Anders Celsius


Quick Info

Born
11 November 1701
Uppsala, Sweden
Died
25 April 1744
Uppsala, Sweden

Summary
Anders Celsius was a Swedish astronomer, physicist and mathematician. He participated in Maupertuis' expedition to measure a degree of latitude in Lapland. He is best known for the temperature scale that he proposed and which is named after him.

Biography

Anders Celsius's grandfather was Anders Spole (1630-1699) an astronomer born in Barnarp, Sweden, who had studied in Uppsala. In his youth, Spole travelled through Europe, meeting many important astronomers, and later became Professor of Astronomy at the University of Lund. There, he constructed an observatory in his house and made frequent visits to Tycho Brahe in Hven. Because of this, Spole was well informed of the scientific state of Europe. He sided with Giovanni Domenico Cassini on his and Isaac Newton's argument about the shape of the Earth. Spole left Lund after the Danish invasion of southern Sweden in 1676, which caused the University of Lund to dissolve. He chose to participate in the war and, possibly as a reward, in 1679 he was offered the position of professor of astronomy at the University of Uppsala.

One of Spole's students in Uppsala was Nils Celsius (1658-1724), the son of Magnus Celsius (1621-1679) who was professor of mathematics at Uppsala between 1668 and 1679. Under Spole, Nils wrote the dissertation De Principiis Astronomicis Propiis (1679), in which he stated that only empirical observations, and not theological doctrine, were the pillars of astronomy. Since Uppsala was the ecclesiastical centre of Sweden and it had not yet accepted heliocentrism, this went against the consensus at the University and caused the dissertation to be banned. This refusal of the latest astronomical ideas explains, in part, the lack of proper astronomical instruments in the University of Uppsala at the beginning of the 18th century. Spole tried to remedy this by building an astronomical observatory in his own house, but it burned down in a great fire in 1702. Nils married one of Spole's daughters, Gunilla Maria Spole (1672-1756). After Spole's death in 1699, the university disregarded his suggestion of having Nils Celsius succeed him and, instead, they appointed Per Elvius (1660-1718) (who was married to another of Spole's daughters) as professor of astronomy. Only when Elvius died in 1718 did Nils Celsius become professor of astronomy. He was also the headmaster of the Trivial school of Uppsala. The Trivial schools were given that name because they taught the first three subjects, the trivium, of the liberal arts, namely grammar, rhetoric and logic.

Anders Celsius grew up with access to a big family library, which managed to survive the fire of 1702. This gave him early access to a copy of the 1687 edition of Isaac Newton's Principia. His academic teaching in mathematics and astronomy was poor in the beginning, but by the age of twelve he managed to solve all of the mathematical problems in a university textbook. He began his secondary schooling in Uppsala on 12 June 1711. After graduating from secondary school, Celsius studied astronomy, mathematics, and experimental physics at the University of Uppsala and gained a deep appreciation for mathematics mainly thanks to Anders Gabriel Duhre (about 1680-1739), who visited Uppsala in 1724-25 and gave a lecture course. The mathematics professor at Uppsala at this time was Elof Steuch (1687-1772) who seems to have had little mathematical ability or interest in the subject having been professor of Greek at the University of Lund before being appointed to the chair of mathematics in Uppsala. Celsius had been so unhappy with the mathematics teaching that he thought he would specialise in law but this all changed after he attended Duhre's course.

Celsius had, from the early 1720s, carried out observations for Erik Burman (1692-1729), Nils Celsius's successor as professor of astronomy in Uppsala, and, having been taught about meteorology and experimental physics by Burman, Celsius published his first two papers in 1724 both relating to barometers. On 12 December 1727 he was examined on his astronomy thesis Disputatio astronomy ca de motu vertiginis lunae by Burman. On 21 May 1728 he was examined on his thesis Dissertatio gradualis de existentia mentis by Johan Hermansson, the professor of law, philology and politics.

After graduating, Celsius became a substitute lecturer in mathematics, while the professor, Samuel Klingenstierna (1698-1765), was abroad. In fact Klingenstierna and Celsius had both been applicants for the vacant chair of mathematics in the University of Uppsala, but Klingenstierna had been appointed, mainly because of a very strong letter of recommendation from Christian Wolff, a pupil of Gottfried Leibniz. Klingenstierna had been awarded a travel grant to visit the European centres of learning and was not able to take up the chair of mathematics at Uppsala until he returned in 1731, so he had to pay Celsius out of his own pocket for taking on the duties of the chair of mathematics.

When Erik Burman died in 1729, Celsius took over his lectures in astronomy in addition to substituting for the professor of mathematics. This experience allowed him to be appointed Professor of Astronomy in Uppsala in 1730. He had been an assistant secretary of the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala since 1724 and, following the death of Burman he took on the role of secretary. The University of Uppsala was now a very strong centre for mathematics and astronomy with Klingenstierna and Celsius both world-class scholars.

