Sir Frederick William Herschel, FRS KH (15 November 1738 – 25 August 1822) was a German-born British astronomer and composer who became famous for discovering Uranus. He also discovered infrared radiation and made many other discoveries in astronomy.
Early life and musical activities
He was born
Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel in
Brussels,
Belgium, as one of ten children (of whom four died very young). His father was Isaac Herschel (1707-1768), an
oboist of the Hanover Military Band. Although Isaac was of
Jewish birth, his wife was a Christian and the children were raised as Christians. His wife especially was instrumental in his own
conversion to Christianity. In 1755 the Hanoverian Guards regiment, in whose band William and his brother Jacob were engaged as oboists, was ordered to
England. At the time, the crowns of England and
Hannover were united under
George II. This brief visit made an impression, and the next year the brothers resigned from the Guards band and moved to London. William learned English quickly and, at age nineteen, he changed his name to
Frederick William Herschel.
He became a successful science teacher and quaterback, played the cello besides the oboe and, later, the organ. During a concert in 1767, Herschel showed off his versatility by performing an oboe concerto, violin concerto and harpsichord sonata. He composed numerous musical works, including 24 symphonies and many concertos, as well as some church music. Besides a few oboe concertos, his music is largely forgotten today. After a career leading orchestras in Newcastle, Leeds and Halifax (he was organist at the Parish Church of St John the Baptist, Halifax, West Yorkshire), he became organist of the Octagon Chapel, Bath, in which town he was also Director of Public Concerts. His sister Caroline came to England in 1772 and lived with him there in New King Street. His brothers Dietrich, Alexander and Jacob (1734-1792) also appeared as musicians of Bath. In 1780, Herschel was appointed director of the Bath orchestra, with his sister often appearing as soprano soloist.
Astronomy
Discoverer of Uranus
Herschel's music led him to an interest in
mathematics, and thence to
astronomy. This interest grew stronger after 1773, and he built some telescopes and made the acquaintance of
Nevil Maskelyne. He the United Kingdom|King George III]] also brought him favour (the name didn't stick - in France, where reference to the British king was to be avoided if possible, the planet was known as 'Herschel' until the name 'Uranus' was universally adopted). That same year, Herschel was awarded the
Copley Medal and was elected a Fellow of the
Royal Society. In 1782, he was appointed "The King’s Astronomer" and he and his sister subsequently moved to
Datchet (then in
Buckinghamshire but now in
Berkshire) on
1 August 1782. He continued his work as a telescope maker, selling a number of them to other astronomers.
Work with his sister Caroline
In 1783 he gave
Caroline a telescope and she began to make astronomical discoveries in her own right, particularly
comets. Caroline also served as his full-time assistant, taking notes while he observed at the telescope.
In June 1785, owing to damp conditions, he and Caroline moved to Clay Hall in Old Windsor. Clay Hall (or Clayhall Farm) had been owned by Samuel Foote, father of Topham Foote whose bust by Peter Scheemakers is in Windsor Parish Church. Topham's mother sold the farm to her brother Richard Topham who willed it to Sidney Bleuclerk. On 3 April 1786, William Herschel moved his family to a new residence on Windsor Road in Slough. He lived the rest of his life in this residence, which came to be known as Observatory House. It is no longer standing, having been demolished in 1963 to make way for a high-rise office building.
On 7 May 1788, he married the widow Mary Pitt (née Baldwin) at St Laurence's Church, Upton in Slough. His sister Caroline then moved to separate lodgings, but continued to work as his assistant.
Herschel's telescopes
During the course of his career, he constructed more than four hundred telescopes. The largest and most famous of these was a
reflecting telescope with a 40 ft (12 m)
focal length and an aperture 49½ inches (126 cm) in diameter. On
28 August 1789, his first night of observation using this instrument, he discovered a new
moon of
Saturn. A second moon followed within the first month of observation. The 40 ft (12 m) telescope proved very cumbersome, however, and most of his observations were done with a smaller telescope of 20 ft (6.1 m) focal length. Herschel discovered that unfilled telescope apertures can be used to obtain high angular resolution, something which became the essential basis for interferometric imaging in astronomy (in particular
Aperture Masking Interferometry and
hypertelescopes).
