Cassini giovanni domenico biography templates pdf
PDF | This book offers a fascinating account of the life and scientific achievements of Giovanni Domenico Cassini, or Cassini I, the most.
To learn more, view our Privacy Policy. To browse Academia. This book offers a fascinating account of the life and scientific achievements of Giovanni Domenico Cassini, or Cassini I, the most famous astronomer of his time, who is remembered today especially for his observations of the rings and satellites of Saturn and his earlier construction of the great meridian line in the Basilica of San Petronio in Bologna.
The various stages of his life are recounted in an engaging style, from his early childhood in Perinaldo and his time at the famous Jesuit College in Genoa, to his later experiences in Bologna and Paris. The emphasis, however, is on the scientific side of his life. He would go on to serve as Director of the Observatory, where he would make the majority of his scientific discoveries, for the rest of his life.
The correspondence between Giuseppe Lorenzoni and Pietro Tacchini covers the period from to Two hundred and ninety original letters written by Tacchini to Lorenzoni and rough copies of letters by Lorenzoni to Tacchini are preserved at the Padova Observatory Archives. Their friendship, which started in during the expedition to the total solar eclipse in Sicily, as well as their astronomical ability, were of great importance for many events in Italian astronomy during the second half of the 19th century.
This study constitutes a case study of the status of practical astronomy among Jews in fourteenth-century southern France.
From both Cassini's autobiography and the above mentioned text is possible to find out that Giovanni Domenico was a lively and intelligent child and that he.
This was hardly surprising in a time when Portuguese diplomatic and cultural relations with Rome were so intense. Bianchini dedicated his opus magnum, the book Hesperi et Phosphori Rome, , to the Portuguese monarch, the generous patron of the opulent volume. In this work the Veronese presented detailed observations of the planet Venus and the cartography of spots he saw on its apparent face.
Bianchini labeled those features honoring Portuguese and Italian historical figures. The dedication, inscribing the glory and power of the Portu-guese king in the heavens, is to be seen in the context of the preceding cases of Galileo, with his four Medi-cian Stars, and of Giovanni Domenico Cassini's discovery of four moons of Saturn, dedicated to Louis XIV.
The letter-extracts are from Volume 10 of Favaro's Opere unless otherwise stated, with the numbers given by Favaro. A part of Galileo's comet lecture is also included, as pertinent to a letter from Brenzoni.