In 1732, following in his grandfather's footsteps, Celsius decided to travel through Europe and he received permission on 23 May of that year. He did not travel alone for he had as a travelling companion Jonas Meldercreutz (1714-1785), a young mathematician who would be appointed to the chair of mathematics at Uppsala after Klingenstierna retired in 1751. One of the tasks Celsius and Meldercreutz undertook was to visit learned societies and academies, aiming to set up links with the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala. During his trips, Celsius made several astronomical observations with a quadrant he bought in Berlin. In 1733, he published 316 of his observations on the northern lights while in Nuremberg. In the same year, also in Nuremberg, he published an astronomical magazine with astronomer and publisher Michael Adelbulner titled Commercium litterarium ad astronomiae incrementum inter huius scientiae amatores communi consilio institutum . It included information about future astronomical phenomena worthy of observation, along with news and reviews. After initial complaints that the news was too old (due to the slow posting of the time), Celsius started admitting observations from the readers, but the magazine stopped publication two years later after probably 45 issues. In late 1733 he travelled to Bologna, where he assisted Eustachio Manfredi with his observations. His work was published in Manfredi's book, Liber de gnomon meridian Bononiensi , in 1736. After Bologna he travelled to Rome where again he made observations. Celsius loved Italy and wrote to his mother, saying that he wished he could swap Uppsala for an Italian city so that he would never have to leave.

When Celsius arrived at Paris in late 1734, the scientific community was in the middle of a discussion about the shape of the Earth. Unlike his grandfather, Celsius supported Pierre de Maupertuis, who defended Newton's theoretical argument of an oblate Earth. The Académie des Sciences had decided to send two expeditions, one to Peru near the Equator and one to the Arctic Circle, to measure the length of one degree of the meridian arc. The Academy asked Celsius to make the corresponding observations in Sweden but he had to turn down their request since he had neither the financial support nor the necessary instruments. Celsius, therefore, joined the Arctic Circle expedition, headed by Maupertuis, and it was probably on his suggestion that it was decided to go to Lapland. His grandfather had led an expedition with a similar goal in 1694, but without success.

Celsius was sent on a short trip to London to commission a zenith sector from Graham, a revered instrument maker of the time. During his visit to London, Celsius attended a meeting of the Society of Antiquaries and published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. The expedition departed from Dunkirk, France, in April 1736. In addition to Celsius and Maupertuis, the mathematicians and astronomers Alexis Clairaut, Pierre Charles Le Monnier (1715-1799) and Charles-Étienne Camus were among the party. They arrived at Tornea in the summer of 1736. There, they measured a network of triangles along the river Torne (oriented north to south). During winter, the difference was established using the zenith sector at the northern and southern ends of the network. The expedition returned to Paris in the summer of 1737. Maupertuis describes the contributions of Celsius in his 1738 report of the findings of the expedition La Figure de la Terre [2]:-
Most of these observations are due to the vigilance of M le Monnier and M Celsius, who, in a country where the Sky often refuses observations, were continuously attentive to not allow any of the possible ones to escape.
The results confirmed that Newton was in the right. Celsius took part in the debate which followed, where Jacques Cassini and his followers put into question the accuracy of the observations made during the expedition. Celsius defended them in De Observationibus Pro Figura Tellius Determinanda in Gallia Habitis, Disquisitio (1738), rebutting all their allegations. In it, Celsius shows that, in his previous measures of the meridian in France, Cassini had committed bigger mistakes than the ones he was accusing them of having made. This was confirmed by a later measurement of the French meridian and the results of the Peru expedition confirmed the findings of the Lapland expedition.

Due to the success of the Lapland expedition, Celsius received a pension of 1000 livres per year from the French government. He also earned some international recognition, which generated an increased number of exchanges between Uppsala and the rest of Europe. When he returned to Uppsala, Celsius worked to improve the standing of astronomy in Uppsala and Sweden, which had been in decline. He bought new instruments to bring the collection up to the standards of the time (some he ordered from Graham, in London) and built a new observatory on Svatbäck Street (the previous one, built by Spole, had burnt down in the 1702 fire). It was finished in 1741. Celsius, who never married, lived in the building.

A picture of the Uppsala Observatory is at THIS LINK.

The observatory was later found to be built on unstable foundations, so a new one was built in 1853 further away from the city, where the cathedral would not block the southern sky.

When building a precise thermometer, Celsius invented a new scale divided into 100 degrees, with 0 being the boiling point of water and 100 its freezing point. He explains his choice of fixed points in his 1742 report Observationer om twänne beständiga Grader på en Termometer . To justify his choice, Celsius carried out a number of experiments: he showed the freezing point did not change when varying latitude or pressure and that the boiling point did not depend on the length of the boiling time or the origin of the water. He was aware Fahrenheit had shown that the boiling point depended on pressure, so he experimented with different conditions and concluded that "the change of one inch in barometer reading approximately equals a change of one degree in the boiling point", which is remarkably accurate for the time. He stated that the boiling point of water is reliable as a fixed point only with a defined barometric pressure, which he proposed to be 25.3 inches of mercury. The most important aspect of his scale was the identification of two easily reproducible fixed points. Celsius had studied the numerous temperature scales of the time during his travels through Europe in hopes of creating an international scale. In the above paper, he says:-
Then one can be sure that several such thermometers placed in the same air, will always show the same degree, for instance a thermometer made in Paris, will show the same height as a thermometer made in Uppsala at the same heat.
The scale, which he used for the first time on 25 December 1741, became widely utilised after his death, but its orientation was reversed (0 degrees Celsius is now the freezing point of water, while 100 degrees is its boiling point).

