Sunday 14 November 2021

GOTTFRIED KIRCH DISCOVERS THE GREAT COMET OF 1680

Today, The Grandma has received the wonderful visit of one of her closest friends, Joseph de Ca'th Lon. Joseph loves Astronomy, and they have been talking about Gottfried Kirch, the German astronomer who discovered the Great Comet of 1680, the first comet to be discovered by telescope, on a day like today in 1680.
 
Gottfried Kirch (18 December 1639-25 July 1710) was a German astronomer and the first Astronomer Royal in Berlin and, as such, director of the nascent Berlin Observatory.

The son of Michael Kirch, a shoemaker in Guben, Electorate of Saxony, initially he worked as a schoolmaster in Langgrün and Neundorf near Lobenstein. He also worked as a calendar-maker in Saxonia and Franconia.

He began to learn astronomy with Erhard Weigel in Jena, and with Hevelius in Danzig. In Danzig in 1667, Kirch published calendars and built several telescopes and instruments.

In 1679, he invented a screw micrometer for astronomical measurements. He became an astronomer working in Coburg, Leipzig and Guben as well from 1700 in Berlin.

In the last quarter of the 17th century, Kirch was the most-read calendar maker and counted as one of the leading Germans.

In 1680, he discovered a comet with a telescope for the first time: Komet C/1680 V1, called Kirch's comet.

In 1681, he discovered the Wild Duck Cluster M 11.

In 1686, he went to Leipzig. Together with the farmer and astronomer Christoph Arnold he observed the comets of that year. In the same year, he discovered the Mira variable χ Cygni.

More information: Springer Link

He also dedicated much time to observing the double star Mizar. He introduced three new constellations, the Reichsapfel, the Kurfürstliches Schwert and the Sceptre of Brandenburg, which however were not recognized and adopted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).

Via Arnold he met his second wife Maria Margaretha Winkelmann (1670–1720), who had learnt astronomy from self-study and from Arnold. While jointly observing the comet of 1702, they discovered the globular cluster M 5 (5 May 1702). In 1699, he had observed comet 55P/Tempel-Tuttle, but this observation was not recognized until later analysis by Joachim Schubart.

For a long period, he was unable to find employment, so he had to earn his living through the publication of Almanacs/Calendars. He was assisted in the calculations by his second wife and their children. A few series of almanacs appeared across several decades.

For a time, he published up to 13 almanacs a year, a few appearing under pseudonyms, and he also continued established almanacs from other authors under their name.

It is only recently that the importance of the Kirch's Almanacs has been recognized for the distribution of ideas of the Enlightenment and Pietism to the wider population. The functions of almanacs are Information, Education and Discussion.

More information: People Pill

Kirch's Calendars are noted additionally for the announcement of both his own results and results from abroad. A few almanacs anticipate the Astronomisches Jahrbuch. Further aspects are the transmission of new ideas to ordinary people in conjunction with a growing distancing from astrological superstition and criticisms of orthodox beliefs.

Astrological ideas were still not fully overcome at this time, but he attacked the practice of astrological forecasting and the mendacity of many almanac makers of his time as being a sin against God, especially prophecies regarding war and peace.

Beginning in 1675 he pursued the idea of founding an Astronomical Society in Germany. It was to be open to all astronomers, independent of nationality or religious persuasion. He promoted the idea that all astronomers should send their observations to a central location where they could be published as soon as possible. He considered Frankfurt am Main to be the ideal location, for one because of the Messe (fair) and on the other hand because of its easy connection to the Netherlands via the Rivers Main and Rhine.

The planned society should also serve to coordinate the observing of astronomical events such as eclipses and transits of planets. In particular, he organized observations of the transit of Mercury on 31 October or 1 November 1690 in quasi-military fashion. However, he appears to have made no concrete steps to set up such a society.

Then in 1700 he was appointed the first astronomer of the Royal Society of Sciences, Kurfürstlich-Brandenburgische Societät der Wissenschaften in Berlin on 10 May by Prince-elector Friedrich III of Brandenburg, from 1701: King Friedrich I. of Prussia. The founding of the associated Berlin Observatory was a reaction to the new national observatories in Greenwich, Paris and St. Petersburg.

More information: Principia

To finance the Academy, the Prince-Elector conferred the Kalenderpatent on it, a monopoly on publishing almanacs. Kirch and his wife were therefore obliged to finance the Academy by their almanac calculations.

After his death, his wife continued the almanac calculations. His son Christfried Kirch became director of the Observatory in 1716. When Prussia incorporated the new province of Silesia in the 1740s, a further almanac was needed to be drawn up for the Catholics, and for that issue the Academy employed his daughter Christine Kirch (1696–1782).

After 1700, two calendar variants were in force in the Holy Roman Empire: the Gregorian Calendar in the catholic, the Verbesserter Reichskalender (improved Reich calendar) in the Protestant regions, however the latter differed from the former solely in respect of calculation of the date of Easter.

The crater Kirch on the Moon and the asteroid 6841 Gottfriedkirch are named after him.

Kirch studied the double star Mizar.

He died at Berlin at the age of seventy.

More information: J.W.Werner


 The astronomer will believe
that the most erratic comet will yet
accomplish its journey and revisit our sphere;
but we give up those for lost
who have not wandered one-half the distance
from the centre of light and life.

Charles Spurgeon

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