Dictionary Definition
Kepler n : German astronomer who first stated
laws of planetary motion (1571-1630) [syn: Johannes
Kepler, Johan
Kepler]
Extensive Definition
Johannes Kepler () (December 27
1571
– November 15
1630) was a
German
mathematician,
astronomer and
astrologer, and key
figure in the 17th century astronomical revolution. He is best
known for his eponymous
laws of planetary motion, codified by later astronomers based
on his works Astronomia
nova, Harmonices
Mundi, and Epitome of Copernican Astronomy.
Before Kepler, planets' paths were computed by
combinations of the circular motions of the celestial
orbs. After Kepler, astronomers gradually shifted their
attention from orbs to
orbits. Kepler's laws also provided one of the foundations for
Isaac
Newton's theory of universal
gravitation.
During his career, Kepler was a mathematics
teacher at a seminary school in Graz, Austria, an
assistant to astronomer Tycho Brahe,
the court mathematician to
Emperor Rudolf II, a mathematics teacher in Linz, Austria, and an
adviser to General
Wallenstein. He also did fundamental work in the field of
optics, invented an
improved version of the refracting
telescope (the Keplerian
Telescope), and helped to legitimize the telescopic
discoveries of his contemporary Galileo
Galilei.
Kepler lived in an era when there was no clear
distinction between astronomy and astrology, but there was a
strong division between astronomy (a branch of mathematics within the
liberal
arts) and physics (a
branch of the more prestigious discipline of natural
philosophy). Kepler also incorporated religious arguments and
reasoning into his work, motivated by the religious conviction that
God had created the world according to an intelligible plan that is
accessible through the natural light of reason. Kepler described his new
astronomy as "celestial physics", as "an excursion into Aristotle's
Metaphysics",
and as "a supplement to Aristotle's On the
Heavens", transforming the ancient tradition of physical
cosmology by treating astronomy as part of a universal mathematical
physics.
Early years
Kepler was born on December 27 1571, at the Imperial Free City of Weil der Stadt (now part of the Stuttgart Region in the German state of Baden-Württemberg, 30 km west of Stuttgart's center). His grandfather, Sebald Kepler, had been Lord Mayor of that town, but by the time Johannes was born, the Kepler family fortune was on the decline. His father, Heinrich Kepler, earned a precarious living as a mercenary, and he left the family when Johannes was five years old. He was believed to have died in the Eighty Years' War in the Netherlands. His mother Katharina Guldenmann, an inn-keeper's daughter, was a healer and herbalist who was later tried for witchcraft. Born prematurely, Johannes claimed to have been a weak and sickly child. He was, however, a brilliant child; he often impressed travelers at his grandfather's inn with his phenomenal mathematical faculty.He was introduced to astronomy at an early age,
and developed a love for it that would span his entire life. At age
six, he observed the Great
Comet of 1577, writing that he "was taken by [his] mother to a
high place to look at it." At age nine, he observed another
astronomical event, the Lunar
eclipse of 1580, recording that he remembered being "called
outdoors" to see it and that the moon "appeared quite red".
However, childhood smallpox left him with weak
vision and crippled hands, limiting his ability in the
observational aspects of astronomy.
In 1589, after moving through grammar school,
Latin school, and lower and higher seminary in the Württemberg
state-run Protestant education system, Kepler began attending the
University of Tübingen as a theology student, and studied
philosophy under Vitus
Müller. He proved himself to be a superb mathematician and
earned a reputation as a skillful astrologer, casting horoscopes for fellow
students. Under the instruction of Michael
Maestlin, he learned both the Ptolemaic
system and the Copernican system of
planetary motion. He became a Copernican at that time. In a student
disputation, he defended heliocentrism from both a
theoretical and theological perspective, maintaining that the
Sun was the
principal source of motive power in the universe. Despite his
desire to become a minister, near the end of his studies Kepler was
recommended for a position as teacher of mathematics and astronomy
at the Protestant school in Graz, Austria (later the
University
of Graz). He accepted the position in April 1594, at the age of
23.
Graz (1594–1600)
Mysterium Cosmographicum
Johannes Kepler's first major astronomical work,
Mysterium
Cosmographicum (The Cosmographic Mystery), was the first
published defense of the Copernican system. Kepler claimed to have
had an epiphany on July 19, 1595, while teaching
in Graz, demonstrating the periodic
conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter in the zodiac; he realized
that regular
polygons bound one inscribed and one circumscribed circle at
definite ratios, which, he reasoned, might be the geometrical basis
of the universe. After failing to find a unique arrangement of
polygons that fit known astronomical observations (even with extra
planets added to the system), Kepler began experimenting with
3-dimensional polyhedra. He found that each
of the five Platonic
solids could be uniquely inscribed and circumscribed by
spherical orbs;
nesting these solids, each encased in a sphere, within one another
would produce six layers, corresponding to the six known
planets—Mercury,
Venus,
Earth,
Mars, Jupiter, and
Saturn. By
ordering the solids correctly—octahedron, icosahedron, dodecahedron, tetrahedron, cube—Kepler found that the spheres
could be placed at intervals corresponding (within the accuracy
limits of available astronomical observations) to the relative
sizes of each planet’s path, assuming the planets circle the Sun.
Kepler also found a formula relating the size of each planet’s orb
to the length of its orbital
period: from inner to outer planets, the ratio of increase in
orbital period is twice the difference in orb radius. However,
Kepler later rejected this formula, because it was not precise
enough. As he indicated in the title, Kepler thought he had
revealed God’s geometrical plan for the universe. Much of Kepler’s
enthusiasm for the Copernican system stemmed from his theological convictions
about the connection between the physical and the spiritual; the
universe itself was an image of God, with the Sun
corresponding to the Father, the stellar sphere to the Son, and the
intervening space between to the Holy Spirit.
His first manuscript of Mysterium contained an extensive chapter
reconciling heliocentrism with biblical passages that seemed to
support geocentrism.