Celsius continued his astronomical studies during his time in Uppsala, sometimes in collaboration with his contacts in Paris. He studied the timing of eclipses of the moons of Jupiter (De Satelliti Bus Jovis , 1741) and proposed a theory for the evolution of the stars (he thought stars were once planets like Mars which started glowing once all water evaporated), among other topics. Along with Olof Hiorter (1696-1750), he was one of the first to find a correlation between compass deviations and the aurora borealis. He also tried to covert Sweden to the Gregorian calendar, though he was unsuccessful in this regard. Celsius served as secretary of the Royal Society of Sciences at Uppsala until his death and was responsible for reviving the Society when he returned to Uppsala in 1737 after the Lapland expedition.

Celsius also endeavoured to create a star catalogue and for this he wrote Constellatione Tauri , 1743, and Constellatione Leonis , 1741, among other works. He intended to begin with the zodiac constellations since a more accurate determination of these was necessary in order to improve the solar, lunar and planetary tables. Unfortunately the Uppsala Observatory was not well suited for this task, as the stars of the zodiac never rise high above the horizon and observing on bright summer nights was troublesome. On the other hand, the view to the south was obscured by the cathedral and the hill. For a long time Celsius hesitated unsure whether to set up the classical instrument for this work at the observatory or at his home in Sävja. His death due to tuberculosis in 1744, at not yet age 43, did not allow him to complete this project. His health had degenerated because of his expeditions in harsh conditions and continuous observations in the cold of the night. He died at 7 o'clock in the morning on 25 April and was buried in the Old Uppsala Churchyard.

We quote from [11] regarding Celsius's character:-
Celsius was a versatile man. He wrote Swedish and Latin verses. Always happy and cheerful, no matter how busy he was, he never seemed to be in a hurry.


References (show)

  1. P Collinder, Swedish Astronomers 1477-1900 (Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis 19) (Uppsala, Sweden, 1970).
  2. P de Maupertuis & al., La Figure de la Terre (Paris, 1739).
  3. N V E Nordenmark, Anders Celsius, professor i Uppsala, 1701-1744 (Almqvist & Wiksells, Uppsala, 1936).
  4. R Outhier, Journal d'un voyage au Nord en 1736 et 1737 (Paris, 1744).
  5. O Beckman, Anders Celsius and the fixed points of the Celsius scale, European Journal of Physics 18 (1997), 169-75. http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0143-0807/18/3/007/pdf
  6. O Beckman, Anders Celsius, Elementa 84 (4) (2001), 174-180.
  7. Biography of Anders Celsius, Uppsala University. https://www.uu.se/en/about-uu/history/celsius/
  8. The Editors, Anders Celsius, Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Anders-Celsius
  9. J Eames, An Account by John Eames, F.R.S. of a Dissertation, Containing Remarks upon the Observations Made in France, in Order to Ascertain the Figure of the Earth, by Mr Celsius, Intituled, De Observationibus Pro Figura Telluris Determinanda, in Gallia Habitis, Disquisitio. Auctore Andrea Celsio, Philosophical Transactions 41 (1739-1741), 371-382. https://www.jstor.org/stable/104298
  10. H J Heyman, Nils Celsius, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon 8 (1929), 242. https://sok.riksarkivet.se/Sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=14762
  11. H J Heyman, Anders Celsius, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon 8 (1929), 266. https://sok.riksarkivet.se/Sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=14758
  12. T Hockey and R S Jarrell, Celsius, Anders, in T Hockey, V Trimble and T R Williams (eds.), Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers (Springer Publishing, New York, 2014). https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007%2F978-0-387-30400-7_254
  13. G Holmberg, Anders (Andreas) Spole, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon 33 (2007-11), 41. https://sok.riksarkivet.se/Sbl/Presentation.aspx?id=20008
  14. H C Stempels, Anders Celsius' contributions to meridian arc measurements and the establishment of an astronomical observatory in Uppsala, Baltic Astronomy 20 (2011), 179-85. https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/astro.2011.20.issue-2/astro-2017-0281/astro-2017-0281.pdf

Additional Resources (show)

Other pages about Anders Celsius:

  1. The Uppsala Observatory
  2. Miller's postage stamps

Other websites about Anders Celsius:

  1. Mathematical Genealogy Project

Honours (show)

Honours awarded to Anders Celsius

  1. Lunar features Crater Celsius

Cross-references (show)


Written by I J Falconer, J G Mena, J J O'Connor, T S C Peres, E F Robertson, University of St Andrews.
Last Update November 2018