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Percival Lowell

Percival Lowell (/ˈləl/; March 13, 1855 – November 12, 1916) was an American businessman, author, mathematician, and astronomer who fueled speculation that there were canals on Mars, and furthered theories of a ninth planet within the Solar System. He founded the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, and formed the beginning of the effort that led to the discovery of Pluto 14 years after his death.

Percival Lowell
Percival Lowell during the early-20th century
Born(1855-03-13)March 13, 1855
DiedNovember 12, 1916(1916-11-12) (aged 61)
Resting placeMars Hill, Lowell Observatory
NationalityAmerican
EducationNoble and Greenough School
Alma materHarvard University
Known forMartian canals
Asteroids discovered: 793 Arizona (April 9, 1907)
Scientific career
FieldsAstronomy
Signature

Life and career Edit

Early life and work Edit

 
Percival Lowell c. 1904

Percival Lowell was born on March 13, 1855,[1][2][3] in Boston, Massachusetts, the first son of Augustus Lowell and Katherine Bigelow Lowell. A member of the Brahmin Lowell family, his siblings included the poet Amy Lowell, the educator and legal scholar Abbott Lawrence Lowell, and Elizabeth Lowell Putnam, an early activist for prenatal care. They were the great-grandchildren of John Lowell and, on their mother's side, the grandchildren of Abbott Lawrence.[4][3][5]

Percival graduated from the Noble and Greenough School in 1872 and Harvard College in 1876 with distinction in mathematics.[5] While at Harvard he joined Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. At his college graduation, he gave a speech, considered very advanced for its time, on the nebular hypothesis. He was later awarded honorary degrees from Amherst College and Clark University.[6] After graduation he ran a cotton mill for six years.[3]

 
Lowell (front row, rightmost) in Joseon, before the departure of the first Korean mission to the United States

In the 1880s, Lowell traveled extensively in the Far East. In August 1883, he served as a foreign secretary and counselor for a special Korean diplomatic mission to the United States.[7] He lived in Korea for about two months.[3] He also spent significant periods of time in Japan, writing books on Japanese religion, psychology, and behavior. His texts are filled with observations and academic discussions of various aspects of Japanese life, including language, religious practices, economics, travel in Japan, and the development of personality.

Books by Lowell on the Orient include Noto: An Unexplored Corner of Japan (1891) and Occult Japan, or the Way of the Gods (1894), the latter from his third and final trip to the region. His time in Korea inspired Chosön: The Land of the Morning Calm[3] (1886, Boston). The most popular of Lowell's books on the Orient, The Soul of the Far East (1888), contains an early synthesis of some of his ideas that, in essence, postulated that human progress is a function of the qualities of individuality and imagination.[citation needed] The writer Lafcadio Hearn called it a "colossal, splendid, godlike book."[8] At his death he left with his assistant Wrexie Leonard an unpublished manuscript of a book entitled Peaks and Plateaux in the Effect on Tree Life.[8]

Lowell was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1892.[9] He moved back to the United States in 1893.[3] He became determined to study Mars and astronomy as a full-time career after reading Camille Flammarion's La planète Mars.[10] He was particularly interested in the canals of Mars, as drawn by Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli, who was director of the Milan Observatory. The Boston geologist George Russel Agassiz noted that Lowell made the decision to begin his observations after hearing that Schiaparelli began to experience failing eyesight.[11] Beginning in the winter of 1893–94, using his wealth and influence, Lowell dedicated himself to the study of astronomy, founding the observatory which bears his name.[5] He chose Flagstaff, Arizona Territory, as the home of his new observatory. At an altitude of over 2,100 meters (6,900 feet), with few cloudy nights, and far from city lights, Flagstaff was an excellent site for astronomical observations. This marked the first time an observatory had been deliberately located in a remote, elevated place for optimal seeing which included enhanced image quality, sharpness and steadiness.[11][5] At his Flagstaff observatory Lowell favored the use of smaller telescopes rather than larger ones, believing that they were usually better for viewing fine planetary details.[12] He was assisted in setting up his observatory by William Pickering, another observer of Mars who had noted the lines seen by Schiaparelli as well.[13]

In 1904, Lowell received the Prix Jules Janssen, the highest award of the Société astronomique de France, the French astronomical society. For the last 23 years of his life, astronomy, Lowell Observatory, and his and others' work at his observatory were the focal points of his life.

