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Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel

Friedrich Wilhelm BesselBorn: 22-Jul-1784
Birthplace: Minden, Brandenburg, Germany
Died: 17-Mar-1846
Location of death: Königsberg, Prussia, Germany
Cause of death: unspecified

Gender: Male
Race or Ethnicity: White
Occupation: Astronomer, Mathematician

Nationality: Germany
Executive summary: Pioneer in precision astronomy

German astronomer, born at Minden on the 22nd of July 1784. Placed at the age of fifteen in a counting-house at Bremen, he was impelled by his desire to obtain a situation as supercargo on a foreign voyage to study navigation, mathematics and finally astronomy. In 1804 he calculated the orbit of Halley's Comet from observations made in 1607 by Thomas Harriot, and communicated his results to H. W. M. Olbers, who procured their publication (Monatliche Correspondenz, x.425), and recommended the young aspirant in 1805 for the post of assistant in J. H. Schröters observatory at Lilienthal. A masterly investigation of the comet of 1807 (Königsberg, 1810) enhanced his reputation, and the King of Prussia summoned him, in 1810, to superintend the erection of a new observatory at Königsherg, of which he acted as director from its completion in 1813 until his death. In this capacity he inaugurated the modern era of practical astronomy. For the purpose of improving knowledge of star-places he reduced James Bradley's Greenwich observations, and derived from them an invaluable catalogue of 3222 stars, published in the volume rightly named Fundarnenta Astronomiae (1818). In Tabulae Regiomontanae (1830), he definitively established the uniform system of reduction still in use. During the years 1821-33, he observed all stars to the ninth magnitude in zones extending from -15 degrees to +45 degrees dec., and thus raised the number of those accurately determined to about 50,000. He corrected the length of the seconds' pendulum in 1826, in a discussion re-published by H. Bruns in 1889; measured an arc of the meridian in East Prussia in 1831-32; and deduced for the earth in 1841 an ellipticity of 1/299. His ascertainment in 1838 of a parallax figure for the "Flying Star" 61 Cygni was the first authentic result of the kind published. He announced in 1844 the binary character of Sirius and Procyon from their disturbed proper motions; and was preparing to attack the problem solved later by the discovery of Neptune, when. fatal illness intervened. He died at Königsberg on the 17th of March 1846. Modern astronomy of precision is essentially Bessel's creation. Apart from the large scope of his activity, he introduced such important novelties as the effective use of the heliometer, the correction for personal equation (in 1823), and the systematic investigation of instrumental errors. He issued 21 volumes of Astronomische Beobachtungen auf der Sternwarte zu Königsberg (1815-44), and a list of his writings drawn up by A. L. Busch appeared in vol. 24 of the same series. Especial attention should be directed to his Astronomische Untersuchungen (2 vols. 1841-42), Populäre Vorlesungen (1848), edited by H. C. Schumacher, and to the important collection titled Abhandlungen (4 vols. 1875-82), issued by R. Engelmann at Leipzig. His minor treatises numbered over 350. In pure mathematics he enlarged the resources of analysis by the invention of Bessel's Functions. He made some preliminary use of these expressions in 1817, in a paper on Kepler's Problem (Transactions Berlin Academy, 1816-17, p. 49), and fully developed them seven years later, for the purposes of a research into planetary perturbations (Ibid. 1824, pp. 1-52).

    Royal Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1829 (with William Pearson and Heinrich Christian Schumacher)
    Royal Astronomical Society Gold Medal 1841



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