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Wikipedia

Joseph Petzval

Joseph Petzval[4] (6 January 1807 – 17 September 1891[5]) was a mathematician, inventor, and physicist best known for his work in optics. He was born in the town of Szepesbéla in the Kingdom of Hungary (in German: Zipser Bela, now Spišská Belá in Slovakia).[1][2][3][6]

Joseph Petzval
Born(1807-01-06)6 January 1807
Szepesbéla/Zipser Bela, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire (today Spišská Belá, Slovakia)
Died17 September 1891(1891-09-17) (aged 84)
NationalitySlovak[1][2][3]
CitizenshipKingdom of Hungary[1][2][3]
Known forPetzval field curvature
Contributions to geometrical optics, photography, cinematography
Scientific career
FieldsPhysics
InstitutionsUniversity of Budapest
University of Vienna

Petzval studied and later lectured at the Institutum Geometricum (currently Budapest University of Technology and Economics) in Buda (today part of Budapest). He headed the Institute of Practical Geometry and Hydrology/Architecture between 1841 and 1848. Later in life, he accepted an appointment to a chair of mathematics at the University of Vienna. Petzval became a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1873.

Petzval is considered to be one of the main founders of geometrical optics, modern photography and cinematography. Among his inventions are the Petzval portrait lens and opera glasses, both still in common use today. He is also credited with the discovery of the Laplace transform[citation needed] and is also known for his extensive work on aberration in optical systems.

Early life edit

In 1801, Joseph Petzval's father married the Zipser-German Susanne Kreutzmann, who was born in Szepesbéla, Kingdom of Hungary, a daughter of the previous teacher at the same school in Szepesbéla. The couple brought up six children: Gustáv Adolf (1800–1803), who died prematurely; Nestor Aemilianus (1804–1806); Joseph Maximilián (1807 - 1891); Petrol Baltazár (1809–1889); and three daughters. In 1810, the family moved to Késmárk (in German: Käsmark, today Kežmarok, Slovakia) and in 1819 to Lőcse (in German: Leutschau, today Levoča, Slovakia).

The entire family shared an aptitude for technology. Joseph's father worked as a teacher at the evangelical school in Szepesbéla, as well as an organist in Szepesbéla and later in Késmárk. He was also a conductor and a geodesist in Lőcse. He had a reputation as an outstanding musician and composer, who was also gifted mechanically. In 1824, he was awarded two patents: one for improvements to the pendulum clock and the other for a "polygraph" (typewriter). Petzval's brother, Petrol Baltazár Petzval, was a well-respected mathematician, engineer and astronomer.

Education edit

Joseph Petzval attended elementary school in Késmárk, and began his secondary school studies in Késmárk and Podolin (in German: Pudlein, now Podolínec, Slovakia). On 1 October 1819 he returned to his family in Lőcse, and entered high school. Both in elementary school and high school he ranked among the best in his class in the subjects of Latin (the official language of the Kingdom of Hungary) and religion; however, he struggled with his Hungarian. Before arriving at Lőcse, he was also very weak in mathematics. In Lőcse, however, he clearly improved in this discipline.

One anecdote told about Petzval is as follows: When his family had already decided to make a shoemaker out of Petzval, he read the book Analytic Paper on the Elements of Mathematics by the German mathematician Hauser over the summer holidays, just after completing his fourth class in elementary school. He was preparing to undergo a repeat class in mathematics. After Petzval finished the book, the child who had been a weak math pupil swiftly became a math genius.

After finishing high school, Petzval decided to move to the Institutum Geometricum, the engineering faculty of the Pester University. Before that, he had to complete a two-year lyceum, which he attended from 1823 to 1825 in Kassa (in German: Kaschau, today Košice, Slovakia). When he arrived there in 1823, Petzval was already well-versed in the subjects of Latin, mathematical analysis, classical literature and stylistics. In addition to his Slovak he was able to speak perfectly in Czech, German and Hungarian. With his father's assistance, he also learned French and English.[7]

Further studies and career edit

After completing the Lyceum, Petzval worked for a year as an educator for Count Almássy in the Heves county. In addition to bringing in some urgently needed money, this experience also provided him with important social contacts.

From 1826 to 1828, Petzval studied at the Institutum Geometricum in Buda, and earned an engineering diploma in 1828. In the same year, he joined the graduate degree program of the university, and became the self-appointed adjunct chair for the Physics Department (in 1831). From 1828 to 1835, Petzval simultaneously worked as an urban engineer for the city of Buda—particularly as a specialist in flood abatement and sewers—and studied mathematics, mechanics and practical geometry. He authored an unrealized plan to build a navigation channel around Buda. In 1830, his dam computations saved the city from an inundation caused by the flooding of the Danube. After he received his Ph.D. in 1832, he taught as an associate professor at the university. During this period, he also received a degree in mathematics. In 1835, he was appointed a university professor in higher mathematics.

