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Citation

Alternate Title(s): Martis circa axem proprium | On other italian observations of the dark patches of Mars | De aliis Romanis observationibus macularum Martis | On the period of the daily rotation of Mars | De periodo quotidianae revolutionis Martis
Author: Giovanni Domenico Cassini
Publication Location: Bologna
Year: 1666

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Summary

These 3 broadsides, issued approximately 2 weeks apart, contain the first detailed illustrations of Mars. Although the patches do not correspond to actual features discernible today, Cassini used them to determine that Mars rotates on its own axis, inclined to the ecliptic, with a period of 24 hours, 40 minutes (only 3 minutes off the present value). At this time, Cassini was a professor of astronomy at the University of Bologna, using a 17-foot telescope crafted by Giuseppe Campani. In 1671, he became the founding director of the Paris observatory. In addition to discovering 4 additional moons of Saturn, he discerned the major break in Saturn’s ring now known as the Cassini gap.

Related Items

Theme(s): Astronomy, Scientific Instruments, History of the Book
Chronological Period: 17th century
Geographical Region(s): Europe, Italy, France
Resource Type: Book