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Jeremiah Horrocks

 
Scientist: Jeremiah Horrocks
 

English astronomer (1619–1641)

Little is known about the early life of Horrocks (or Horrox) other than that he was born into a Puritan family in Toxteth, Liverpool, and was admitted to Cambridge in 1632. Even though he died ‘in his twenty second year’ he had made major contributions to astronomy and several original observations.

Horrocks noted that as the orbits of Venus and Mercury fall between the earth and the Sun, it would seem possible that at certain times the inner planets would appear to an observer on the Earth to cross the face of the Sun. The events, known as transits, are so rare that they are unlikely to be seen by chance. Only five transits of Venus have been observed, those of 1639, 1761, 1769, 1874, and 1882; the next is due in 2004.

At Cambridge, Horrocks had mastered the new astronomy of Kepler. From Kepler's recently published Rudolphine Tables (1627), he worked out that a transit of Venus was due on 24 November 1639 at 3 p.m. At this time he was probably working as a curate at Hoole near Preston in Lancashire. He prepared for the transit by directing the solar image on to a large sheet of paper in a darkened room. However, a late November afternoon in Lancashire is not the best time to observe the Sun. For Horrocks there was another problem. The predicted day was a Sunday which meant that the puritan curate could well find himself in church at the crucial moment.

Horrocks was successful in observng the transit, however, and left an account of the day in his Venus in Sole Visa (Venus in the Face of the Sun), published posthumously in 1662. The day was cloudy but at 3.15, “as if by divine interposition” the clouds dispersed. He noted a spot of unusual magnitude on the solar disc and began to trace its path; but, he added, “she was not visible to me longer than half an hour, on account of the Sun quickly setting.”

With the aid of his observations Horrocks could establish the apparent diameter of Venus as 1′ 12ʺ compared with the Sun's diameter of 30′, a figure much smaller than the 11′ assigned by Kepler. Horrocks also attempted to determine the solar parallax, and derived, although with little confidence, a figure of 15ʺ, compared with a modern value of 8ʺ.8.

Before his death Horrocks was working on an Astronomia Kepleriana (Astronomy of Kepler), and essays on comets, tides, and the Moon. Unfortunately none of this was published until long after his death. Much of his work had been lost in the chaos of the Civil War. Other material sent to a London bookseller was burnt in the Great Fire of 1666. The remainder of his papers were published by John Wallis as Opera posthuma (1678; Posthumous Works).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Jeremiah Horrocks
Horrocks or Horrox, Jeremiah (both: hŏr'əks) , 1618?–1641, English astronomer. He made the first observation of the transit of Venus. His Venus in sole visa, which narrates this experience, was printed by Hevelius in 1662. The transit occurred on Nov. 24, 1639; Horrocks watched the small shadow of the planet move part way across the disk of light on a white screen, where the sun's image was focused through a telescope. Other fragments of his works besides the Venus were edited by John Wallis (1672). Horrocks estimated more correctly than anyone else had yet done the distance of the sun from the earth.
 
Wikipedia: Jeremiah Horrocks
Top
Jeremiah Horrocks
making the first observation ofthe transit of Venus in 1639
making the first observation of
the transit of Venus in 1639
Born 1618
Lower Lodge, Otterspool,
Toxteth Park, near Liverpool, UK
Died 3 January 1641
Toxteth Park, near Liverpool, UK
Residence England
Citizenship English
Nationality English
Fields Astronomy
Mathematics
Mechanics
Alma mater University of Cambridge
Known for Transit of Venus
Tides
Elliptical orbit
Lunar orbit

Jeremiah Horrocks (1618 – 3 January 1641), sometimes given as Jeremiah Horrox (the Latinised version that he used on the Emmanuel College register and in his Latin manuscripts),[1] was an English astronomer who was the only person to predict, and one of only two people to observe and record, the transit of Venus of 1639.