After being invited to the University of Vienna in 1836, Petzval accepted a position of the chair of mathematics there in 1837, and worked until 1877 as a professor of mathematics. Apart from mathematics, he was also concerned with mechanics, ballistics, optics, and acoustics. His lectures on the theory of algebraic equations, which integrated linear and differential equations with constant and variable coefficients, ballistics, acoustic theory, and other areas were high quality and became well attended.

Petzval moved into a rented abandoned monastery at Kahlenberg mountain. He founded his own glass-sharpening workshop there. His lenses became world-famous because Petzval was also a skillful lens sharpener and precision mechanic.

In 1840, he designed his famous portrait lens. 1845 brought disputes with the entrepreneur Peter Wilhelm Friedrich von Voigtländer (1812–1878) over who had the right to produce Petzval's lenses. In 1859, Petzval's home was broken into, and his manuscripts — a result of many years of research — were destroyed. Petzval never managed to reconstruct the lost documents. His most refined technical book on optics, lost with his manuscripts, would never appear in print. From then on, he primarily concerned himself with acoustics and began to withdraw from society. His enterprise with Carl Dietzler failed in 1862 (see further below); Dietzler died in 1872.

In 1869, at the age of 62, Petzval married his housekeeper, but she died four years later. In 1877, he stopped lecturing, withdrew to a monastery on Kahlenberg, and became a hermit.

 
Joseph Petzval's grave

Petzval died in Vienna in 1891, nearly forgotten, embittered, and destitute. His grave is in the Viennese central cemetery. His bitterness at the end of his life can probably be traced, on the one hand, to his continuing controversy with Voigtländer, the loss of his manuscripts, and his business failure; and on the other hand, to the fact that he was never really acknowledged for his lifelong work in the field of optics. Just before his death, Petzval was reported to have said:

"I defeated the light, I have it firmly in hand, because there is much darkness in the world too."

Private life and hobbies edit

Petzval was a good sportsman and rider. As a young child, he often traveled with his family to the High Tatras, and was also a dedicated athlete. In Vienna, he was for a long time the best fencer and ring fighter in the city. He also inherited an excellent talent for music from his father. Allegedly, while he was a lecturer in Vienna, he always rode to his lectures on a black Arabian horse.

Petzval never wanted to communicate anything about his private life, and was therefore relatively inscrutable to others during his lifetime. As Dr. Ermenyi described in his book, Dr. Josef Petzval's Life

". . . he went so far as to always insert a bare point, for example, use the appearing annual yearbook of the Imperial Academy of Sciences, in whatever apart from the names of the members the date and the place appear aforementioned to the birth for itself into this column."

At the end of his life he lived in increasingly greater isolation in his "castle" on Kahlenberg, with only his horse for company, although several academies and scholarly societies appointed him a member (member of the Academy of Sciences in Vienna (1846/1849), external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1873), honorary member of the Union of the Czech mathematicians and physicists (1881), carriers of the French Charles Chevalier Platinmedaille, and others).

Disputes edit

Petzval placed very high requirements on himself and others. That was probably connected with his critical, contentious and sarcastic nature, which brought him many conflicts, particularly in the field of mathematics.

Petzval had a controversy with Christian Doppler over problems of acoustics, and Doppler responded in 1852 with a book entitled "Remarks Over the Objections Stated by Professor Petzval Against the Correctness of My Theory".

In particular he was involved in lengthy disputes with the entrepreneur Voigtländer. These began in 1845, when Petzval raised the issue of fraud for the first time. Because Petzval only held a patent in Austria, Voigtländer shifted his production to Braunschweig in Germany, where he produced about 60,000 Petzval lenses in the following 20 years. Petzval for his part co-operated since 1854 with the Austrian optics producer Dietzler. The latter's lenses were marketed in Austria as the "photographic Dialyt", while Voigtländer marketed the lenses in Germany and Austria as the "Voightländer Orthoskop". After further interference by Voigtländer, Dietzler went bankrupt in 1862. When Petzval threatened legal action, Voigtländer closed his Austrian plant in 1866. Petzval could have then transferred the marketing, but he had renounced working with optics after his home was robbed in 1859 and worked instead on acoustics. In 1862, he also stopped lecturing on optics.

