
Giovanni Domenico (Jean-Dominique) Cassini

Portrait
'Giovanni Domenico Cassini' (
June 8,
1625–
September 14,
1712) was an
Italian-
French astronomer,
engineer, and
astrologer. Cassini, also known as 'Giandomenico Cassini', was born in
Perinaldo, near
Sanremo, at that time in the
Republic of Genoa.
Cassini was an astronomer at the
Panzano Observatory, from 1648 to 1669. He was a
professor of astronomy at the
University of Bologna and became, in 1671, director of the
Paris Observatory. He thoroughly adopted his new country, to the extent that he became interchangeably known as 'Jean-Dominique Cassini' —although that is also the name of his
great-grand-son.
Along with
Robert Hooke, Cassini is given credit for the discovery of the
Great Red Spot on
Jupiter (ca. 1665). Cassini was the first to observe four of
Saturn's moons, which he called ''
Sidera Lodoicea''; he also discovered the
Cassini Division (1675). Around 1690, Cassini was the first to observe
differential rotation within Jupiter's
atmosphere.
In 1672 he sent his colleague
Jean Richer to
Cayenne,
French Guiana, while he himself stayed in
Paris. The two made simultaneous observations of
Mars and thus found its
parallax to determine its distance, thus measuring for the first time the true dimensions of the
solar system.
Cassini was the first to make successful measurements of
longitude by the method suggested by
Galileo, using eclipses of the
satellites of Jupiter as a clock.
Attracted to the heavens in his youth, his first interest was in
astrology rather than
astronomy. Later in his life he focused almost exclusively on astronomy alone and all but denounced astrology as he became more and more involved in the
scientific revolution and ultra-rational thought of the day. While young he read widely on the subject of astrology, and soon he was very knowledgeable about it; strangely enough, it was his extensive knowledge of astrology that led to his first appointment as an astronomer.
In 1644 the Marquis
Cornelio Malvasia, who was a senator of
Bologna with a great interest in astrology, invited Cassini to Bologna and offered him a position in the Panzano Observatory which he was constructing at that time. Most of their time was spent calculating newer, better, and more accurate
ephemerides for ''astrological purposes'' using the rapidly advancing ''astronomical methods'' and tools of the day.
In 1669 Cassini moved to France and through a grant from
Louis XIV of France helped to set up the
Paris Observatory which opened in 1671; Cassini would remain the director of the observatory for the rest of his career until his death in 1712. In 1673 he became a French citizen. While in France Cassini also served as the court
astronomer/astrologer of Louis XIV ("The Sun King") for forty-one years, serving the expected dual role yet focusing the overwhelming majority of his time on astronomy rather than the astrology he had studied so much of in his youth.
During this time, Cassini's method of determining longitude was used to measure accurately the size of France for the first time. The country turned out to be considerably smaller than expected, and the king quipped that Cassini had taken more of his kingdom from him than he had won in all his wars.
Engineering
Cassini was employed by
Pope Clement IX in regard to
fortifications,
river management, and
flooding of the
Po.
The Pope asked Cassini to take
Holy Orders to work with him permanently but Cassini turned him down because he wanted to work on astronomy full time.
In the 1670s, Cassini began work on a project to create a
topographic map of France, using
Reiner Gemma Frisius's technique of
triangulation. The project was continued by his son
Jacques Cassini and eventually finished by his grandson
Cassini de Thury and published as the
Carte de Cassini in 1789
[1] or 1793
[2]. It was the
first topographic map of an entire country.
Named after Cassini
★
Cassini-Huygens Mission to
Saturn
★ The
Cassini Division in
Saturn's rings
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Cassini Regio, dark area on
Iapetus
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Cassini crater on
Mars
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Cassini crater on
the Moon
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Cassini's Laws
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24101 Cassini, an
asteroid
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Cassini's identity for
Fibonacci numbers
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Cassini Web Server
External links
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Catholic Enyclopedia article
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