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HUYGENS, CHRISTIAAN (1629-1695) , Dutch mathematician, mechanician, astronomer and physicist, was born at the Hague on the 14th of April 1629. He was the second son of Sir Constantijn Huygens. From his father he received the rudiments of his education, which was continued at Leiden under A. Vinnius and F. van Schooten, and completed in the juridical school of Breda. His mathematical bent, however, soon diverted him from legal studies, and the perusal of some of his earliest theorems enabled Descartes to predict his future greatness. In 1649 he accompanied the mission of Henry, count of Nassau, to Denmark, and in 1651 entered the lists of science as an assailant of the unsound system of quadratures adopted by Gregory of St Vincent. This first essay (Exetasis quadraturae circuli, Leiden, 1651) was quickly succeeded by his Theoremata de quadratura hyperboles, ellipsis, et circuli; while, in a treatise entitled De circuli magnitudine inventa, he made, three years later, the closest approximation so far obtained to the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of a circle.Another class of subjects was now to engage his attention. The improvement of the telescope was justly regarded as a sine qua non for the advancement of astronomical knowledge. But the difficulties interposed by spherical and chromatic aberration had arrested progress in that direction until, in 1655, Huygens, working with his brother Constantijn, hit upon a new method of grinding and polishing lenses. The immediate results of the clearer definition obtained were the detection of a satellite to Saturn (the sixth
bright region still known by his name, and detected the multiple character of its nuclear star. His application of the pendulum to regulate the movement
His reputation now became cosmopolitan. As early as 1655 the university of Angers had distinguished him with an honorary degree of doctor
body
Huygens had before this time fixed his abode in France. In 1665 Colbert made to him on behalf of Louis XIV. an offertoo tempting to be refused, and between the following year and 1681 his residence in the philosophic seclusion of the Bibliotheque du Roi was only interrupted by two short visits to his native country. His magnum opus dates from this period. The Horologium oscillatorium, published with a dedication to his royal patron in 1673, contained original
In 1681 he finally severed his French connexions, and returned to Holland. The harsher measures which about that time began to be adopted towards his co-religionists in France are usually assigned as the motive of this step. He now devoted himself during six years to the production of lenses of enormous focal distance, which, mounted on high poles, and connected with the eye-piece by means of a cord, formed what were called " aerial telescopes." Three of his object-glasses, of respectively 123, 18o and 210 ft. focal length, are in the possession of the Royal Society. He also succeeded in constructing an almost perfectly achromatic eye-piece, still known by his name. But his re-searches in physical optics constitute his chief
original
Huygens never married. He died at the Hague on the 8th of June 1695, bequeathing his manuscripts to the university of Leiden, and his considerable property to the sons of his younger brother. In character he was as estimable as he was brilliant in intellect. Although, like most men of strong originative power, he assimilated with difficulty the ideas of others, his tardiness sprang rather from inability to depart from the track of his own methods than from reluctance to acknowledge the merits of his competitors. In addition to the works already mentioned, his Cosmotheoros a speculation concerning the inhabitants of the planetswas printed posthumously at the Hague in 1698, and appeared almost simultaneously in an English translation. A volume entitled Opera posthuma (Leiden, 1703) contained his " Dioptrica," in which the ratio between the respective focal lengths of object-glass and eye-glass is given as the measure of magnifying power, together with the shorter essays De vitris figurandis, De corona et parheliis, &c. An early tract De ratiociniis in ludo aleae, printed in 16J7 with Schooten's Exercitationes mathematicae, is notable as one of the first formal treatises on the theory of probabilities; nor should his investigations of the properties of the cissoid, logarithmic and catenary curves be left unnoticed. His invention of the spiral watch- spring was explained in the Journal des savants (Feb. 25, 1675). An edition of his works was published by G. J. 's Gravesande, in four quarto volumes entitled Opera varia (Leiden, 1724) and Opera reliqua (Amsterdam, 1728). His scientific correspondence was edited by P. J. Uylenbroek from manuscripts preserved at Leiden, with the title Christiana Hugenii aliorumque seculi X VII. virorum celebrium exercitationes mathematicae et philosophicae (the Hague, 1833).The publication of a monumental edition of the letters and works of Huygens was undertaken at the Hague by the Societe Hollandaise des Sciences, with the heading Euvres de Christian Huygens (1888), &c. Ten quarto volumes, comprising the whole of his correspondence, had already been issued in 1905. A biography of Huygens was prefixed to his Opera varia (1724); his Eloge in the character of a French academician was printed by J. A. N. Condorcet in 1773. Consult further: P. J. Uylenbroek, Oratio de fratribus Christiano atque Constantino Hugenio (Groningen, 1838); P. Harting, Christie an Huygens in zijn Leven en Werken geschetzt (Groningen, 1868) ; J. B. J. Delambre , Hist. de l'astronomie moderne (ii. 549); J. E. Montucla, Hist. des mathematiques (ii. 84, 412, 549) ; M. Chasles, Apergu historique sur l'origine des melhodes en geometric, pp. 101-109; E. Duhring, Kritische Geschichte der allgemeinen Principien der Mechanik, Abschnitt (U. 120, 163, iii. 227) ; A. Berry, A Short History of Astronomy, p. zoo; R. Wolf, Geschichte der Astronomic, passim; Houzeau, Bibliographie astronomique (ii. 169) ; F. Kaiser, Astr. Nach. (xxv. 245, 1847) ; Tijdschrift voor de Wetenschappen (i. 7, 1848) ; Allgemeine deutsche Biographic (M. B. Cantor) ; J. C. Poggendorff, Biog. lit. Handworterbuch. (A. M. C.)End of Article: HUYGENS, CHRISTIAAN (1629-1695) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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