Discoveries and inventions edit

Optics edit

 
Diagram of Petzval's 1841 portrait lens - crown glass shaded pink, flint glass shaded blue
 
Petzval lenses
 
Modern Petzval objective lenses from a projector

Petzval's greatest achievements lie in his work with geometric optics. In 1839, Louis Daguerre presented the Daguerreotype, the first commercially successful photographic process. Fox Talbot's calotype was discovered earlier but did not enjoy commercial success. Petzval learned of the invention from his friend, Viennese professor Andreas von Ettingshausen. The daguerreotype was problematic in that it required exposure times as long as 30 minutes to create a portrait. With Ettingshausen's urging, Petzval set up a workshop and laboratory at Kahlenberg in Vienna and, after six months of complex computations, produced designs for improved objective lenses for both portraiture and landscape photography. Because the artillery was one of the few occupations that used advanced mathematical computations at the time, Archduke Ludwig lent eight artillery cannoneers and three corporals to the computational efforts. The calculations these men carried out in tandem with each other have been regarded as an early (albeit human) example of a parallel computer.

Petzval's portrait objective lens (Petzval Porträtobjektiv) was an almost distortionless Anachromatischer vierlinser (double achromatic objective lens, with four lenses in three groups). The luminous intensity of this flat "portrait lens" was substantially higher than the daguerre standard of 1839, the Wollaston Chevalier lens (f/16). The screen f/3.6 with a focal length of 160 mm made crucially shorter exposure times possible — using exposures of only about 15 to 30 seconds compared to the 10 minutes previously. Thus, snapshots became possible for the first time.

The portrait objective lens consisted of a cemented double lens in front (f/5) and a double lens with a gap in the back. The rear double lens was necessary for the correction of spherical and coma errors. The Chevalier lens used two cemented double lenses, but was immediately replaced by the Petzval lens, so that the Petzval Porträtlinse was the first cemented lens in widespread use. The first portrait objective lenses were rather small and had a diameter of 2.6 cm. The 1856 Petzval lenses produced by Dietzler had a diameter of 15 cm and a weight of 15 kg, with which one could make portraits measuring 33 by 42 cm. [1]

In 1840, Petzval allowed the Viennese entrepreneur Peter Wilhelm Friedrich von Voigtländer to produce the lens for a one-time payment of 2,000 guldens, without a patent or a contract, which led later to a lasting controversy between Petzval and Voigtländer. Voigtländer, who had confirmed the process through his own calculations, produced a prototype in May 1840 and began production of the lens for the daguerrotype cameras in 1841, making a fortune in the process. The thermionic cameras were made from brass, using round daguerreotype plates which exposed a diameter of 8 cm. In 1841, 600 of these cameras were manufactured and sold at a price of 120 guldens. Voigtländer received a medal at the world exhibition in Paris for this achievement. These first metal-body cameras were prototypes of today's modern cameras. It took another 50 years until an improved camera became available. Petzval's portrait objective lens was used into the 1920s (often under other names) in cameras and is used today in projectors. The lens played an important role in the development of photography and cinematography.

Even with all its apparent improvements, Petzval was dissatisfied with the lens and, after some improvements, left it for others to produce and patent. The camera with the new landscape objective, produced by Dietzler, possessed a light foldable chamber with double bellows. Petzval never made a commercial profit from the lens.

Among Petzval's other works are the invention of opera glasses, lens system calculations that led to the perfection of a telescope and microscope (1843), computations for efficient binoculars, and construction of new floodlights (1847). His plan for the construction of lighting systems for ships on the Danube could not be carried out, however. His special mirror lamp (Petzval lamp), which made possible a maximum utilization of light energy, was used particularly for the bright projectors developed by Petzval. Petzval can also be regarded as the inventor of the modern unastigmatic lens system, based on records from his estate. Around 1860, Petzval conducted photogrammetric measurements using equipment he had designed. He also proved scientifically that glowing solid compounds emit more light than burning gases. Carl Freiherr Auer von Welsbach later applied this principle to the gas lamp he designed.

Petzval's achievements are used today in cinematography, astronomy, and meteorology. The Astro-Petzval-Objektiv lens is used in astronomy. This objective made a distortion-free illustration of a large part of the sky, as well as permitting photographing of galaxies and star fields. German optics companies (Töpfer, Voigtländerkorrigie, Zeiss) produced the Petzval objective lens until the 1940s. Petzval's largest contributions to optics are his theoretical bases for the construction and correction of optical lens systems. He carried out fundamental work for the theory of aberration in optical systems. A few central terms of this field were later named after Petzval:

  • The Petzval surface is the generally curved image plane of an unadjusted optical system.
  • In the case of adherence to the Petzval condition the Petzval surface is even.

