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Related papers: Willem Janszoon Blaeu

200 papers

Near the end of the 16th century Wilhelm IV, Landgraf von Hessen-Kassel, set up an observatory with the main goal to increase the accuracy of stellar positions primarily for use in astrology and for calendar purposes. A new star catalogue…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2021-05-31 Andreas Schrimpf , Frank Verbunt

The Jesuit scientist Christopher Clavius (1538-1612) has been the most influential teacher of the renaissance. His contributions to algebra, geometry, astronomy and cartography are enormous. He paved the way, with his texts and his teaching…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2022-03-02 Costantino Sigismondi

The scientific revolution in the first half of the seventeenth century, pioneered by figures such as Harvey, Galileo, Gassendi, Kepler and Descartes, was disseminated to the northernmost countries in Europe with considerable delay. In this…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2014-07-29 Helge Kragh

We analyse a manuscript star catalogue by Wilhem IV, Landgraf von Hessen-Kassel, from 1586. From measurements of altitudes and of angles between stars, given in the catalogue, we find that the measurement accuracy averages 26 arcsec for…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2021-06-02 Frank Verbunt , Andreas Schrimpf

Pope Clement XI (1700-1721) ordered Francesco Bianchini (1662-1729) to build a Meridian Line. Bianchini was the Secretary of the Commission for the Calendar. He chose the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli because of the stability of its…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2011-06-16 Costantino Sigismondi

Annual astrological calendars, practica and prognostications became widespread publications in Europe after the invention of printing presses in the 15th century. Using the national language instead of Latin, the language of the scientists,…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2018-01-03 Andreas Schrimpf

In 1492, for the first time, an unknown ocean opened up before sailors: weeks of navigation and no idea how to pinpoint their location. Since ancient times, navigators had known how to determine latitude by using the North Star, but the…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2025-01-28 Alessandro De Angelis

As the European maritime powers expanded their reach beyond north Atlantic coastal waters to distant lands as far away as the East Indies, access to a practical means of maritime navigation in the southern hemisphere became imperative. The…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2023-02-28 Richard de Grijs

The year 2012 will be the fourth centennial year of the Jesuit Christopher Clavius (1535-1612), known as the Euclid of XVI century and the collaborator of the Pope Gregory XIII for the calendar reformation. In the occasion of the year of…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2011-06-14 Costantino Sigismondi

In this contribution I discuss the Kapteyn Astronomical Laboratory during the period of Pieter Johannes van Rhijn's directorate, which lasted from 1921 to 1957. It had developed under the founder Jacobus Cornelius Kapteyn into one of the…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2022-08-30 P. C. van der Kruit

Ancient instruments of high interest for research on the origin and diffusion of early scientific devices in the late XVI - early XVII centuries are reproduced in three paintings by Jan Brueghel the Elder. We investigated the nature and the…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2015-12-07 Pierluigi Selvelli , Paolo Molaro

The late-sixteenth century witnessed a major expansion of Dutch shipping activity from northern European waters to the Indian Ocean and beyond. At a time when the Renaissance had just arrived on the North Sea's shores, scientist-scholars,…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2021-01-14 Richard de Grijs

In the late 1620s the Neapolitan telescope maker Francesco Fontana was the first to observe the sky using a telescope with two convex lenses, which he had manufactured himself. Fontana succeeded in drawing the most accurate maps of the…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2017-04-20 Paolo Molaro

Exactly 500 years ago, Nicolaus Copernicus drew a lattice of lines on a panel above the doorway to his rooms at Olsztyn Castle, then in the Bishopric of Warmia. Although its design has long been regarded as some kind of reflecting vertical…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2018-12-05 Gerd Graßhoff , Gordon Fischer

The great meridian line in the Basilica of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Rome was built in 1701/1702 with the scope of measuring the obliquity of the Earth's orbit in the following eight centuries, upon the will of Pope Clement XI. During the…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2014-12-22 Alexandre Humberto Andrei , Costantino Sigismondi , Veronica Regoli

G. B. Riccioli's 1651 Almagestum Novum contains a table of diameters of stars measured by Riccioli and his associates with a telescope. These telescopically measured star diameters are spurious, caused by the diffraction of light waves…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2010-05-03 Christopher M. Graney

In 1626, the Venetian physician Santorio Santorio published the details of his pulsilogium, a stop clock that could accurately measure one's pulse rate. He applied Galileo Galilei's insights that the frequency of a pendulum's oscillation is…

History and Philosophy of Physics · Physics 2017-02-20 Richard de Grijs , Daniel Vuillermin

Several early spyglasses are depicted in five paintings by Jan Brueghel the Elder completed between 1608 and 1625, as he was court painter of Archduke Albert VII of Habsburg. An optical tube that appears in the Extensive Landscape with View…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2009-09-30 Paolo Molaro , Pierluigi Selvelli

The James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) has been the world's most successful single dish telescope at submillimetre wavelengths since it began operations in 1987. From the pioneering days of single-element photometers and mixers, through…

Astrophysics of Galaxies · Physics 2017-06-27 Ian Robson , Wayne S. Holland , Per Friberg

We have investigated the nature and the origin of the telescopes depicted in three paintings of J. Bruegel the Elder completed between 1609 and 1618. The "tube" that appears in the painting dated 1608-1612 represents a very early dutch…

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics · Physics 2009-07-23 Pierluigi Selvelli , Paolo Molaro
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