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Galileo Galilei almost certainly began telescopic sunspot observations around the same time as Harriot, given he made his first telescope in 1609 on hearing of the Dutch patent of the device, and that he had managed previously to make naked-eye observations of sunspots. He is also reported to have shown sunspots to astronomers in Rome, but we ...
Thomas Harriot is recognized as the first person to observe sunspots in 1610 with the use of a telescope. [38] Harriot observed the sunspot with the use of a telescope in a direct and hazardous way. [39] Even though Harriot observed the Sun directly through his telescope, there were no recorded injuries to his eyes. [4]
In 2001, observations from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) using sound waves traveling below the photosphere (local helioseismology) were used to develop a three-dimensional image of the internal structure below sunspots; these observations show that a powerful downdraft lies beneath each sunspot, forms a rotating vortex that ...
Astronomers observed sunspots with telescopes for the first time in 1610. At the same time, the sun was making an unusual transition into an extended period of weakened activity. ... a telescopic ...
Galileo published a description of sunspots in 1613 entitled Letters on Sunspots suggesting the Sun and heavens are corruptible. [243] The Letters on Sunspots also reported his 1610 telescopic observations of the full set of phases of Venus, and his discovery of the puzzling "appendages" of Saturn and their even more puzzling subsequent ...
Johannes first observed a sunspot on February 27, 1611; in Wittenberg in that year he published the results of his observations in his 22-page pamphlet De Maculis in Sole observatis..... [5] It was the first publication on the topic of sunspots. [6]
German astronomer Johannes Kepler used a projecting device in 1607 to help him sketch the sunspots he saw just a few years before the first telescopic observations of the features.
Halley sailed to the island in late 1676, then set up an observatory with a large sextant with telescopic sights. Over a year, he made observations with which he would produce the first telescopic catalogue of the southern sky, [17] and observed a transit of Mercury across the Sun. Focusing on this latter observation, Halley realised that ...