With the support of his mentor Michael
Maestlin, Kepler received permission from the Tübingen
university senate to publish his manuscript, pending removal of the
Bible exegesis and the addition of a simpler, more understandable
description of the Copernican system as well as Kepler’s new ideas.
Mysterium was published late in 1596, and Kepler received his
copies and began sending them to prominent astronomers and patrons
early in 1597; it was not widely read, but it established Kepler’s
reputation as a highly skilled astronomer. The effusive dedication,
to powerful patrons as well as to the men who controlled his
position in Graz, also provided a crucial doorway into the patronage
system.
Though the details would be modified in light of
his later work, Kepler never relinquished the Platonist
polyhedral-spherist cosmology of Mysterium Cosmographicum. His
subsequent main astronomical works were in some sense only further
developments of it, concerned with finding more precise inner and
outer dimensions for the spheres by calculating the eccentricities
of the planetary orbits within it. In 1621 Kepler published an
expanded second edition of Mysterium, half as long again as the
first, detailing in footnotes the corrections and improvements he
had achieved in the 25 years since its first publication.
Marriage to Barbara Müller
In December 1595, Kepler was introduced to Barbara Müller, a 23-year-old widow (twice over) with a young daughter, and he began courting her. Müller, heir to the estates of her late husbands, was also the daughter of a successful mill owner. Her father Jobst initially opposed a marriage despite Kepler's nobility; though he had inherited his grandfather's nobility, Kepler's poverty made him an unacceptable match. Jobst relented after Kepler completed work on Mysterium, but the engagement nearly fell apart while Kepler was away tending to the details of publication. However, church officials — who had helped set up the match — pressured the Müllers to honor their agreement. Barbara and Johannes were married on April 27, 1597.In the first years of their marriage, the Keplers
had two children (Heinrich and Susanna), both of whom died in
infancy. In 1602, they had a daughter (Susanna); in 1604, a son
(Friedrich); and in 1607, another son (Ludwig).
Other research in Graz
Following the publication of Mysterium and with the blessing of the Graz school inspectors, Kepler began an ambitious program to extend and elaborate his work. He planned four additional books: one on the stationary aspects of the universe (the Sun and the fixed stars); one on the planets and their motions; one on the physical nature of planets and the formation of geographical features (focused especially on Earth); and one on the effects of the heavens on the Earth, to include atmospheric optics, meteorology and astrology.He also sought the opinions of many of the
astronomers to whom he had sent Mysterium, among them Reimarus
Ursus (Nicolaus Reimers Bär) — the imperial
mathematician to
Rudolph II and a bitter rival of Tycho Brahe.
Ursus did not reply directly, but republished Kepler's flattering
letter to pursue his priority dispute over (what is now called) the
Tychonic
system with Tycho. Despite this black mark, Tycho also began
corresponding with Kepler, starting with a harsh but legitimate
critique of Kepler's system; among a host of objections, Tycho took
issue with the use of inaccurate numerical data taken from Copernicus.
Through their letters, Tycho and Kepler discussed a broad range of
astronomical problems, dwelling on lunar phenomena and Copernican
theory (particularly its theological viability). But without the
significantly more accurate data of Tycho's observatory, Kepler had
no way to address many of these issues.
Instead, he turned his attention to chronology and "harmony," the
numerological
relationships among music, mathematics and the physical world, and
their astrological
consequences. By assuming the Earth to possess a soul (a property
he would later invoke to explain how the sun causes the motion of
planets), he established a speculative system connecting astrological
aspects and astronomical distances to weather and other earthly
phenomena. By 1599, however, he again felt his work limited by the
inaccuracy of available data — just as growing religious
tension was also threatening his continued employment in Graz. In
December of that year, Tycho invited Kepler to visit him in
Prague; on
January
1, 1600
(before he even received the invitation), Kepler set off in the
hopes that Tycho's patronage could solve his philosophical problems as well as his social
and financial ones.
Prague (1600–1612)
Work for Tycho Brahe
On February 4, 1600, Kepler met Tycho and his assistants Franz Tengnagel and Longomontanus at Benátky nad Jizerou (~50 km from Prague), the site where Tycho's new observatory was being constructed. Over the next two months he stayed as a guest, analyzing some of Tycho's observations of Mars; Tycho guarded his data closely, but was impressed by Kepler's theoretical ideas and soon allowed him more access. Kepler planned to test his theory from Mysterium Cosmographicum based on the Mars data, but he estimated that the work would take up to two years (since he was not allowed to simply copy the data for his own use). With the help of Johannes Jessenius, Kepler attempted to negotiate a more formal employment arrangement with Tycho, but negotiations broke down in an angry argument and Kepler left for Prague on April 6. Kepler and Tycho soon reconciled and eventually reached an agreement on salary and living arrangements, and in June, Kepler returned home to Graz to collect his family.Political and religious difficulties in Graz
dashed his hopes of returning immediately to Tycho; in hopes of
continuing his astronomical studies, Kepler sought an appointment
as mathematician to Archduke
Ferdinand. To that end, Kepler composed an essay —
dedicated to Ferdinand — in which he proposed a
force-based theory of lunar motion (In Terra inest virtus, quae
Lunam ciet — "There is a force in the earth which causes
the moon to move"). Though the essay did not earn him a place in
Ferdinand's court, it did detail a new method for measuring
lunar
eclipses, which he applied during the July 10 eclipse in Graz.
These observations formed the basis of his explorations of the laws
of optics that would culminate in Astronomiae Pars Optica.
On August 2,
1600, after
refusing to convert to Catholicism, Kepler and his family were
banished from Graz; several months later, Kepler returned, now with
the rest of his household, to Prague. Through most of 1601, he was
supported directly by Tycho, who assigned him to analyzing
planetary observations and writing a tract against Tycho's (now
deceased) rival Ursus. In September, Tycho secured him a commission
as a collaborator on the new project he had proposed to the
emperor: the Rudolphine
Tables that should replace the Prussian
Tables of Erasmus
Reinhold. Two days after Tycho's unexpected death on October 24,
1601, Kepler
was appointed his successor as imperial mathematician with the
responsibility to complete his unfinished work. He illegally
appropriated Tycho's observations, the property of his heirs, which
subsequently led to four year delays each to the publications of
two of his works whilst he negotiated copyright permissions for the
use of Tycho's data. The next 11 years as imperial mathematician
would be the most productive of his life.
