Francesco Fontana

The basics

Quick Facts

A.K.A.Francesco Girolamo Learco Fontana Checco
A.K.A.Francesco Girolamo Learco Fontana Checco
Gender
Male
Birth19 December 1943, Bassano del Grappa
Age81 years
The details

Biography

Francesco Fontana (1580–c. 1656) was an Italian lawyer (University of Naples ) and an astronomer.
He created woodcuts showing the Moon and the planets as he saw them through a self-constructed telescope. In 1646 he published most of them in the book Novae coelestium terrestriumq[ue] rerum observationes, et fortasse hactenus non vulgatae. In 1645, he claimed to have observed a satellite of Venus (Paul Stroobant demonstrated in 1887 that all similar observations were not related to a putative satellite of Venus).
The lunar crater Fontana and the crater Fontana on Mars are named in his honor.
Note: See Donato Creti for paintings of planets from the next century.

Microscope

Fontana also claimed to have invented the compound microscope (two or more lenses in a tube) in 1618, but the invention is generally credited to one of three or more Dutch lens-makers: Cornelis Drebbel, Zacharias Jansen (or Jansz) or his father Hans Zansz.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.