Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The German astronomer Ernst Wilhelm Leberecht Tempel (1821-1889) owed most of his successes to a
10.8-cm Steinheil refractor, which he bought in 1858. A lithographer, without an academic foundation, but with a
strong passion for astronomy, Tempel had sharp eyesight and a talent for drawing, and he discovered with his
telescope many celestial objects, including asteroids, comets (most notably, 9 P/Tempel 1) and the Merope Nebula in
the Pleiades. Tempel carried his telescope with him throughout his moves in France and Italy. The telescope is now
conserved in Florence, at the Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory, where Tempel was astronomer from 1875 until the
end of his life. Using unpublished material from the Arcetri Historical Archive, as well as documents from other
archives and published material, we trace the history of the telescope and its use during and after Tempel's life, and
describe its recent rediscovery and status.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Wilhelm Tempel; nineteenth-century astronomy; instrumentation; Steinheil; Arcetri
List of contributors:
Brenni, PAOLO MARIA ETTORE CLAUDIO
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