To the regret of physicists, Petzval never released a prepared multi-volume optical work.

Mathematics edit

In mathematics, Petzval stressed practical applicability. He said, "Mankind does not exist for science's sake, but science should be used to improve the conditions of mankind." He worked on applications of the Laplace transformation. His work was very thorough, but not completely satisfying, since he could not use an edge integration in order to invert the transformation. Petzval wrote a paper in two volumes as well as a long work on this subject. A controversy with the student Simon Spritzer, who accused Petzval of plagiarism of Pierre-Simon Laplace, led the Spritzer-influenced mathematicians George Boole and Jules Henri Poincaré to later name the transformation after Laplace. Petzval tried to represent practically everything in his environment mathematically. Thus he tried to mathematically model fencing or the course of the horse. His obsession with mathematics finally led to the discovery of the portrait objective.

Acoustics edit

In the study of acoustics, Petzval was particularly concerned with string oscillations, differential equations of the string oscillations, and the mathematical theory of musical instruments. He designed a piano with three key sequences. Petzval developed a theory of the oscillations of strained strings as well as his own theory of tone systems.

Memorials edit

The Jozef Maximilián Petzval Museum of the History of Photography and Cinematography, part of the Slovak Technical Museum of Košice, is located in Spišská Belá, in the house where Petzval was born. The crater Petzval on the far side of the Moon is named after him, as are roads and statues in modern Slovakia, Austria, and Hungary.

In 1980 a planetoid (3716 Petzval, 1980 TG) was named after Petzval upon the request of the astronomical institute in Tatranská Lomnica and Czech scientists; Petzval's portrait objective lens made possible the discovery of many planetoids at the end of the 19th century. The Austrian Board of Education has bestowed the "Petzval Medal" for special achievements in the area of scientific photography since 1928.

Ethnicity and name edit

The Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Acta technica, Volume 25, 1959 notes a dispute over the ethnicity of Petzval. According to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences:

"The Austrians declared Petzval to having been an Austrian, the Czechs tried to prove his Bohemian origin, the Slovaks claiming to the fact that the County of Szepes, where Petzval was born, is now in Slovakia, so he must have been a Slovak."

The same publication also cites Petzval's expressed claim to being Hungarian and a "...loyal son of the fatherland"[9] As mentioned earlier, he struggled with Hungarian language while at school, since it was not his mother tongue. Petzvals contemporaries widely accepted that he was Hungarian, as Petzval always proclaimed. "He lived 54 years of his life in Vienna, but could not become, and did not become a Viennese - devotedly to his native country, he remained a Hungarian." - told Lueger, mayor of Vienna, at Petzval's burial.[10]

Works edit

  • Bericht über die Ergebnisse einiger dioptrischen Untersuchungen (Pest, 1843)
  • Eigenschaften einer guten Camera-Obscura (Wien, 1847)
  • Integration der linearen Differenzialgleichungen mit Constanten und veränderlichen Coefficienten, I–II. (Wien, 1853–1859)
  • Berichte über optische Untersuchungen (Wien, 1857)
  • Über das neue Landschaft – als Fernobjektiv (Wien, 1858)
  • Theorie der Störungen der Stützlinien (bei Gewölben und Hängebrücken) (Leipzig, 1904–1905)
  • Theorie der Tonsysteme (Leipzig, 1904–1905)
  • Aus den Vorlesungen über Ballistik. Ein Beitr. zur Geschichte der Ballistik (Leipzig, 1908)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Lance Day; Ian McNeil (1996). Biographical dictionary of the history of technology. Taylor & Francis. p. 554. ISBN 9780415060424. Retrieved 2009-05-16.
  2. ^ a b c Leonard Gaunt (1969). The Focal encyclopedia of photography. Michigan University: Focal Press. p. 1076.
  3. ^ a b c Michael R. Peres; Mark Osterman; Grant B. Romer; Nancy M. Stuart; J. Tomas Lopez (2007). The Concise Focal Encyclopedia of Photography: From the First Photo on Paper to the Digital Revolution. Focal Press. p. 28. ISBN 9780240809984. Retrieved 2009-05-17.
  4. ^ German: Josef Maximilian Petzval; Hungarian: Petzvál József Miksa; Slovak: Jozef Maximilián Petzval
  5. ^ Wiener Zeitung, 23 September 1891, p. 11
  6. ^ Clarke, Graham (1997). Oxford history of art; The photograph. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. p. 239. ISBN 9780192842008.
  7. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-05-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ Magyar Tudományos Akadémia (1 January 1959). Acta technica. Magyar Tudomoányos Akadémia. Retrieved 3 April 2012.
  9. ^ Acta technica, page 215
  10. ^ Petzval József, Mai Manó Ház Photography Museum, Budapest

