Giuseppe Campani (1635–July 28, 1715)[1] was an Italian optician and astronomer who lived in Rome during the latter half of the 17th century.
Life
Giuseppe Campani was born in 1635.[1]
He was an Umbrian from Castel San Felice near Spoleto.
His lenses and telescopes, made in Rome, were sent as far as Florence and Paris.[2]
Campani was known as the best maker of optical instruments of his age.[3]
His brother, Matteo Campani-Alimenis, and he were experts in grinding and polishing lenses, especially for very long focal lengthaerial telescopeobjectives.[4]
His brother is also noted as a mechanician for his work on clocks. He was a priest in charge of a parish in Rome.
Campani made many observations himself. Cassini called his attention to the spots on Jupiter, and he disputed with Eustachio Divini, an Italian optician, the priority of their discovery. His astronomical observations and his descriptions of his telescopes are detailed in the following papers: Ragguaglio di due nuovi osservazioni, una celeste in ordine alla stella di Saturno, e terrestre l'altra in ordine agl' instrumenti (Rome, 1664, and again in 1665); Lettere di G. C. al sig. Giovanni Domenico Cassini intorno alle ombre delle stelle Medicee nel volto di Giove, ed altri nuovi fenomeni celesti scoperti co' suoi occhiali (Rome, 1666).
Instruments
Campani's entire workshop was donated to the Gabinetto di Fisica of the Academy of Sciences of Bologna Institute in 1747.[6]
His telescopes were 20 to 50 feet (6.1 to 15.2 m) in length.
A 10 feet (3.0 m) telescope by Campani was tested in 1871 and was found to provide good definition and a flat field, with a magnification of about 20 times.[7]
A tripod compound monocular microscope made by Campani is held in the Billings microscope collection at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C.[8]
Trier, Friedrich H.; Gaulke, Karsten (2007). "The aerial telescope of Giuseppe Campani in the Astronomical-Physical Cabinet of the Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel (German Title: Das Luftfernrohr von Giuseppe Campani im Astronomisch-Physikalischen Kabinett der Museumslandschaft Hessen Kassel)". Acta Historica Astronomiae. 33: 185. Bibcode:2007AcHA...33..185T.
Williams (1871). "On an early telescope made by Giuseppe Campani of Rome". Astronomical Register: A Medium of Communication for Amateur Observers and All Others Interested in the Science of Astronomy. J. D. Potter. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
Bedini, Silvio: Giuseppe Campani, 'Inventor Romae,' an Uncommon Genius. ISBN9789004460102 Brill, Leiden 2021
Reinhard Oberschelp: Giuseppe Campani und der Ring des Planeten Saturn. (in German) ISBN9783827188359 (Lesesaal, 35) 32 pp. C. W. Niemeyer, Hameln 2012