heating power of the sun's rays,[18] and his work with the instrument is of great importance in the early history of photochemistry.
He proposed a correction to the Gregorian calendar, making years that are multiples of 4000 not leap years, thus reducing the average length of the calendar year from 365.2425 days to 365.24225.[19] Although this is closer to the mean tropical year of 365.24219 days, his proposal has never been adopted because the Gregorian calendar is based on the mean time between vernal equinoxes (currently 365.242374 days).[20]
In 1836, he was elected a foreign member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
In 1835, the New York Sun newspaper wrote a series of satiric articles that came to be known as the Great Moon Hoax, with statements falsely attributed to Herschel about his supposed discoveries of animals living on the Moon, including batlike winged humanoids.[21]
The village of Herschel in western Saskatchewan (Canada), Mount Herschel (Antarctica), the crater J. Herschel on the Moon, and the Herschel Girls' School in Cape Town (South Africa), are all named after him. While it is commonly accepted that Herschel Island (in the Arctic Ocean, part of the Yukon Territory) was named after him, the entries in the expedition journal of Sir John Franklin state that the latter wished to honour the Herschel name, about which John Herschel’s father (Sir William Herschel) and his aunt (Caroline Herschel) are two other notable members of this family.[22]
Family
He married his cousin Margaret Brodie Stewart (1810–1884) on 3 March 1829 at Edinburgh and was father of the following children:
- Caroline Emilia Elizabeth Herschel (31 March 1830 – 29 Jan 1909), who married Alexander Hamilton-Gordon
- Isabella Herschel (5 June 1831 – 1893)
- Sir William James Herschel, 2nd Bt. (9 January 1833 – 1917),
- Margaret Louisa Herschel (1834–1861), an accomplished artist
- Prof. Alexander Stewart Herschel (1836–1907), FRS
- Col. John Herschel FRS, FRAS, (1837–1921) surveyor
- Marie Sophie Herschel (1839–1929)
- Amelia Herschel (1841–1926) married Sir Thomas Francis Wade, diplomat and sinologist
- Julia Edith Herschel (1842–1933) married on 4 June 1878 to Captain (later Admiral) John Fiot Lee Pearse Maclear
- Matilda Rose Herschel (1844–1914)
- Francisca Herschel (1846–1932)
- Constance Ann Herschel (1855–20 June 1939)
On his death at Collingwood, his home near Hawkhurst in Kent, he was given a national funeral and buried in Westminster Abbey.
Bibliography
- On the Aberration of Compound Lenses and Object-Glasses (1821)[1]
- Book-length articles on "Light", "Sound" and "Physical Astrononmy" for the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana (30 vols. 1817-45)
- A preliminary discourse on the study of natural philosophy, part of Dionysius Lardner's Cabinet cyclopædia (1831, new edition 1840)[8][23]
- A Treatise on Astronomy (1833)[24]
- Outlines of Astronomy (1849)[1]
- General Catalogue of 10,300 Multiple and Double Stars (published posthumously)
- Familiar Lectures on Scientific Subjects
- General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters
- Manual of Scientific Inquiry (ed.), (1849)[1]
- Meteorology (1861)
- Familiar Lectures on Scientific Subjects (1867)[1]
- Herschel, John F. W. (20 February 1840), "On the Chemical Action of the Rays of the Solar Spectrum on Preparations of Silver and Other Substances, Both Metallic and Non-Metallic, and on Some Photographic Processes", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 130: 1–59, Bibcode:1840RSPT..130....1H, doi:10.1098/rstl.1840.0002, ISSN 0261-0523, JSTOR 108209.
References
Footnotes
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Herschel, Sir John Frederick William, 1792-1871, astronomer". NAHSTE project. University of Edinburgh.
- ^ Cobb, Aaron (2012). "Is John F. W. Herschel an Inductivist about Hypothetical Inquiry?". Perspectives on Science. 20: 409–39.
- ^ John Timbs, The Year-book of Facts in Science and Art, London: Simpkin, Marshall, and Co., 1846
- ^ "Herschel, John Frederick William (HRSL808JF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ "LIST OF PRESIDENTS AND DATES OF OFFICE". A brief history of the RAS. Royal Astronomical Society. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
- ^ Dreyer, John L. E.; Turner, Herbert H. (1923). History of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1820-1920. Vol. 1. London: Royal Astronomical Society. p. 250.