External links edit

  • Article on Petzval Lenses
  • www.info.omikk.bme.hu (in Hungarian)
  • (in Hungarian)
  • (in Hungarian)
  • Joseph Petzval at Monoskop.org

joseph, petzval, january, 1807, september, 1891, mathematician, inventor, physicist, best, known, work, optics, born, town, szepesbéla, kingdom, hungary, german, zipser, bela, spišská, belá, slovakia, born, 1807, january, 1807szepesbéla, zipser, bela, kingdom,. Joseph Petzval 4 6 January 1807 17 September 1891 5 was a mathematician inventor and physicist best known for his work in optics He was born in the town of Szepesbela in the Kingdom of Hungary in German Zipser Bela now Spisska Bela in Slovakia 1 2 3 6 Joseph PetzvalBorn 1807 01 06 6 January 1807Szepesbela Zipser Bela Kingdom of Hungary Austrian Empire today Spisska Bela Slovakia Died17 September 1891 1891 09 17 aged 84 Vienna Austria HungaryNationalitySlovak 1 2 3 CitizenshipKingdom of Hungary 1 2 3 Known forPetzval field curvatureContributions to geometrical optics photography cinematographyScientific careerFieldsPhysicsInstitutionsUniversity of Budapest University of ViennaPetzval studied and later lectured at the Institutum Geometricum currently Budapest University of Technology and Economics in Buda today part of Budapest He headed the Institute of Practical Geometry and Hydrology Architecture between 1841 and 1848 Later in life he accepted an appointment to a chair of mathematics at the University of Vienna Petzval became a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1873 Petzval is considered to be one of the main founders of geometrical optics modern photography and cinematography Among his inventions are the Petzval portrait lens and opera glasses both still in common use today He is also credited with the discovery of the Laplace transform citation needed and is also known for his extensive work on aberration in optical systems Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Education 2 Further studies and career 2 1 Private life and hobbies 2 2 Disputes 3 Discoveries and inventions 3 1 Optics 3 2 Mathematics 3 3 Acoustics 4 Memorials 5 Ethnicity and name 6 Works 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editIn 1801 Joseph Petzval s father married the Zipser German Susanne Kreutzmann who was born in Szepesbela Kingdom of Hungary a daughter of the previous teacher at the same school in Szepesbela The couple brought up six children Gustav Adolf 1800 1803 who died prematurely Nestor Aemilianus 1804 1806 Joseph Maximilian 1807 1891 Petrol Baltazar 1809 1889 and three daughters In 1810 the family moved to Kesmark in German Kasmark today Kezmarok Slovakia and in 1819 to Locse in German Leutschau today Levoca Slovakia The entire family shared an aptitude for technology Joseph s father worked as a teacher at the evangelical school in Szepesbela as well as an organist in Szepesbela and later in Kesmark He was also a conductor and a geodesist in Locse He had a reputation as an outstanding musician and composer who was also gifted mechanically In 1824 he was awarded two patents one for improvements to the pendulum clock and the other for a polygraph typewriter Petzval s brother Petrol Baltazar Petzval was a well respected mathematician engineer and astronomer Education edit Joseph Petzval attended elementary school in Kesmark and began his secondary school studies in Kesmark and Podolin in German Pudlein now Podolinec Slovakia On 1 October 1819 he returned to his family in Locse and entered high school Both in elementary school and high school he ranked among the best in his class in the subjects of Latin the official language of the Kingdom of Hungary and religion however he struggled with his Hungarian Before arriving at Locse he was also very weak in mathematics In Locse however he clearly improved in this discipline One anecdote told about Petzval is as follows When his family had already decided to make a shoemaker out of Petzval he read the book Analytic Paper on the Elements of Mathematics by the German mathematician Hauser over the summer holidays just after completing his fourth class in elementary school He was preparing to undergo a repeat class in mathematics After Petzval finished the book the child who had been a weak math pupil swiftly became a math genius After finishing high school Petzval decided to move to the Institutum Geometricum the engineering faculty of the Pester University Before that he had to complete a two year lyceum which he attended from 1823 to 1825 in Kassa in German Kaschau today Kosice Slovakia When he arrived there in 1823 Petzval was already well versed in the subjects of Latin mathematical analysis classical literature and stylistics In addition to his Slovak he was able to speak perfectly in Czech German and Hungarian With his father s assistance he also learned French and English 7 Further studies and career editAfter completing the Lyceum Petzval worked for a year as an educator for Count Almassy in the Heves county In addition to bringing in some urgently needed money this experience also provided him with important social contacts From 1826 to 1828 Petzval studied at the Institutum Geometricum in Buda and earned an engineering diploma in 1828 In the same year he joined the graduate degree program of the university and became the self appointed adjunct chair for the Physics Department in 1831 From 1828 to 1835 