Advisor to Emperor Rudolph II
Kepler's primary obligation as imperial mathematician was to provide astrological advice to the emperor. Though Kepler took a dim view of the attempts of contemporary astrologers to precisely predict the future or divine specific events, he had been casting detailed horoscopes for friends, family and patrons since his time as a student in Tübingen. In addition to horoscopes for allies and foreign leaders, the emperor sought Kepler's advice in times of political trouble (though Kepler's recommendations were based more on common sense than the stars). Rudolph was actively interested in the work of many of his court scholars (including numerous alchemists) and kept up with Kepler's work in physical astronomy as well.Officially, the only acceptable religious
doctrines in Prague were Catholic
and Utraquist, but
Kepler's position in the imperial court allowed him to practice his
Lutheran faith unhindered. The emperor nominally provided an ample
income for his family, but the difficulties of the over-extended
imperial treasury meant that actually getting hold of enough money
to meet financial obligations was a continual struggle. Partly
because of financial troubles, his life at home with Barbara was
unpleasant, marred with bickering and bouts of sickness. Court
life, however, brought Kepler into contact with other prominent
scholars (Johannes
Matthäus Wackher von Wackhenfels, Jost
Bürgi, David
Fabricius, Martin Bachazek, and Johannes Brengger, among
others) and astronomical work proceeded rapidly.
Astronomiae Pars Optica
As he continued analyzing Tycho's Mars
observations — now available to him in their entirety
— and began the slow process of tabulating the Rudolphine
Tables, Kepler also picked up the investigation of the laws of
optics from his lunar essay of 1600. Both lunar and solar
eclipses presented unexplained phenomena, such as unexpected
shadow sizes, the red color of a total lunar eclipse, and the
reportedly unusual light surrounding a total solar eclipse. Related
issues of atmospheric
refraction applied to all astronomical observations. Through
most of 1603, Kepler paused his other work to focus on optical
theory; the resulting manuscript, presented to the emperor on
January
1, 1604,
was published as Astronomiae Pars Optica (The Optical Part of
Astronomy). In it, Kepler described the inverse-square law
governing the intensity of light, reflection by flat and curved
mirrors, and principles of pinhole
cameras, as well as the astronomical implications of optics
such as parallax and
the apparent sizes of heavenly bodies. Astronomiae Pars Optica is
generally recognized as the foundation of modern optics (though the
law of
refraction is conspicuously absent).
The Supernova of 1604
In October 1604, a bright new evening star (SN 1604) appeared, but Kepler did not believe the rumors until he saw it himself. Kepler began systematically observing the star. Astrologically, the end of 1603 marked the beginning of a fiery trigon, the start of the ca. 800-year cycle of great conjunctions; astrologers associated the two previous such periods with the rise of Charlemagne (ca. 800 years earlier) and the birth of Christ (ca. 1600 years earlier), and thus expected events of great portent, especially regarding the emperor. It was in this context, as the imperial mathematician and astrologer to the emperor, that Kepler described the new star two years later in his De Stella Nova. In it, Kepler addressed the star's astronomical properties while taking a skeptical approach to the many astrological interpretations then circulating. He noted its fading luminosity, speculated about its origin, and used the lack of observed parallax to argue that it was in the sphere of fixed stars, further undermining the doctrine of the immutability of the heavens (the idea accepted since Aristotle that the celestial spheres were perfect and unchanging). The birth of a new star implied the variability of the heavens. In an appendix, Kepler also discussed the recent chronology work of Laurentius Suslyga; he calculated that, if Suslyga was correct that accepted timelines were four years behind, then the Star of Bethlehem — analogous to the present new star — would have coincided with the first great conjunction of the earlier 800-year cycle.Astronomia nova
The extended line of research that culminated in Astronomia nova (A New Astronomy) — including the first two laws of planetary motion — began with the analysis, under Tycho's direction, of Mars' orbit. Kepler calculated and recalculated various approximations of Mars' orbit using an equant (the mathematical tool that Copernicus had eliminated with his system), eventually creating a model that generally agreed with Tycho's observations to within two arcminutes (the average measurement error). But he was not satisfied with the complex and still slightly inaccurate result; at certain points the model differed from the data by up to eight arcminutes. The wide array of traditional mathematical astronomy methods having failed him, Kepler set about trying to fit an ovoid orbit to the data.Within Kepler's religious view of the cosmos, the
Sun (a symbol of God the
Father) was the source of motive force in the solar system. As
a physical basis, Kepler drew by analogy on William
Gilbert's theory of the magnetic soul of the Earth from
De
Magnete (1600) and on his own work on optics. Kepler supposed
that the motive power (or motive species) radiated by the Sun
weakens with distance, causing faster or slower motion as planets
move closer or farther from it. Perhaps this assumption entailed a
mathematical relationship that would restore astronomical order.
Based on measurements of the aphelion and perihelion of the Earth and
Mars, he created a formula in which a planet's rate of motion is
inversely proportional to its distance from the Sun. Verifying this
relationship throughout the orbital cycle, however, required very
extensive calculation; to simplify this task, by late 1602 Kepler
reformulated the proportion in terms of geometry: planets sweep out
equal areas in equal times — the second law of planetary
motion.
