Timeline of solar astronomy
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Contents |
[edit] 17th century
- 1613 - Galileo Galilei uses sunspot observations to demonstrate the rotation of the Sun
- 1619 - Johannes Kepler postulates a solar wind to explain the direction of comet tails
[edit] 19th century
- 1802 - William Hyde Wollaston observes dark lines in the solar spectrum
- 1814 - Joseph Fraunhofer systematically studies the dark lines in the solar spectrum
- 1834 - Hermann Helmholtz proposes gravitational contraction as the energy source for the Sun
- 1843 - Heinrich Schwabe announces his discovery of the sunspot cycle and estimates its period to be about ten years
- 1852 - Edward Sabine shows that sunspot number is correlated with geomagnetic field variations
- 1859 - Richard Carrington discovers solar flares
- 1860 - Gustav Kirchhoff and Robert Bunsen discover that each chemical element has its own distinct set of spectral lines and use this fact to explain the solar dark lines
- 1861 - Gustav Spörer discovers the variation of sun-spot latitudes during a solar cycle, known as Spörer's law
- 1863 - Richard Carrington discovers the differential nature of solar rotation
- 1868 - Pierre Janssen and Norman Lockyer discover an unidentified yellow line in solar prominence spectra and suggest it comes from a new element which they name "helium"
- 1893 - Edward Maunder discovers the 1645-1715 Maunder sunspot minimum
[edit] 20th century
- 1904 - Edward Maunder plots the first sunspot "butterfly diagram"
- 1906 - Karl Schwarzschild explains solar limb darkening
- 1908 - George Hale discovers the Zeeman splitting of spectral lines from sunspots
- 1929 - Bernard Lyot invents the coronagraph and observes the corona with an "artificial eclipse."
- 1942 - J.S. Hey detects solar radio waves
- 1949 - Herbert Friedman detects solar X-rays
- 1960 - Robert Leighton, Robert Noyes, and George Simon discover solar five-minute oscillations by observing the Doppler shifts of solar dark lines
- 1961 - Horace W. Babcock proposes the magnetic coiling sunspot theory
- 1970 - Roger Ulrich, John Leibacher, and Robert Stein deduce from theoretical solar models that the interior of the Sun could act as a resonant acoustic cavity
- 1975 - Franz-Ludwig Deubner makes the first accurate measurements of the period and horizontal wavelength of the five-minute solar oscillations
- 1981 - NASA retrieves data from 1978 showing a comet crashing into the sun
[edit] 21st century
- 2004 - Fourth-largest and largest solar flares ever recorded occur