Petzval simultaneously worked as an urban engineer for the city of Buda particularly as a specialist in flood abatement and sewers and studied mathematics mechanics and practical geometry He authored an unrealized plan to build a navigation channel around Buda In 1830 his dam computations saved the city from an inundation caused by the flooding of the Danube After he received his Ph D in 1832 he taught as an associate professor at the university During this period he also received a degree in mathematics In 1835 he was appointed a university professor in higher mathematics After being invited to the University of Vienna in 1836 Petzval accepted a position of the chair of mathematics there in 1837 and worked until 1877 as a professor of mathematics Apart from mathematics he was also concerned with mechanics ballistics optics and acoustics His lectures on the theory of algebraic equations which integrated linear and differential equations with constant and variable coefficients ballistics acoustic theory and other areas were high quality and became well attended Petzval moved into a rented abandoned monastery at Kahlenberg mountain He founded his own glass sharpening workshop there His lenses became world famous because Petzval was also a skillful lens sharpener and precision mechanic In 1840 he designed his famous portrait lens 1845 brought disputes with the entrepreneur Peter Wilhelm Friedrich von Voigtlander 1812 1878 over who had the right to produce Petzval s lenses In 1859 Petzval s home was broken into and his manuscripts a result of many years of research were destroyed Petzval never managed to reconstruct the lost documents His most refined technical book on optics lost with his manuscripts would never appear in print From then on he primarily concerned himself with acoustics and began to withdraw from society His enterprise with Carl Dietzler failed in 1862 see further below Dietzler died in 1872 In 1869 at the age of 62 Petzval married his housekeeper but she died four years later In 1877 he stopped lecturing withdrew to a monastery on Kahlenberg and became a hermit nbsp Joseph Petzval s gravePetzval died in Vienna in 1891 nearly forgotten embittered and destitute His grave is in the Viennese central cemetery His bitterness at the end of his life can probably be traced on the one hand to his continuing controversy with Voigtlander the loss of his manuscripts and his business failure and on the other hand to the fact that he was never really acknowledged for his lifelong work in the field of optics Just before his death Petzval was reported to have said I defeated the light I have it firmly in hand because there is much darkness in the world too Private life and hobbies edit Petzval was a good sportsman and rider As a young child he often traveled with his family to the High Tatras and was also a dedicated athlete In Vienna he was for a long time the best fencer and ring fighter in the city He also inherited an excellent talent for music from his father Allegedly while he was a lecturer in Vienna he always rode to his lectures on a black Arabian horse Petzval never wanted to communicate anything about his private life and was therefore relatively inscrutable to others during his lifetime As Dr Ermenyi described in his book Dr Josef Petzval s Life he went so far as to always insert a bare point for example use the appearing annual yearbook of the Imperial Academy of Sciences in whatever apart from the names of the members the date and the place appear aforementioned to the birth for itself into this column At the end of his life he lived in increasingly greater isolation in his castle on Kahlenberg with only his horse for company although several academies and scholarly societies appointed him a member member of the Academy of Sciences in Vienna 1846 1849 external member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences 1873 honorary member of the Union of the Czech mathematicians and physicists 1881 carriers of the French Charles Chevalier Platinmedaille and others Disputes edit Petzval placed very high requirements on himself and others That was probably connected with his critical contentious and sarcastic nature which brought him many conflicts particularly in the field of mathematics Petzval had a controversy with Christian Doppler over problems of acoustics and Doppler responded in 1852 with a book entitled Remarks Over the Objections Stated by Professor Petzval Against the Correctness of My Theory In particular he was involved in lengthy disputes with the entrepreneur Voigtlander These began in 1845 when Petzval raised the issue of fraud for the first time Because Petzval only held a patent in Austria Voigtlander shifted his production to Braunschweig in Germany where he produced about 60 000 Petzval lenses in the following 20 years Petzval for his part co operated since 1854 with the Austrian optics producer Dietzler The latter s lenses were marketed in Austria as the photographic Dialyt while Voigtlander marketed the lenses in Germany and Austria as the Voightlander Orthoskop After further interference by Voigtlander Dietzler went bankrupt in 1862 When Petzval threatened legal action Voigtlander closed his Austrian plant in 1866 Petzval could have then transferred the marketing but he had renounced working with optics after his home was robbed in 1859 and worked instead