He then set about calculating the entire orbit of
Mars, using the geometrical rate law and assuming an egg-shaped
ovoid orbit. After
approximately 40 failed attempts, in early 1605 he at last hit upon
the idea of an ellipse,
which he had previously assumed to be too simple a solution for
earlier astronomers to have overlooked. Finding that an elliptical
orbit fit the Mars data, he immediately concluded that all planets
move in ellipses, with the sun at one focus — the first
law of planetary motion. Because he employed no calculating
assistants, however, he did not extend the mathematical analysis
beyond Mars. By the end of the year, he completed the manuscript
for Astronomia nova, though it would not be published until 1609
due to legal disputes over the use of Tycho's observations, the
property of his heirs.
Dioptrice, the Somnium manuscript, and other work
In the years following the completion of Astronomia Nova, most of Kepler's research was focused on preparations for the Rudolphine Tables and a comprehensive set of ephemerides (specific predictions of planet and star positions) based on the table (though neither would be completed for many years). He also attempted (unsuccessfully) to begin a collaboration with Italian astronomer Giovanni Antonio Magini. Some of his other work dealt with chronology, especially the dating of events in the life of Jesus, and with astrology, especially criticism of dramatic predictions of catastrophe such as those of Helisaeus Roeslin.Kepler and Roeslin engaged in series of published
attacks and counter-attacks, while physician Philip Feselius
published a work dismissing astrology altogether (and Roeslin's
work in particular). In response to what Kepler saw as the excesses
of astrology on the one hand and overzealous rejection of it on the
other, Kepler prepared Tertius Interveniens (Third-party
Interventions). Nominally this work — presented to the
common patron of Roeslin and Feselius — was a neutral
mediation between the feuding scholars, but it also set out
Kepler's general views on the value of astrology, including some
hypothesized mechanisms of interaction between planets and
individual souls. While Kepler considered most traditional rules
and methods of astrology to be the "evil-smelling dung" in which
"an industrious hen" scrapes, there was "also perhaps a good little
grain" to be found by the conscientious scientific
astrologer.
In the first months of 1610, Galileo
Galilei — using his powerful new telescope —
discovered four satellites orbiting Jupiter. Upon
publishing his account as Sidereus
Nuncius (Starry Messenger), Galileo sought the opinion of
Kepler, in part to bolster the credibility of his observations.
Kepler responded enthusiastically with a short published reply,
Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo (Conversation with the Starry
Messenger). He endorsed Galileo's observations and offered a range
of speculations about the meaning and implications of Galileo's
discoveries and telescopic methods, for astronomy and optics as
well as cosmology and astrology. Later that year, Kepler published
his own telescopic observations of the moons in Narratio de Jovis
Satellitibus, providing further support of Galileo. To Kepler's
disappointment, however, Galileo never published his reactions (if
any) to Astronomia Nova.
After hearing of Galileo's telescopic
discoveries, Kepler also started a theoretical and experimental
investigation of telescopic optics using a telescope borrowed from
Duke
Ernest of Cologne. The resulting manuscript was completed in
September of 1610 and published as Dioptrice in 1611. In it, Kepler
set out the theoretical basis of double-convex converging lenses
and double-concave diverging lenses — and how they are
combined to produce a Galilean
telescope — as well as the concepts of real vs.
virtual
images, upright vs. inverted images, and the effects of focal
length on magnification and reduction. He also described an
improved telescope — now known as the astronomical or
Keplerian
telescope — in which two convex lenses can produce
higher magnification than Galileo's combination of convex and
concave lenses.
Around 1611, Kepler circulated a manuscript of
what would eventually be published (posthumously) as Somnium
(The Dream). Part of the purpose of Somnium was to describe what
practicing astronomy would be like from the perspective of another
planet, to show the feasibility of a non-geocentric system. The
manuscript, which disappeared after changing hands several times,
described a fantastic trip to the moon; it was part allegory, part
autobiography, and part treatise on interplanetary travel (and is
sometimes described as the first work of science
fiction). Years later, a distorted version of the story may
have instigated the witchcraft trial against his mother, as the
mother of the narrator consults a demon to learn the means of space
travel. Following her eventual acquittal, Kepler composed 223
footnotes to the story — several times longer than the
actual text — which explained the allegorical aspects as
well as the considerable scientific content (particularly regarding
lunar geography) hidden within the text.
As a New Year's gift that year, he also composed
for his friend and some-time patron Baron Wackher von Wackhenfels a
short pamphlet entitled Strena Seu de Nive Sexangula (A New Year's
Gift of Hexagonal Snow). In this treatise, he investigated the
hexagonal symmetry of snowflakes and, extending the discussion into
a hypothetical atomistic
physical basis for the symmetry, posed what later became known as
the Kepler
conjecture, a statement about the most efficient arrangement
for packing spheres.
Personal and political troubles
In 1611, the growing political-religious tension in Prague came to a head. Emperor Rudolph — whose health was failing — was forced to abdicate as King of Bohemia by his brother Matthias. Both sides sought Kepler's astrological advice, an opportunity he used to deliver conciliatory political advice (with little reference to the stars, except in general statements to discourage drastic action). However, it was clear that Kepler's future prospects in the court of Matthias were dim.Also in that year, Barbara Kepler contracted
Hungarian
spotted fever, then began having seizures. As Barbara was
recovering, Kepler's three children all fell sick with smallpox; Friedrich, 6, died.
Following his son's death, Kepler sent letters to potential patrons
in Württemberg and Padua. At the
University of Tübingen in Württemberg, concerns over Kepler's
perceived Calvinist
heresies in violation of the Augsburg
Confession and the Formula
of Concord prevented his return. The University
of Padua — on the recommendation of the departing
Galileo — sought Kepler to fill the mathematics
professorship, but Kepler, preferring to keep his family in German
territory, instead travelled to Austria to arrange a position as
teacher and district mathematician in Linz. However, Barbara
relapsed into illness and died shortly after Kepler's return.
Kepler postponed the move to Linz and remained in
Prague until Rudolph's death in early 1612, though between
political upheaval, religious tension, and family tragedy (along
with the legal dispute over his wife's estate), Kepler could do no
research. Instead, he pieced together a chronology manuscript,
Eclogae Chronicae, from correspondence and earlier work. Upon
succession as Holy Roman Emperor, Matthias re-affirmed Kepler's
position (and salary) as imperial mathematician but allowed him to
move to Linz.
