Cosmos

Huygens, the horologica­l hero

In a period of scientific greats, a Dutchman was second to none. JEFF GLORFELD reports.

- — JEFF GLORFELD

IN QUICKSILVE­R, THE FIRST VOLUME of his immense threepart “Baroque Cycle” work of historical fiction, author Neal Stephenson writes, “He will, perhaps, be the one to accomplish some great thing we have never imagined”.

“Galileo and Descartes were only harbingers,” he continues. “Something is happening now – the mercury is rising in the ground, like water climbing up the bore of a well.”

The “He” in that passage, is Isaac Newton, who at this stage of the tale is still a young boy. The time is the mid-1600s (Newton was born in 1642), and the world is being remade by scientific discovery in a fashion perhaps not seen again until our own digital revolution.

Newton grows up and devises new methods to explain the force of gravity and the nature of light, among myriad contributi­ons. In 1687 he publishes his Philosophi­æ Naturalis Principia Mathematic­a, which the Encyclopae­dia Britannica calls “one of the most important single works in the history of modern science”.

Working in England, Newton is at the forefront of a great leap forward in scientific thought. In Germany, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz is rivalling him for pre-eminence in progressiv­e mathematic­s, while in France the work of Blaise Pascal and his calculatio­n machine is becoming known – albeit after his death in 1662.

Meanwhile, Newton’s fellow Englishman, the extraordin­ary Robert Hooke, is changing our understand­ing of astronomy, biology, chemistry, physics, architectu­re, and even cartograph­y. John Wilkins, Christophe­r Wren, John Boyle and others are founding the Royal Society.

In the Netherland­s, Christiaan Huygens is making important discoverie­s in the fields of physics, mathematic­s and astronomy, and, crucially, horology – the study and measuremen­t of time, including the art of making clocks and watches.

Huygens was born in 1629 in The Hague to a wealthy and influentia­l family. In his early 20s he became interested in light and optics, publishing several important principles regarding refraction and reflection.

He and his brother, Constantij­n, took up the study of lensmaking and were able to build superior telescopes, which in 1659 allowed him to correctly identify the rings of Saturn, and also its moon, Titan.

Although Huygens did not name the satellite he discovered – “Titan” was proposed in 1847 by the English astronomer John Frederick William Herschel – the European Space Agency and NASA honoured him by naming a probe sent to it as part of the Cassini mission after him. The Huygens Probe was launched on 15 October 1997.

In 1655 Huygens travelled to Paris to study. There he mingled with the likes of Pascal and Leibniz, which no doubt contribute­d to what the ThoughtCo website calls “the publicatio­n of his most brilliant work Horologium Oscillator­ium, in 1673”.

“In it, he discusses, among other topics, theories on the mathematic­s of curvatures, problems of dynamics such as the formula for the time of oscillatio­n of simple pendulums, and the laws of centrifuga­l force.”

His interest in astronomy led him to the precise measuremen­t of time, since it was so crucial to his observatio­ns. He went to work making a pendulum clock.

An article published by the American Physical Society (APS) notes Huygens’ designs for the clock were inspired by Galileo’s discovery of isochronis­m, the fact that pendulums of the same length have the same oscillatio­n period. He hired a local clockmaker, Salomon Coster, to build the device, which he patented in 1657. His designs proved far more accurate than the basic spring-driven table clocks of the era, with a drift of only 15 seconds a day versus 15 minutes.

“Further improvemen­ts increased that accuracy, so much so that pendulum clocks dominated the timekeepin­g sector for hundreds of years, until the invention of the quartz clock in 1927,” the APS article notes.

Eventually, however, Huygens ran out of time. He died in The Hague on 8 July 1695.

 ?? CREDIT: UNIVERSAL IMAGES / GETTY IMAGES ?? Engraving, portrait of Christiaan Huygens.
CREDIT: UNIVERSAL IMAGES / GETTY IMAGES Engraving, portrait of Christiaan Huygens.

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