on acoustics In 1862 he also stopped lecturing on optics Discoveries and inventions editOptics edit nbsp Diagram of Petzval s 1841 portrait lens crown glass shaded pink flint glass shaded blue nbsp Petzval lenses nbsp Modern Petzval objective lenses from a projectorPetzval s greatest achievements lie in his work with geometric optics In 1839 Louis Daguerre presented the Daguerreotype the first commercially successful photographic process Fox Talbot s calotype was discovered earlier but did not enjoy commercial success Petzval learned of the invention from his friend Viennese professor Andreas von Ettingshausen The daguerreotype was problematic in that it required exposure times as long as 30 minutes to create a portrait With Ettingshausen s urging Petzval set up a workshop and laboratory at Kahlenberg in Vienna and after six months of complex computations produced designs for improved objective lenses for both portraiture and landscape photography Because the artillery was one of the few occupations that used advanced mathematical computations at the time Archduke Ludwig lent eight artillery cannoneers and three corporals to the computational efforts The calculations these men carried out in tandem with each other have been regarded as an early albeit human example of a parallel computer Petzval s portrait objective lens Petzval Portratobjektiv was an almost distortionless Anachromatischer vierlinser double achromatic objective lens with four lenses in three groups The luminous intensity of this flat portrait lens was substantially higher than the daguerre standard of 1839 the Wollaston Chevalier lens f 16 The screen f 3 6 with a focal length of 160 mm made crucially shorter exposure times possible using exposures of only about 15 to 30 seconds compared to the 10 minutes previously Thus snapshots became possible for the first time The portrait objective lens consisted of a cemented double lens in front f 5 and a double lens with a gap in the back The rear double lens was necessary for the correction of spherical and coma errors The Chevalier lens used two cemented double lenses but was immediately replaced by the Petzval lens so that the Petzval Portratlinse was the first cemented lens in widespread use The first portrait objective lenses were rather small and had a diameter of 2 6 cm The 1856 Petzval lenses produced by Dietzler had a diameter of 15 cm and a weight of 15 kg with which one could make portraits measuring 33 by 42 cm 1 In 1840 Petzval allowed the Viennese entrepreneur Peter Wilhelm Friedrich von Voigtlander to produce the lens for a one time payment of 2 000 guldens without a patent or a contract which led later to a lasting controversy between Petzval and Voigtlander Voigtlander who had confirmed the process through his own calculations produced a prototype in May 1840 and began production of the lens for the daguerrotype cameras in 1841 making a fortune in the process The thermionic cameras were made from brass using round daguerreotype plates which exposed a diameter of 8 cm In 1841 600 of these cameras were manufactured and sold at a price of 120 guldens Voigtlander received a medal at the world exhibition in Paris for this achievement These first metal body cameras were prototypes of today s modern cameras It took another 50 years until an improved camera became available Petzval s portrait objective lens was used into the 1920s often under other names in cameras and is used today in projectors The lens played an important role in the development of photography and cinematography Even with all its apparent improvements Petzval was dissatisfied with the lens and after some improvements left it for others to produce and patent The camera with the new landscape objective produced by Dietzler possessed a light foldable chamber with double bellows Petzval never made a commercial profit from the lens Among Petzval s other works are the invention of opera glasses lens system calculations that led to the perfection of a telescope and microscope 1843 computations for efficient binoculars and construction of new floodlights 1847 His plan for the construction of lighting systems for ships on the Danube could not be carried out however His special mirror lamp Petzval lamp which made possible a maximum utilization of light energy was used particularly for the bright projectors developed by Petzval Petzval can also be regarded as the inventor of the modern unastigmatic lens system based on records from his estate Around 1860 Petzval conducted photogrammetric measurements using equipment he had designed He also proved scientifically that glowing solid compounds emit more light than burning gases Carl Freiherr Auer von Welsbach later applied this principle to the gas lamp he designed Petzval s achievements are used today in cinematography astronomy and meteorology The Astro Petzval Objektiv lens is used in astronomy This objective made a distortion free illustration of a large part of the sky as well as permitting photographing of galaxies and star fields German optics companies Topfer Voigtlanderkorrigie Zeiss produced the Petzval objective lens until the 1940s Petzval s largest contributions to optics are his theoretical bases for the construction and correction of optical lens systems He carried out fundamental work for the theory of aberration in optical systems A few central terms of this