Linz and elsewhere (1612–1630)
In Linz, Kepler's primary responsibilities (beyond completing the Rudolphine Tables) were teaching at the district school and providing astrological and astronomical services. In his first years there, he enjoyed financial security and religious freedom relative to his life in Prague — though he was excluded from Eucharist by his Lutheran church over his theological scruples. His first publication in Linz was De vero Anno (1613), an expanded treatise on the year of Christ's birth; he also participated in deliberations on whether to introduce Pope Gregory's reformed calendar to Protestant German lands; that year he also wrote the influential mathematical treatise Nova stereometria doliorum vinariorum, on measuring the volume of containers such as wine barrels (though it would not be published until 1615).Second marriage
On October 30, 1613, Kepler married the twenty-four-year-old Susanna Reuttinger. Following Barbara's death, Kepler had considered eleven different matches. He eventually returned to Reuttinger (the fifth match) who, he wrote, "won me over with love, humble loyalty, economy of household, diligence, and the love she gave the stepchildren." The first three children of this marriage (Margareta Regina, Katharina, and Sebald) died in childhood. Three more survived into adulthood: Cordula (b. 1621); Fridmar (b. 1623); and Hildebert (b. 1625). According to Kepler's biographers, this was a much happier marriage than his first.Epitome of Copernican Astronomy, calendars, and the witch trial of Kepler's mother
Since completing the Astronomia nova, Kepler had intended to compose an astronomy textbook. In 1615, he completed the first of three volumes of Epitome astronomia Copernicanae (Epitome of Copernican Astronomy); the first volume (books I-III) was printed in 1617, the second (book IV) in 1620, and the third (books V-VII) in 1621. Despite the title, which referred simply to heliocentrism, Kepler's textbook culminated in his own ellipse-based system. Epitome became Kepler's most influential work. It contained all three laws of planetary motion and attempted to explain heavenly motions through physical causes. Though it explicitly extended the first two laws of planetary motion (applied to Mars in Astronomia nova) to all the planets as well as the Moon and the Medicean satellites of Jupiter, it did not explain how elliptical orbits could be derived from observational data.As a spin-off from the Rudolphine Tables and the
related Ephemerides,
Kepler published astrological calendars, which were very popular
and helped offset the costs of producing his other work —
especially when support from the Imperial treasury was withheld. In
his calendars — six between 1617 and 1624 —
Kepler forecast planetary positions and weather as well as
political events; the latter were often cannily accurate, thanks to
his keen grasp of contemporary political and theological tensions.
By 1624, however, the escalation of those tensions and the
ambiguity of the prophecies meant political trouble for Kepler
himself; his final calendar was publicly burned in Graz.
In 1615, Ursula Reingold, a woman in a financial
dispute with Kepler's brother Cristoph, claimed Kepler's mother
Katharina had made her sick with an evil brew. The dispute
escalated, and in 1617, Katharina was accused of witchcraft;
witchcraft trials were relatively common in central Europe at this
time. Beginning in August 1620 she was imprisoned for fourteen
months. She was released in October 1621, thanks in part to the
extensive legal defense drawn up by Kepler. The accusers had no
stronger evidence than rumors, along with a distorted, second-hand
version of Kepler's Somnium, in which a woman mixes potions and
enlists the aid of a demon. However, Katharina was
subjected to territio verbalis, a graphic description of the
torture awaiting her as
a witch, in a final attempt to make her confess. Throughout the
trial, Kepler postponed his other work to focus on his "harmonic
theory". The result, published in 1619, was Harmonices
Mundi ("Harmony of the Worlds").
Harmonices Mundi
Kepler was convinced "that the geometrical things have provided the Creator with the model for decorating the whole world." In Harmony, he attempted to explain the proportions of the natural world — particularly the astronomical and astrological aspects — in terms of music. The central set of "harmonies" was the musica universalis or "music of the spheres," which had been studied by Pythagoras, Ptolemy and many others before Kepler; in fact, soon after publishing Harmonices Mundi, Kepler was embroiled in a priority dispute with Robert Fludd, who had recently published his own harmonic theory.Kepler began by exploring regular
polygons and regular
solids, including the figures that would come to be known as
Kepler's
solids. From there, he extended his harmonic analysis to music,
meteorology and astrology; harmony resulted from the tones made by
the souls of heavenly bodies — and in the case of
astrology, the interaction between those tones and human souls. In
the final portion of the work (Book V), Kepler dealt with planetary
motions, especially relationships between orbital
velocity and orbital distance from the Sun. Similar
relationships had been used by other astronomers, but Kepler
— with Tycho's data and his own astronomical theories
— treated them much more precisely and attached new
physical significance to them.
Among many other harmonies, Kepler articulated
what came to be known as the
third law of planetary motion. He then tried many combinations
until he discovered that (approximately) "The square of the
periodic times are to each other as the cubes of the mean
distances." However, the wider significance for planetary dynamics
of this purely kinematical law was not realized until the 1660s.
For when conjoined with Christian
Huygens' newly discovered law of centrifugal force it enabled
Isaac
Newton, Edmund
Halley and perhaps Christopher
Wren and Robert Hooke
to demonstrate independently that the presumed gravitational
attraction between the Sun and its planets decreased with the
square of the distance between them. This refuted the traditional
assumption of scholastic physics that the power of gravitational
attraction remained constant with distance whenever it applied
between two bodies, such as was assumed by Kepler and also by
Galileo in his mistaken universal law that gravitational fall is
uniformly accelerated, and also by Galileo's student Borrelli in
his 1666 celestial mechanics.
Rudolphine Tables and Kepler's last years
In 1623, Kepler at last completed the Rudolphine
Tables, which at the time was considered his major work.