World War I very much saddened Lowell, a dedicated pacifist. This, along with some setbacks in his astronomical work (described below), undermined his health and contributed to his death from a stroke on November 12, 1916, aged 61.[14] Lowell is buried on Mars Hill near his observatory.[15] Lowell claimed to "stick to the church" though at least one current author describes him as an agnostic.[16]

Canals of Mars Edit

 
Martian canals depicted by Percival Lowell

For some fifteen years (1893 to about 1908) Lowell studied Mars extensively, making intricate drawings of the surface markings as he perceived them. Lowell published his views in three books: Mars (1895), Mars and Its Canals (1906), and Mars As the Abode of Life (1908). With these writings, Lowell more than anyone else popularized the long-held belief that these markings showed that Mars sustained intelligent life forms.[17][18]

His works include a detailed description of what he termed the "non-natural features" of the planet's surface, including especially a full account of the "canals," single and double; the "oases," as he termed the dark spots at their intersections; and the varying visibility of both, depending partly on the Martian seasons. He theorized that an advanced but desperate culture had built the canals to tap Mars' polar ice caps, the last source of water on an inexorably drying planet.[19]

 
Craters on the Mars surface (frame 11) imaged by Mariner 4 as it flew by Mars in 1965

While this idea excited the public, the astronomical community was skeptical. Many astronomers could not see these markings, and few believed that they were as extensive as Lowell claimed. As a result, Lowell and his observatory were largely ostracized.[20] Although the consensus was that some actual features did exist which would account for these markings,[21] in 1909 the sixty-inch Mount Wilson Observatory telescope in Southern California allowed closer observation of the structures Lowell had interpreted as canals, and revealed irregular geological features, probably the result of natural erosion.[22]

The existence of canal-like features was definitively disproved in the 1960s by NASA's Mariner missions. Mariner 4, 6 and 7, and the Mariner 9 orbiter (1972), did not capture images of canals but instead showed a cratered Martian surface. Today, the surface markings taken to be canals are regarded as an optical illusion.[23] Psychologist Matthew J. Sharps has argued that perception of the canals by Lowell and others could have been the result of a combination of psychological factors, including individual differences, Gestalt reconfiguration, and sociocognitive factors.[24]

Venus spokes Edit

 
Percival Lowell in 1914, observing Venus in the daytime with the 24-inch (61 cm) Alvan Clark & Sons refracting telescope at Flagstaff, Arizona

Although Lowell was better known for his observations of Mars, he also drew maps of the planet Venus. He began observing Venus in detail in mid-1896 soon after the 61-centimetre (24-inch) Alvan Clark & Sons refracting telescope was installed at his new Flagstaff, Arizona observatory. Lowell observed the planet high in the daytime sky with the telescope's lens stopped down to 3 inches in diameter to reduce the effect of the turbulent daytime atmosphere. Lowell observed spoke-like surface features including a central dark spot, contrary to what was suspected then (and known now): that Venus has no surface features visible from Earth, being covered in an atmosphere that is opaque. It has been noted in a 2003 Journal for the History of Astronomy paper and in an article published in Sky and Telescope in July 2003 that Lowell's stopping down of the telescope created such a small exit pupil at the eyepiece, it may have become a giant ophthalmoscope giving Lowell an image of the shadows of blood vessels cast on the retina of his own eye.[25][26]

Pluto Edit

Lowell's greatest contribution to planetary studies came during the last decade of his life, which he devoted to the search for Planet X, a hypothetical planet beyond Neptune. Lowell believed that the planets Uranus and Neptune were displaced from their predicted positions by the gravity of the unseen Planet X.[27] Lowell started a search program in 1906. A team of human computers, led by Elizabeth Williams were employed to calculate predicted regions for the proposed planet. The program initially used a camera 5 inches (13 cm) in aperture.[28] The small field of view of the 42-inch (110 cm) reflecting telescope rendered the instrument impractical for searching.[28] From 1914 to 1916, a 9-inch (23 cm) telescope on loan from Sproul Observatory was used to search for Planet X.[28] Lowell did not discover Pluto but later Lowell Observatory (observatory code 690) would photograph Pluto in March and April 1915, without realizing at the time that it was not a star.[29]

In 1930, Clyde Tombaugh, working at the Lowell Observatory, discovered Pluto near the location expected for Planet X. Partly in recognition of Lowell's efforts, a stylized P-L monogram (♇)[30] – the first two letters of the new planet's name and also Lowell's initials – was chosen as Pluto's astronomical symbol.[27] However, it would subsequently emerge that the Planet X theory was mistaken.[citation needed]

Pluto's mass could not be determined until 1978, when its satellite Charon was discovered. This confirmed what had been increasingly suspected: Pluto's gravitational influence on Uranus and Neptune is negligible, not nearly enough to account for the discrepancies in their orbits.[31] In 2006, Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union.