Further discoveries
In his later career, Herschel discovered two moons of Saturn,
Mimas and
Enceladus; as well as two moons of Uranus,
Titania and
Oberon. He did not give these moons their names; rather, they were named by his son
John in 1847 and 1852, respectively, well after his death.
He worked on creating an extensive catalog of nebulae. He continued to work on double stars, and was the first to discover that most double stars are not mere optical doubles as had been supposed previously, but are true binary stars, thus providing the first proof that Newton's laws of gravitation apply outside the solar system.
From studying the proper motion of stars, he was the first to realize that the solar system is moving through space, and he determined the approximate direction of that movement. He also studied the structure of the Milky Way and concluded that it was in the shape of a disk.
He also coined the word "asteroid", meaning star-like (from the Greek asteroeides, aster "star" + -eidos "form, shape"), in 1802 (shortly after Olbers discovered the second minor planet, 2 Pallas, in late March of the same year), to describe the star-like appearance of the small moons of the giant planets and of the minor planets; the planets all show discs, by comparison.
Despite his numerous important scientific discoveries, Herschel was not averse to wild speculation. In particular, he believed every planet was inhabited, even the Sun: he believed that the Sun had a cool, solid surface protected from its hot atmosphere by an opaque layer of cloud, and that a race of beings adapted to their strange environment lived there and had enormous heads. He believed this to be true, as his calcultions showed that under those conditions, a normal sized head would effectively explode. The original belief of lifeforms inhabiting the Sun came from the sight and movement of Sun Spots on the surface of the Sun.
Discovery of infrared radiation
Herschel discovered
infrared radiation by passing
sunlight through a
prism and holding a
thermometer just beyond the
red end of the
visible spectrum. This thermometer was meant to be a control to measure the ambient air temperature in the room. He was
shocked when it showed a higher temperature than the
visible spectrum. Further experimentation led to Herschel's conclusion that there must be an
invisible form of
light beyond the
visible spectrum.
Family and death
William and Mary had one child,
John, born at Observatory House on
7 March 1792. In 1816, William was made a Knight of the
Royal Guelphic Order by the
Prince Regent entitling him to the prefix 'Sir'. He helped to found the Astronomical Society of London in 1820, which in 1831 received a royal charter and became the
Royal Astronomical Society.
On 25 August 1822, Herschel died at Observatory House, Windsor Road, Slough, and is buried at nearby St Laurence's Church, Upton.
His son John Herschel also became a famous astronomer. One of William's brothers, Alexander Herschel, moved permanently to England, near Caroline and John.
His house at 19 New King Street in Bath, Somerset where he made many telescopes and first observed Uranus, is now home to the Herschel Museum of Astronomy.
Named after Herschel
- Mu Cephei, Two of the largest known stars in the universe, is also known as Herschel's Garnet Star
- Herschel, a small crater on the Moon
- Herschel, a large impact basin on Mars
- The enormous Herschel crater on Saturn's moon Mimas
- 2000 Herschel, an asteroid
- The William Herschel Telescope on La Palma
- The Herschel Space Observatory, currently under development by the European Space Agency. It will be the largest space telescope of its kind
- Herschel Grammar School, Slough
- Rue Herschel, a street in Paris, France bears his name.
- The Herschel Building at Newcastle University, Newcastle, United Kingdom
- Herschel Museum of Astronomy
- Herschel Girls School, Cape Town
- Herschelschule, Hanover, Germany, a grammar school
- Herschel, Saskatchewan, Canada is a small, rural village that is home to the Ancient Echoes Interpretive Centre
- The Herschel Observatory, from the school Universitas in Santos, Brazil.
- The lunar crater C. Herschel, the asteroid 281 Lucretia, and the comet 35P/Herschel-Rigollet are named after his sister Caroline Herschel.
- A public house in Slough is named after him and is quite close to the site of Obervatory House. Herschel Arms, 22, Park St, Slough, Berkshire SL1 1PS
- Herschel Astronomical Society who operate the Herschel Memorial Observatory based in Eton, Berkshire.
See also
Notes
References