Christopher Scheiner's illustration of his idea of the surface of the sun, 1635. Artist: Unknown
Sujet

Christopher Scheiner's illustration of his idea of the surface of the sun, 1635. Artist: Unknown

Légende

Christopher Scheiner's illustration of his idea of the surface of the sun, 1635. German astronomer and mathematician Scheiner (1573-1650) used telescopes invented by Galileo to make over 2000 observations of the Sun, recording sunspots in the process. As a Jesuit, Scheiner held the belief that the Sun, and the heavens generally, had to be perfect, and that sunspots were shadows cast by satellites of the Sun onto its face as they passed across it. This brought him into a bitter dispute with Galileo, who was of the opinion that sunspots were features which formed on the surface of the Sun itself. Scheiner attacked Galileo in his book Rosa Ursina, before Galileo's trial before the Inquisition in 1633.
Oxford Science Archive

Date

1635

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images

Notre référence

HRM19B65_141

Model release

Non

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

50,0Mo (5,0Mo) / 34,6cm x 36,2cm / 4085 x 4276 (300dpi)

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