field were later named after Petzval The Petzval surface is the generally curved image plane of an unadjusted optical system In the case of adherence to the Petzval condition the Petzval surface is even To the regret of physicists Petzval never released a prepared multi volume optical work Mathematics edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In mathematics Petzval stressed practical applicability He said Mankind does not exist for science s sake but science should be used to improve the conditions of mankind He worked on applications of the Laplace transformation His work was very thorough but not completely satisfying since he could not use an edge integration in order to invert the transformation Petzval wrote a paper in two volumes as well as a long work on this subject A controversy with the student Simon Spritzer who accused Petzval of plagiarism of Pierre Simon Laplace led the Spritzer influenced mathematicians George Boole and Jules Henri Poincare to later name the transformation after Laplace Petzval tried to represent practically everything in his environment mathematically Thus he tried to mathematically model fencing or the course of the horse His obsession with mathematics finally led to the discovery of the portrait objective Acoustics edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the study of acoustics Petzval was particularly concerned with string oscillations differential equations of the string oscillations and the mathematical theory of musical instruments He designed a piano with three key sequences Petzval developed a theory of the oscillations of strained strings as well as his own theory of tone systems Memorials editThe Jozef Maximilian Petzval Museum of the History of Photography and Cinematography part of the Slovak Technical Museum of Kosice is located in Spisska Bela in the house where Petzval was born The crater Petzval on the far side of the Moon is named after him as are roads and statues in modern Slovakia Austria and Hungary In 1980 a planetoid 3716 Petzval 1980 TG was named after Petzval upon the request of the astronomical institute in Tatranska Lomnica and Czech scientists Petzval s portrait objective lens made possible the discovery of many planetoids at the end of the 19th century The Austrian Board of Education has bestowed the Petzval Medal for special achievements in the area of scientific photography since 1928 Ethnicity and name editThe Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Acta technica Volume 25 1959 notes a dispute over the ethnicity of Petzval According to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences The Austrians declared Petzval to having been an Austrian the Czechs tried to prove his Bohemian origin the Slovaks claiming to the fact that the County of Szepes where Petzval was born is now in Slovakia so he must have been a Slovak Hungarian Academy of Sciences 8 The same publication also cites Petzval s expressed claim to being Hungarian and a loyal son of the fatherland 9 As mentioned earlier he struggled with Hungarian language while at school since it was not his mother tongue Petzvals contemporaries widely accepted that he was Hungarian as Petzval always proclaimed He lived 54 years of his life in Vienna but could not become and did not become a Viennese devotedly to his native country he remained a Hungarian told Lueger mayor of Vienna at Petzval s burial 10 Works editBericht uber die Ergebnisse einiger dioptrischen Untersuchungen Pest 1843 Eigenschaften einer guten Camera Obscura Wien 1847 Integration der linearen Differenzialgleichungen mit Constanten und veranderlichen Coefficienten I II Wien 1853 1859 Berichte uber optische Untersuchungen Wien 1857 Uber das neue Landschaft als Fernobjektiv Wien 1858 Theorie der Storungen der Stutzlinien bei Gewolben und Hangebrucken Leipzig 1904 1905 Theorie der Tonsysteme Leipzig 1904 1905 Aus den Vorlesungen uber Ballistik Ein Beitr zur Geschichte der Ballistik Leipzig 1908 References edit a b c Lance Day Ian McNeil 1996 Biographical dictionary of the history of technology Taylor amp Francis p 554 ISBN 9780415060424 Retrieved 2009 05 16 a b c Leonard Gaunt 1969 The Focal encyclopedia of photography Michigan University Focal Press p 1076 a b c Michael R Peres Mark Osterman Grant B Romer Nancy M Stuart J Tomas Lopez 2007 The Concise Focal Encyclopedia of Photography From the First Photo on Paper to the Digital Revolution Focal Press p 28 ISBN 9780240809984 Retrieved 2009 05 17 German Josef Maximilian Petzval Hungarian Petzval Jozsef Miksa Slovak Jozef Maximilian Petzval Wiener Zeitung 23 September 1891 p 11 Clarke Graham 1997 Oxford history of art The photograph Vol 1 Oxford University Press p 239 ISBN 9780192842008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2010 05 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia 1 January 1959 Acta technica Magyar Tudomoanyos Akademia Retrieved 3 April 2012 Acta technica page 215 Petzval Jozsef Mai Mano Haz Photography Museum BudapestExternal links editArticle on Petzval Lenses Jozsef Petzval www info omikk bme hu in Hungarian Jozef Petzval Award in Hungarian Jozef Petzval Medal in Hungarian Joseph Petzval at Monoskop org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Petzval amp oldid 1196104173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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