Information about Joseph Von Fraunhofer

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Joseph von Fraunhofer


Joseph von Fraunhofer (March 6, 1787June 7, 1826) was a German optician. He is known for the discovery of the dark absorption lines known as Fraunhofer lines in the Sun's spectrum, and for making excellent optical glass and achromatic telescope objectives.

Biography

Fraunhofer became an orphan at the age of 11, and he started working as an apprentice to a harsh glassmaker named Philipp Anton Weichelsberger. In 1801 the workshop in which he was working collapsed and he was buried in the rubble. The rescue operation was led by Maximilian IV Joseph, Prince Elector of Bavaria (the future Maximilian I Joseph). The prince entered Fraunhofer's life, providing him with books and forcing his employer to allow the young Joseph Fraunhofer time to study.

After eight months of study, Fraunhofer went to work at the Optical Institute at Benediktbeuern, a secularised Benedictine monastery devoted to glass making. There he discovered how to make the world's finest optical glass and invented incredibly precise methods for measuring dispersion. In 1818 he became the director of the Optical Institute. Due to the fine optical instruments he had developed, Bavaria overtook England as the centre of the optics industry. Even the likes of Michael Faraday were unable to produce glass that could rival Fraunhofer's.

His illustrious career eventually earned him an honorary doctorate from the University of Erlangen in 1822. In 1824, he was awarded the order of merit, became a noble, and made an honorary citizen of Munich. Like many glassmakers of his era who were poisoned by heavy metal vapours, Fraunhofer died young, in 1826 at the age of 39. His most valuable glassmaking recipes are thought to have gone to the grave with him.

Scientific research

In 1814, Fraunhofer invented the spectroscope, and discovered 574 dark lines appearing in the solar spectrum. These were later shown to be atomic absorption lines, as explained by Kirchhoff and Bunsen in 1859. These lines are still sometimes called Fraunhofer lines in his honour.

He also invented the diffraction grating and in doing so transformed spectroscopy from a qualitative art to a quantitative science by demonstrating how one could measure the wavelength of light accurately. He found out that the spectra of Sirius and other first-magnitude stars differed from each other and from the sun, thus founding stellar spectroscopy.

Ultimately, however, his primary passion was still practical optics, once noting that "In all my experiments I could, owing to lack of time, pay attention to only those matter which appeared to have a bearing upon practical optics."

See also

References

  • Aller, Lawrence H. (1991). Atoms, Stars and Nebulae, 3rd ed.. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-32512-9. 

External links

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Maximilian I Josef
King of Bavaria

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Reign as Elector of Bavaria April 1, 1795 - December 26, 1805

As King of Bavaria December 26, 1805 - October 13, 1825
Born May 27, 1756
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Benediktbeuern Abbey (Kloster Benediktbeuern) is a monastery of the Salesians of Don Bosco, originally a monastery of the Benedictine Order, in Benediktbeuern in Bavaria, near the Kochelsee.
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Michael Faraday

Michael Faraday, portrait by Thomas Phillips c1841-1842[2]
Born September 22 1791(1791--)
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Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen Nuremberg (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (German), FAU (abbr.)), founded in 1742, is Bavaria's second largest state university with eleven faculties and 265 chairs.
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München
Munich

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Gustav Robert Kirchhoff

Gustav Kirchhoff
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Robert Bunsen

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Göttingen, Germany
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Fraunhofer lines are a set of spectral lines named for the German physicist Joseph von Fraunhofer (1787–1826). The lines were originally observed as dark features (absorption lines) in the optical spectrum of the Sun.
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diffraction grating is an optical component with a surface covered by a regular pattern of parallel lines, typically with a distance between the lines comparable to the wavelength of light.
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Spectroscopy is the study of the interaction between radiation (electromagnetic radiation, or light, as well as particle radiation) and matter. Spectrometry is the measurement of these interactions and an instrument which performs such measurements is a spectrometer or
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Sirius (α CMa / α Canis Majoris / Alpha Canis Majoris) (IPA: /ˈsɪriəs/) is the brightest star in the night-time sky with a visual apparent magnitude of −1.47.
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The Fraunhofer Society (German: Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft) is a German research organization with 56 institutes spread throughout Germany, each focusing on different fields of applied
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