- ^ Darwin 1958, pp. 67–68
Browne 1995, pp. 128, 133 - ^ a b Darwin Correspondence Project - Letter 94 — Darwin, C. R. to Fox, W. D., (15 Feb 1831), retrieved 11 December 2008
- ^ a b van Wyhe 2007, p. 197.
- ^ Babbage 1838, pp. 225–227
- ^ Desmond & Moore 1991, pp. 214–215.
- ^ Letter 346 — Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, C. S., 27 Feb 1837 Darwin Correspondence Project, Darwin Correspondence Project, retrieved 30 April 2010
- ^ "Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, volume 8, page 42" (archive), NASA, 2004, ADsabs.Harvard.edu webpage: Adsabs-MNRAS.
- ^ "General View of Niagara Falls from Bridge". World Digital Library. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^ Herschel, John William Frederich (1842), "On the Action of the Rays of the Solar Spectrum on Vegetable Colours, and on some new Photographic Processes", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 132: 182–214, doi:10.1098/rstl.1842.0013
- ^ "William Willis". Knaw.nl.
- ^ Herschel, John (1819), "On the Hyposulphurous Acid and its Compounds", The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, 1: 19, retrieved 15 April 2011.
- ^ Science, American Association for the Advancement of (25 April 1884), "Notes and News", Science, 3 (64): 527, Bibcode:1884Sci.....3..524., doi:10.1126/science.ns-3.64.524.
- ^ John Herschel (1849), Outlines of Astronomy
- ^ Duncan Steel (2000), Marking time: the epic quest to invent the perfect calendar, John Wiley and Sons, p. 185, ISBN 978-0-471-29827-4
- ^ Cosmic Errors, Smithsonian magazine, December 2010
- ^ Burn 2009, pp. 317–323.
- ^ John Hershell, A preliminary discourse on the study of natural philosophy, 1831
- ^ Herschel, John W.F. (1835). A Treatise on Astronomy, 3rd Edition. Philadelphia: Carey, Leah and Blanchard.
Works cited
- Burn, C. R. (September 2009). "After Whom Is Herschel Island Named?". Arctic. 62 (3). Arctic Institute of North America: 317–323. doi:10.14430/arctic152. JSTOR 40513310.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - van Wyhe, John (27 March 2007). "Mind the gap: Did Darwin avoid publishing his theory for many years?". Notes and Records of the Royal Society. 61 (2): 177–205. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2006.0171. Retrieved 2 February 2009.
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(help) - Desmond, Adrian J.; Moore, James Richard (1991). Darwin. Michael Joseph. ISBN 978-0-7181-3430-3.
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(help) - Darwin, Charles (1958). Barlow, Nora (ed.). The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809–1882. With the original omissions restored. Edited and with appendix and notes by his granddaughter Nora Barlow. London: Collins. Retrieved 11 December 2008.
Further reading
- Babbage, Charles (1838), The Ninth Bridgewater Treatise (2nd ed.), London: John Murray, retrieved 2 February 2009
- Browne, E. Janet (1995), Charles Darwin: vol. 1 Voyaging, London: Jonathan Cape, ISBN 1-84413-314-1
- Herschel, John (1819), "On the Hyposulphurous Acid and its Compounds", The Edinburgh Philosophical Journal, 1: 8–29, retrieved 15 April 2011
- Herschel, John Frederick William (2009) [1830]. A Preliminary Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy (reprint ed.). Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green and John Taylor. ISBN 978-1-108-00017-8 – via Cambridge University Press.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Herschel, Sir John Frederick William (1836). A treatise on astronomy. Carey, Lea, & Blanchard.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - On Herschel’s relationship with Charles Babbage, William Whewell, and Richard Jones, see Snyder, Laura (2011), The Philosophical Breakfast Club: Four Remarkable Friends Who Transformed Science and Changed the World, New York: Broadway Books, ISBN 0767930495
External links
- Use dmy dates from July 2012
- 1792 births
- 1871 deaths
- 19th-century astronomers
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom
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- English people of German descent
- Knights of the Royal Guelphic Order
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- Recipients of the Copley Medal
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