Carl August von Steinheil
Carl August von Steinheil | |
---|---|
Carl August von Steinheil | |
Born | Ribeauvillé, Alsace |
12 October 1801
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Munich, Bavaria |
Resting place | Alter Südfriedhof, Munich Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Citizenship | German |
Fields | Astronomy, Physics, Engineering, Mathematics |
Institutions | University of Munich Austrian Trade Ministry C. A. Steinheil & Söhne Deutsch-Österreichischer Telegraphenverein Trade Ministry of Bavaria |
Alma mater | University of Erlangen |
Carl August von Steinheil (12 October 1801 – 14 September 1870) was a German physicist, inventor, engineer and astronomer.
Biography
Steinheil was born in Ribeauvillé, Alsace. He studied law in Erlangen since 1821. He then studied astronomy in Göttingen and Königsberg. He continued his studies in astronomy and physics while living in his father's manor in Perlachseck near Munich. From 1832 to 1849, Steinheil was professor for mathematics and physics at the University of Munich.
In 1839, Steinheil used silver chloride and a cardboard camera to make pictures in negative from the Museum of Art and the Munich Frauenkirche, then taking another picture of the negative to get a positive, the actual black and white reproduction of a view on the object. The pictures produced were round with a diameter of 4 cm, the method was later named the “Steinheil method.”[1] It was the first daguerreotype in Germany.[2][3]
In 1846, Steinheil travelled to Naples to install a new system for weight and measure units. Three years later, he was appointed to the Board of Telegraphy of the Austrian Trade Ministry. Steinheil was tasked with designing a telegraph network for the entire empire, and helped to form the Deutsch-Österreichischer Telegraphenverein (German-Austrian Telegraph Society). In 1851, he started the Swiss telegraph network. Steinheil returned Munich as konservator (curator) of the mathematical-physical collections and ministerial secretary in the Trade Ministry of Bavaria.[clarification needed]
In 1854, he founded C. A. Steinheil & Söhne, an optical-astronomical company.[2][3] The company built telescopes, spectroscopes and photometers – one of Steinheil's inventions, used to measure brightness. C.A. Steinheil & Söhne produced large telescopes for observatories in Uppsala, Mannheim, Leipzig, Utrecht.[2][3] The company also produced refractors and reflectors with silver-covered mirrors. The process for creating the silvering was developed by Steinheil's friend Justus Liebig. In 1862, Steinheil's sons starting managing the company.
Steinheil died in Munich in Bavaria on 14 September 1870. He was buried in the Alter Südfriedhof cemetery.
Inventions
- Ground electricity
- Print telegraph (not made public)
- Electric clock
- Steinheil script (code to print dots on paper via telegraph, not used due to the adoption of Morse code)
- Steinheil doublet, a flint-first achromatic doublet
- Silver coating of curved glass surfaces (together with Léon Foucault) paving the way for the rise of reflecting telescopes.
Legacy
Some sources state that Steinheilite, a transparent mineral that resembles blue quartz but is actually a form of iolite, was named after Carl von Steinheil.[3] However, the name was in use as early as 1811, too early to be named after Carl von Steinheil, and sources from that time instead attribute it to Fabian Steinheil, the Russian military governor of Finland.[4]
References
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External links
- Carl August von Steinheil in the German National Library catalogue
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- Pages with reference errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Wikipedia articles needing clarification from December 2012
- 1801 births
- 1870 deaths
- 19th-century German people
- 19th-century engineers
- 19th-century physicists
- 19th-century scientists
- 19th-century astronomers
- German mathematicians
- German physicists
- German inventors
- German astronomers
- German engineers
- Mathematics educators
- Science teachers
- Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich faculty
- Alsatian-German people
- Alsatian nobility
- People from Ribeauvillé
- Members of the Bavarian Maximilian Order for Science and Art
- Burials at the Alter Südfriedhof
- Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the New International Encyclopedia
- Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the Encyclopedia Americana with a Wikisource reference