However, due to the publishing requirements of the emperor and
negotiations with Tycho Brahe's
heir, it would not be printed until 1627. In the meantime religious
tension — the root of the ongoing Thirty
Years' War — once again put Kepler and his family in
jeopardy. In 1625, agents of the Catholic
Counter-Reformation placed most of Kepler's library under seal,
and in 1626 the city of Linz was besieged. Kepler moved to Ulm, where he arranged
for the printing of the Tables at his own expense.
In 1628, following the military successes of the
Emperor Ferdinand's armies under General
Wallenstein, Kepler became an official adviser to Wallenstein.
Though not the general's court astrologer per se, Kepler provided
astronomical calculations for Wallenstein's astrologers and
occasionally wrote horoscopes himself. In his final years, Kepler
spent much of his time traveling, from court in Prague to Linz and
Ulm to a temporary home in Sagan, and
finally to Regensburg. Soon
after arriving in Regensburg, Kepler fell ill. He died on November 15,
1630, and was
buried there; his burial site was lost after the army of Gustavus
Adolphus destroyed the churchyard.
Reception of Kepler's astronomy
Kepler's laws were not immediately accepted. Several major figures such as Galileo and René Descartes completely ignored Kepler's Astronomia nova. Many astronomers, including Kepler's teacher, Michael Maestlin, objected to Kepler's introduction of physics into his astronomy. Some adopted compromise positions. Ismael Boulliau accepted elliptical orbits but replaced Kepler's area law with uniform motion in respect to the empty focus of the ellipse while Seth Ward used an elliptical orbit with motions defined by an equant.Several astronomers tested Kepler's theory, and
its various modifications, against astronomical observations. Two
transits of Venus and Mercury across the face of the sun provided
sensitive tests of the theory, under circumstances when these
planets could not normally be observed. In the case of the transit
of Mercury in 1631, Kepler had been extremely uncertain of the
parameters for Mercury, and advised observers to look for the
transit the day before and after the predicted date. Pierre
Gassendi observed the transit on the date predicted, a
confirmation of Kepler's prediction. This was the first observation
of a transit of Mercury. However, his attempt to observe the
transit of
Venus just one month later, was unsuccessful due to
inaccuracies in the Rudolphine Tables. Gassendi did not realize
that it was not visible from most of Europe, including Paris. Jeremiah
Horrocks, who observed the 1639 Venus transit, had used his own
observations to adjust the parameters of the Keplerian model,
predicted the transit, and then built apparatus to observe the
transit. He remained a firm advocate of the Keplerian model.
Epitome of Copernican Astronomy was read by
astronomers throughout Europe, and following Kepler's death it was
the main vehicle for spreading Kepler's ideas. Between 1630 and
1650, it was the most widely used astronomy textbook, winning many
converts to ellipse-based astronomy. However, few adopted his ideas
on the physical basis for celestial motions. In the late
seventeenth century, a number of physical astronomy theories
drawing from Kepler's work — notably those of Giovanni
Alfonso Borelli and Robert Hooke
— began to incorporate attractive forces (though not the
quasi-spiritual motive species postulated by Kepler) and the
Cartesian
concept of
inertia. This culminated in Isaac
Newton's
Principia Mathematica (1687), in which Newton derived Kepler's
laws of planetary motion from a force-based theory of
universal gravitation.
Kepler's historical and cultural legacy
Beyond his role in the historical development of astronomy and natural philosophy, Kepler has loomed large in the philosophy and historiography of science. Kepler and his laws of motion were central to early histories of astronomy such as Jean Etienne Montucla’s 1758 Histoire des mathématiques and Jean-Baptiste Delambre's 1821 Histoire de l’astronomie moderne. These and other histories written from an Enlightenment perspective treated Kepler's metaphysical and religious arguments with skepticism and disapproval, but later Romantic-era natural philosophers viewed these elements as central to his success. William Whewell, in his influential History of the Inductive Sciences of 1837, found Kepler to be the archetype of the inductive scientific genius; in his Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences of 1840, Whewell held Kepler up as the embodiment of the most advanced forms of scientific method. Similarly, Ernst Friedrich Apelt — the first to extensively study Kepler's manuscripts, after their purchase by Catherine the Great — identified Kepler as a key to the "Revolution of the sciences". Apelt, who saw Kepler's mathematics, aesthetic sensibility, physical ideas, and theology as part of a unified system of thought, produced the first extended analysis of Kepler's life and work.Modern translations of a number of Kepler's books
appeared in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, the
systematic publication of his collected works began in 1937 (and is
nearing completion in the early twenty-first century), and Max
Caspar's seminal Kepler biography was published in 1948. However,
Alexandre
Koyré's work on Kepler was, after Apelt, the first major
milestone in historical interpretations of Kepler's cosmology and
its influence. In the 1930s and 1940s Koyré, and a number of others
in the first generation of professional historians of science,
described the "Scientific
Revolution" as the central event in the history of science, and
Kepler as a (perhaps the) central figure in the revolution. Koyré
placed Kepler's theorization, rather than his empirical work, at
the center of the intellectual transformation from ancient to
modern world-views. Since the 1960s, the volume of historical
Kepler scholarship has expanded greatly, including studies of his
astrology and meteorology, his geometrical methods, the role of his
religious views in his work, his literary and rhetorical methods,
his interaction with the broader cultural and philosophical
currents of his time, and even his role as an historian of
science.
The debate over Kepler's place in the Scientific
Revolution has also spawned a wide variety of philosophical and
popular treatments. One of the most influential is Arthur
Koestler's 1959 The Sleepwalkers, in which Kepler is
unambiguously the hero (morally and theologically as well as
intellectually) of the revolution. Influential philosophers of
science — such as Charles
Sanders Peirce, Norwood
Russell Hanson, Stephen
Toulmin, and Karl Popper
— have repeatedly turned to Kepler: examples of
incommensurability, analogical
reasoning, falsification,
and many other philosophical concepts have been found in Kepler's
work. Physicist Wolfgang
Pauli even used Kepler's priority dispute with Robert Fludd
to explore the implications of analytical
psychology on scientific investigation. A well-received, if
fanciful, historical novel by John
Banville, Kepler (1981), explored many of the themes developed
in Koestler's non-fiction narrative and in the philosophy of
science. Somewhat more fanciful is a recent work of nonfiction,
Heavenly Intrigue (2004), suggesting that Kepler murdered Tycho Brahe
to gain access to his data. Kepler has acquired a popular image as
an icon of scientific modernity and a man before his time; science
popularizer Carl Sagan
described him as "the first astrophysicist and the last
scientific astrologer."