In addition, the discrepancies between the predicted and observed positions of Uranus and Neptune were found not to be caused by the gravity of an unknown planet. Rather, they were due to an erroneous value for the mass of Neptune. Voyager 2's 1989 encounter with Neptune yielded a more accurate value of its mass, and the discrepancies disappeared when using this value.[32]

Legacy Edit

 
Lowell mausoleum in 2013
 
Coat of Arms of Percival Lowell

Although Lowell's theories of the Martian canals, of surface features on Venus, and of Planet X are now discredited, his practice of building observatories at the position where they would best function has been adopted as a principle.[27] He also established the program and setting which made the discovery of Pluto by Clyde Tombaugh possible.[33] Lowell has been described by other planetary scientists as "the most influential popularizer of planetary science in America before Carl Sagan".[34]

While eventually disproved, Lowell's vision of the Martian canals, as an artifact of an ancient civilization making a desperate last effort to survive, significantly influences the development of science fiction – starting with H. G. Wells' influential 1898 novel The War of the Worlds, which made the further logical inference that creatures from a dying planet might seek to invade Earth.

The image of the dying Mars and its ancient culture was retained, in numerous versions and variations, in most science fiction works depicting Mars in the first half of the twentieth century (see Mars in fiction). Even when proven to be factually mistaken, the vision of Mars derived from his theories remains enshrined in works that remain in print and widely read as classics of science fiction.

Lowell's influence on science fiction remains strong. The canals figure prominently in Red Planet by Robert A. Heinlein (1949) and The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury (1950). The canals, and even Lowell's mausoleum, heavily influence The Gods of Mars (1918) by Edgar Rice Burroughs as well as all other books in the Barsoom series.

Asteroid 1886 Lowell, discovered by Henry Giclas and Robert Schaldach in 1949,[35] as well as crater Lowell on the Moon,[36] and crater Lowell on Mars,[37] were named after him. The Lowell Regio on Pluto was also named in his honor after its discovery by the New Horizons spacecraft in 2015.[38]

On 13 March 2006, Google celebrated Percival Lowell’s 151st Birthday with a doodle. The traffic led to a couple instances of vandalism. [39][40]

Publications Edit

  • The Soul of the Far East (1888)
  • Noto: An Unexplored Corner of Japan (1891)
  • Occult Japan, or the Way of the Gods (1894)
  • Collected Writings on Japan and Asia, including Letters to Amy Lowell and Lafcadio Hearn, 5 vols., Tokyo: Edition Synapse. ISBN 978-4-901481-48-9
  • Chosön: The Land of the Morning Calm; a Sketch of Korea. Ticknor. 1886.
  • Mars (1895)
  • Mars and Its Canals (1906)
  • Mars As the Abode of Life (1908)
  • The Evolution of Worlds (1910) (Full text at   The Evolution of Worlds.)

