Everything about Pierre Janssen totally explained
Pierre Jules César Janssen (
February 22,
1824 –
December 23,
1907) was a
French astronomer who, along with the English scientist
Joseph Norman Lockyer, is credited with discovering the gas
helium.
Life, work, and interests
Janssen was born in
Paris and studied
mathematics and
physics at the faculty of sciences. He taught at the lycée Charlemagne in 1853, and in the school of
architecture 1865 – 1871, but his energies were mainly devoted to various scientific missions entrusted to him. Thus in 1857 he went to Peru in order to determine the magnetic
equator; in 1861 – 1862 and 1864, he studied telluric absorption in the solar spectrum in Italy and Switzerland; in 1867 he carried out optical and magnetic experiments at the Azores; he successfully observed both
transits of Venus, that of 1874 in Japan, that of 1882 at Oran in Algeria; and he took part in a long series of solar eclipse-expeditions, for example to Trani (1867),
Guntur (1868), Algiers (1870), Siam (1875), the Caroline Islands (1883), and to Alcosebre in Spain (1905). To see the eclipse of 1870 he escaped from besieged Paris in a balloon (that eclipse was obscured by cloud cover, however).
Discovery of helium
In 1868 Janssen discovered how to observe
solar prominences without an
eclipse. On
August 18 of that same year, while observing an eclipse of the
Sun in
India, he noticed a bright yellow line with a
wavelength of 587.49 nm in the
spectrum of the
chromosphere of the Sun. This was the first observation of this particular spectral line, and one possible source for it was an element not yet discovered on the earth. Janssen was at first ridiculed since no element had ever been detected in space before being found on Earth.
On October 20 of the same year,
Joseph Norman Lockyer also observed the same yellow line in the solar spectrum and concluded that it was caused by an unknown element, after unsuccessfully testing to see if it were some new type of hydrogen. This was the first time a chemical element was discovered on an extraterrestrial world before being found on the earth. Lockyer and the English chemist
Edward Frankland named the element with the Greek word for the Sun, ἥλιος (
helios).
Observatories
At the great Indian eclipse of 1868, Janssen also demonstrated the gaseous nature of the red prominences, and devised a method of observing them under ordinary daylight conditions. One main purpose of his spectroscopic inquiries was to answer the question whether the
Sun contains
oxygen or not. An indispensable preliminary was the virtual elimination of oxygen-absorption in the
Earth's atmosphere, and his bold project of establishing an observatory on the top of
Mont Blanc was prompted by a perception of the advantages to be gained by reducing the thickness of air through which observations have to be made. This observatory, the foundations of which were fixed in the snow that appears to cover the summit to a depth of ten metres, was built in September 1893, and Janssen, in spite of his sixty-nine years, made the ascent and spent four days taking observations.
In 1875, Janssen was appointed director of the new astrophysical observatory established by the French government at
Meudon, and set on foot there in 1876 the remarkable series of solar photographs collected in his great
Atlas de photographies solaires (1904). The first volume of the
Annales de l'observatoire de Meudon was published by him in 1896.
Janssen died at Meudon and was buried at
Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.
Craters on Mars and on the moon are named in his honor.
Appearances in Pop Culture
The Simpsons mention Janssen in the episode "
Bart's Comet." When
Bart makes an embarrassing floating blimp resembling
Principal Skinner,
Skinner yells "Curse the man who invented
helium! Curse Pierre Jules César Janssen!"
Notes and references
Further Information
Get more info on 'Pierre Janssen'.
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