In Austria, Johannes Kepler has left such a
historical legacy behind, that he was motive of one of the most
famous silver collectors coins: the
10 euro Johannes Kepler silver coin minted in September 10
2002.
The reverse side of the coin has a portrait of
Johannes Kepler, who spent some time teaching in Graz and the
surrounding areas. Kepler was acquainted with
Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg personally, and most probably he knew
and influenced the construction of Eggenberg
Castle (the main motive of the coin). In front of him on the
coin is a model of his masterpiece, the “Mysterium
Cosmographicum”.
Writings by Kepler
- Mysterium cosmographicum (The Sacred Mystery of the Cosmos) (1596)
- Astronomiae Pars Optica (The Optical Part of Astronomy) (1604)
- De Stella nova in pede Serpentarii (On the New Star in Ophiuchus's Foot) (1604)
- Astronomia nova (New Astronomy) (1609)
- Tertius Interveniens (Third-party Interventions) (1610)
- Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo (Conversation with the Starry Messenger) (1610)
- Dioptrice (1611)
- De nive sexangula (On the Six-Cornered Snowflake) (1611)
- De vero Anno, quo aeternus Dei Filius humanam naturam in Utero benedictae Virginis Mariae assumpsit (1613)
- Eclogae Chronicae (1615, published with Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo)
- Nova stereometria doliorum vinariorum (New Stereometry of Wine Barrels) (1615)
- Epitome astronomiae Copernicanae (Epitome of Copernican Astronomy) (published in three parts from 1618–1621)
- Harmonice Mundi (Harmony of the Worlds) (1619)
- Mysterium cosmographicum (The Sacred Mystery of the Cosmos) 2nd Edition (1621)
- Tabulae Rudolphinae (Rudolphine Tables) (1627)
- Somnium (The Dream) (1634)
See also
Named in Kepler's honour
- Kepler Space Observatory, a solar-orbiting, planet-hunting telescope due to be launched by NASA in 2009
- The Kepler Solids, a set of geometrical constructions, two of which were described by him
- Kepler's Star, Supernova 1604, which he observed and described
- Kepler, a crater on the moon
- Kepler, a crater on Mars
- 1134 Kepler, an asteroid
- In 1975, nine years after its founding, the College for Social and Economic Sciences Linz (Austria) was renamed Johannes Kepler University Linz in honor of Johannes Kepler, since he wrote his magnum opus Harmonice Mundi in Linz.
- Kepler College, Seattle, Washington
- Keplerstraße in Hanau near Frankfurt am Main
- Keplerstraße and Keplerbrücke in Graz, Austria
- Kepler Launch Site
- Keplerplatz, a station on the U1 line of the Vienna U-Bahn rapid transit (Metro) system
- The Kepler system in the game Freelancer
- Johannes Kepler Grammar School , Prague, Czech Republic near the place Kepler lived while in Prague
- Two rockets, the Kepler and the Kepler II, appear in Kim Possible episodes Car Alarm and Graduation respectively.
- The Kepler Verge, a star cluster in the game Mass Effect
- Kepler Mission, a NASA mission to observe extra-solar planets from space.
Kepler in fiction, music, etc.
Music
- Kepler is the main character in Paul Hindemith's opera Die Harmonie der Welt (The Harmony of the World) (1956-57)
- Albert Guinovart's string quartet Kepler, based on the Harmonices Mundi theories, was premiered at Barcelona on 2007.
Fiction
- John Banville's novel Kepler: a novel (1981).
Cinema
- Johannes Kepler (1974), German film directed by Frank Vogel.
- První sekunda (1989), Czech TV film by Michael Havas, about Kepler and Rudolph II.
- Unseen forces (2004), short film (40 min.) directed by Ryan Junell.
Notes and references
- The most complete biography of Kepler remains Max Caspar's Kepler, while many later studies have focused on particular elements of his life and work. Though there are a number of more recent biographies, most are based on Caspar's work with minimal original research; much of the information cited from Caspar can also be found in the books by Arthur Koestler, Kitty Ferguson, and James A. Connor. Owen Gingerich's The Eye of Heaven builds on Caspar's work to place Kepler in the broader intellectual context of early-modern astronomy. Kepler's mathematics, cosmological, philosophical and historical views have been extensively analyzed in books and journal articles, though his astrological work — and its relationship to his astronomy — remains understudied.
Bibliography
- Andersen, Hanne; Peter Barker; and Xiang Chen: The Cognitive Structure of Scientific Revolutions, chapter 6: "The Copernican Revolution." New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006 ISBN 0-521-85575-6
- Banville, John: Kepler, Martin, Secker and Warburg, London, 1981 (fictionalised biography).
- Barker, Peter and Bernard R. Goldstein: "Theological Foundations of Kepler's Astronomy". Osiris, Volume 16: Science in Theistic Contexts. University of Chicago Press, 2001, pp 88–113.
- Caspar, Max: Kepler; transl. and ed. by C. Doris Hellman; with a new introduction and references by Owen Gingerich; bibliographic citations by Owen Gingerich and Alain Segonds. New York: Dover, 1993 ISBN 0-486-67605-6
- Connor, James A.: Kepler's Witch: An Astronomer's Discovery of Cosmic Order Amid Religious War, Political Intrigue, and the Heresy Trial of His Mother. HarperSanFrancisco, 2004 ISBN 0-06-052255-0
- De Gandt, Francois: Force and Geometry in Newton's Principia, Translated by Curtis Wilson, Princeton University Press 1995 ISBN 0-691-03367-6.