Contents

Life and work

Horrocks was born in Lower Lodge, in Toxteth Park, near Liverpool, Lancashire. His father was a small farmer; his uncle was a watchmaker; he was relatively poor during his entire brief life. He joined Emmanuel College on 11 May 1632 and matriculated as a member of the University of Cambridge on 5 July 1632 as a sizar. In 1635 he left without formally graduating, presumably due to the cost of continuing his studies.[2] The traditional view is that he supported himself financially by holding a curacy in Much Hoole, near Preston in Lancashire, but there is little evidence for this. According to local tradition in Much Hoole, he lived at Carr House, within the Bank Hall Estate, Bretherton. Carr House was a substantial property owned by the Stones family who were prosperous farmers and merchants, and Horrocks was a tutor for the Stones children. He may have been a Calvinist and, through his connection with Emmanuel College, a Puritan, although there is little evidence of his religious convictions.[3]

At Cambridge, he became familiar with the works of Johannes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and others. Horrocks read most of the astronomical treatises of his day, found the weaknesses in them and was suggesting new lines of research by the age of seventeen. He was the first to demonstrate that the Moon moved in an elliptical path around the Earth, he wrote a treatise on Keplerian astronomy and began to explore mathematically the properties of the force that later became known as gravity. Sir Isaac Newton acknowledged Horrocks's work as the bridge which connected him with Copernicus, Galileo, Brahe and Kepler.[4] Horrocks was convinced that Lansberg's tables were inaccurate when Kepler predicted that a near-miss of a transit of Venus would occur in 1639. Horrocks believed that the transit would indeed occur, having made his own observations of Venus for years.

Horrocks focused the image of the Sun through a simple telescope onto a piece of card, (see helioscope) where the image could be safely observed. From his location in Much Hoole, he calculated that the transit was to begin at approximately 3:00 pm on 24 November 1639 (Julian calendar, or 4 December in the Gregorian calendar). The weather was cloudy, but he first observed the tiny black shadow of Venus crossing the Sun on the card at about 3:15 pm, and observed for half an hour until sunset. The 1639 transit was also observed by his friend and correspondent, William Crabtree, from his home in Broughton.

Horrocks' observations allowed him to make a well-informed guess as to the size of Venus (previously thought to be larger and closer to Earth), as well as to make an estimate of the distance between the Earth and the Sun. His figure of 59 million miles (95 million kilometres, 0.63 AU) was far from the 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) that it is known to be today but it was a more accurate figure than any suggested up to that time.

A treatise by Horrocks, Venus in sub sole visa (Venus in transit across the Sun) was published by Johannes Hevelius at his own expense in 1662. This paper, which caused great excitement when revealed to members of the Royal Society 20 years after it was written, contained much evidence of Horrocks' enthusiastic and romantic nature, including humorous comments and passages of original poetry. When speaking of the century separating Venusian transits, he rhapsodised, "Thy return/ Posterity shall witness; years must roll/ Away, but then at length the splendid sight/ Again shall greet our distant children's eyes."

Horrocks also put his energies into the highly complex task of determining the Moon's orbit. He correctly hypothesised that the orbit was elliptical rather than circular, and he anticipated Isaac Newton in suggesting an influence on the orbit from the sun as well as the earth. In the final months of his life he also made detailed study of tides, in an attempt to explain the nature of lunar causation of tidal movements.

Horrocks returned to Toxteth Park sometime in the summer of 1640 and died suddenly and from unknown causes on 3 January 1641, aged only 22. As expressed by William Crabtree, "What an incalculable loss!"[5]

References

  1. ^ Marston, Paul (2007). "History of Jeremiah Horrocks". http://www.transit-of-venus.org.uk/conference/history.html. Retrieved on 2007-12-08.  - See footnote 1
  2. ^ Horrox, Jeremiah in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
  3. ^ Westfall, Richard S. (1995). "Jeremiah Horrocks; The Galileo Project". http://galileo.rice.edu/Catalog/NewFiles/horrocks.html. Retrieved on 2007-12-08. 
  4. ^ Chapman, Allan (1994). "Jeremiah Horrocks: His Origins and Education". http://www.longtononline.co.uk/his_horrocks.html. Retrieved on 2007-11-19. 
  5. ^ Opera Posthuma of Jeremiah Horrocks, ed. John Wallis, London, 1672.

Further reading

  • Aughton, Peter (2004). The Transit of Venus: The Brief, Brilliant Life of Jeremiah Horrocks, Father of British Astronomy. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84721-X. 
  • Maor, Eli (2000). Venus in Transit. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-11589-3. 
  • Sheehan, William; Westfall, John (2004). The Transits of Venus. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 1-59102-175-8. 

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