- Dreyer, J. L. E.: A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler. Dover Publications Inc, 1967 ISBN-10: 0486600793
- Ferguson, Kitty: The nobleman and his housedog: Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler: the strange partnership that revolutionized science. London: Review, 2002 ISBN 0-7472-7022-8 (published in the US as: Tycho & Kepler: the unlikely partnership that forever changed our understanding of the heavens. New York: Walker, 2002 ISBN 0-8027-1390-4)
- Field, J. V.: Kepler's geometrical cosmology. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1988 ISBN 0-226-24823-2
- Gilder, Joshua and Anne-Lee Gilder: Heavenly Intrigue: Johannes Kepler, Tycho Brahe, and the Murder Behind One of History's Greatest Scientific Discoveries, Doubleday (May 18, 2004), ISBN 0385508441 ISBN 978-0385508445 Reviews http://www.bookpage.com/0407bp/nonfiction/heavenly_intrigue.htmlhttp://www.crisismagazine.com/october2004/book4.htm
- Gingerich, Owen: The Eye of Heaven: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler. New York: American Institute of Physics, 1993 ISBN 0-88318-863-5 (Masters of modern physics; v. 7)
- Gingerich, Owen: "Kepler, Johannes" in Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Volume VII. Charles Coulston Gillispie, editor. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973
- Jardine, Nick: "Koyré’s Kepler/Kepler's Koyré," History of Science, Vol. 38 (2000), pp 363–376
- Kepler, Johannes: Johannes Kepler New Astronomy trans. W. Donahue, forward by O. Gingerich, Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 0-521-30131-9
- Kepler, Johannes and Christian Frisch: Joannis Kepleri Astronomi Opera Omnia (John Kepler, Astronomer; Complete Works), 8 vols.(1858–1871). vol. 1, 1858, vol. 2, 1859, vol. 3,1860, vol. 6, 1866, vol. 7, 1868, Francofurti a.M. et Erlangae, Heyder & Zimmer, - Google Books
- Kepler, Johannes, et al.: Great Books of the Western World. Volume 16: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler , Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., 1952. (Contains English translations by of Kepler's Epitome, Books IV & V and Harmonices Book 5.)
- Koestler, Arthur: The Sleepwalkers: A History of Man's Changing Vision of the Universe. (1959). ISBN 0-14-019246-8
- Koyré, Alexandre: Galilean Studies Harvester Press 1977 ISBN-10: 0855273542
- Koyré, Alexandre: The Astronomical Revolution: Copernicus-Kepler-Borelli Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1973 ISBN 0-8014-0504-1; London: Methuen, 1973 ISBN 0-416-76980-2; Paris: Hermann, 1973 ISBN 2-7056-5648-0
- Kuhn, Thomas S.: The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1957. ISBN 0-674-17103-9
- Lindberg, David C.: "The Genesis of Kepler's Theory of Light: Light Metaphysics from Plotinus to Kepler." Osiris, N.S. 2. University of Chicago Press, 1986, pp 5–42.
- Lear, John: Kepler's Dream. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1965.
- North, John: The Fontana History of Astronomy and Cosmology, Fontana Press, 1994. ISBN 0-00-686177-6
- Pannekoek, Anton: A History of Astronomy, Dover Publications Inc 1989. ISBN 0486659941
- Pauli, Wolfgang: Wolfgang Pauli - Writings on physics and philosophy, translated by Robert Schlapp and edited by P. Enz and Karl von Meyenn (Springer Verlag, Berlin, 1994). See section 21, The influence of archetypical ideas on the scientific theories of Kepler, concerning Johannes Kepler and Robert Fludd (1574–1637). ISBN 354-05685-9X, ISBN 978-354-05685-99.
- Schneer, Cecil: "Kepler's New Year's Gift of a Snowflake." Isis, Volume 51, No. 4. University of Chicago Press, 1960, pp 531–545.
- Shapin, Steven: The Scientific Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996. ISBN 0-226-75020-5
- Stephenson, Bruce: Kepler's physical astronomy. New York: Springer, 1987 ISBN 0-387-96541-6 (Studies in the history of mathematics and physical sciences; 13); reprinted Princeton:Princeton Univ. Pr., 1994 ISBN 0-691-03652-7.
- Stephenson, Bruce: The Music of the Heavens: Kepler's Harmonic Astronomy, Princeton University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-691-03439-7
- Toulmin, Stephen and June Goodfield: The Fabric of the Heavens: The Development of Astronomy and Dynamics. Pelican, 1963.
- Voelkel, James R.: The Composition of Kepler's Astronomia nova, Princeton University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-691-00738-1
- Westfall, Richard S.: The Construction of Modern Science: Mechanism and Mechanics. John Wiley and Sons, 1971. ISBN 0-471-93531-X; reprinted Cambridge University Press, 1978. ISBN 0-521-29295-6
- Westfall, Richard S.: Never at Rest: A Biography of Isaac Newton. Cambridge University Press, 1981. ISBN 0-521-23143-4
- Wolf, A.: A History of Science, Technology and Philosophy in the 16th and 17th centuries. George Allen & Unwin, 1950.
External links
- Cardboard kit of Kepler's Mysterium Cosmographicum planetary model
- Harmonies of the World, Charles Glenn Wallis tr., etext at sacred-texts.com
- Harmonices mundi ("The Harmony of the Worlds") in fulltext facsimile; Carnegie-Mellon University
- Electronic facsimile-editions of the rare book collection at the Vienna Institute of Astronomy
- Christianson, Gale E., Kepler's Somnium: Science Fiction and the Renaissance Scientist
- Kollerstrom, Nicholas, Kepler's Belief in Astrology
- References for Johannes Kepler
- Plant, David, Kepler and the "Music of the Spheres"
- Kepler, Napier, and the Third Law at MathPages
- Calderón Urreiztieta, Carlos. Harmonice Mundi • Animated and multimedia version of Book V
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