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Eschner, Kat (March 13, 2017). "The Bizarre Beliefs of Astronomer Percival Lowell". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  2. ^ Agassiz, G.R. (1917). "Percival Lowell (1855-1916)" (PDF). Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 52 (13): 845–847. JSTOR 20025724.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Chosön, the Land of the Morning Calm; a Sketch of Korea". World Digital Library. 1888. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  4. ^ Lowell, Delmar R., The Historic Genealogy of the Lowells of America from 1639 to 1899 (Rutland VT: The Tuttle Company, 1899), 283
  5. ^ a b c d Littmann, Mark (1985). Planets Beyond: Discovering the Outer Solar System. Courier. pp. 62–63. ISBN 0-486-43602-0.
  6. ^ Balik, Rachel (March 13, 2010) Happy Birthday Percival Lowell, First Man to Imagine Life on Mars March 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. findingdulcinea.com
  7. ^ See under Empress Myeongseong Progressives vs Conservatives
  8. ^ a b Leonard, Louise. Percival Lowell: An Afterglow. RG Badger, 1921, pp. 33, 46.
  9. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2019: Chapter L" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  10. ^ Chambers, P. (1999). Life on Mars; The Complete Story. London: Blandford. ISBN 0-7137-2747-0.
  11. ^ a b Schorn, Ronald A. (1998). Planetary astronomy: from ancient times to the third millennium. College Station, TX: Texas A & M University Press. ISBN 0-585-38034-1. OCLC 49414656.
  12. ^ Hoyt, William Graves (1976). Lowell and Mars. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-0435-0. OCLC 2390580.
  13. ^ Plotkin, Howard (1993). "William H. Pickering in Jamaica: The Founding of Woodlawn and Studies of Mars". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 24 (1–2): 101–122. Bibcode:1993JHA....24..101P. doi:10.1177/002182869302400104. S2CID 117637626.
  14. ^ Croswell, Kenneth (1997) Planet Quest: The Epic Discovery of Alien Solar Systems. p. 49. ISBN 0684832526.
  15. ^ McKim, R. (1995). "Astronomy on Mars Hill". Journal of the British Astronomical Society. 105: 69–74.
  16. ^ Strauss, David (2001). Percival Lowell: The Culture and Science of a Boston Brahmin. Harvard University Press. p. 280. ISBN 9780674002913. Though Lowell claimed to 'stick to the church' (doubtless from my early religious training), he was an agnostic and hostile to Christianity.
  17. ^ Kidger, Mark (2005) Astronomical Enigmas: Life on Mars, the Star of Bethlehem, and Other Milky Way Mysteries. p. 110. ISBN 0801880262.
  18. ^ Dunlap, David W. (October 1, 2015). "Life on Mars? You Read It Here First". The New York Times. from the original on October 2, 2015. Retrieved June 17, 2022.
  19. ^ Guthke, Karl S. (1990). The Last Frontier: Imagining Other Worlds from the Copernican Revolution to Modern Fiction. Translated by Helen Atkins. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-1680-9. pp. 355–56.
  20. ^ Croswell, Kenneth (1997) Planet Quest: The Epic Discovery of Alien Solar Systems. p. 48. ISBN 0684832526.
  21. ^ Kidger, Mark (2005) Astronomical Enigmas: Life on Mars, the Star of Bethlehem, and Other Milky Way Mysteries. p. 111. ISBN 0801880262.
  22. ^ Guthke, Karl S. (1990). The Last Frontier: Imagining Other Worlds from the Copernican Revolution to Modern Fiction. Translated by Helen Atkins. Cornell University Press. pp. 356. ISBN 0-8014-1680-9.
  23. ^ Baxter, Stephen (2005). Glenn Yeffeth (ed.). "H.G. Wells' Enduring Mythos of Mars". War of the Worlds: Fresh Perspectives on the H.G. Wells Classic. BenBalla: 186–87. ISBN 1-932100-55-5.
  24. ^ Sharps, Matthew (2018). "Percival Lowell and the Canals of Mars". Skeptical Inquirer. 42 (3): 41–46.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on February 21, 2009. Retrieved June 5, 2008.
  26. ^ Sheehan, W. & Dobbins, T., The spokes of Venus: an illusion explained, Journal for the History of Astronomy ISSN 0021-8286, Vol. 34, Part 1, No. 114, pp. 53–63 (2003) via SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
  27. ^ a b c Rabkin, Eric S. (2005). Mars: a tour of the human imagination. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 95. ISBN 0-275-98719-1.
  28. ^ a b c Tombaugh, C. W. (1946). "The Search for the Ninth Planet, Pluto". Astronomical Society of the Pacific Leaflets. 5 (209): 73–80. Bibcode:1946ASPL....5...73T.
  29. ^ Buie, Marc W. (August 11, 2008). "Orbit Fit and Astrometric record for 134340". SwRI (Space Science Department). Retrieved February 21, 2010.
  30. ^ Symbol:   (in case unicode character not shown in text)
  31. ^ Kutner, Marc Leslie (2003). Astronomy: A Physical Perspective. Cambridge University Press. p. 523. ISBN 0-521-52927-1.
  32. ^ Standage, Tom (2000) The Neptune File: A Story of Astronomical Rivalry and the Pioneers of Planet Hunting. ISBN 0802713637. p. 188
  33. ^ Shaw, H. R. (1994). Craters, Cosmos, and Chronicles: A New Theory of Earth. Stanford University Press. p. 494. ISBN 0-8047-2131-9.
  34. ^ Zahnle, K.; Arndt, Nick; Cockell, Charles; Halliday, Alex; Nisbet, Euan; Selsis, Franck; Sleep, Norman H. (2007). "Emergence of a Habitable Planet". Space Science Reviews. 129 (1–3): 35–78. Bibcode:2007SSRv..129...35Z. doi:10.1007/s11214-007-9225-z. S2CID 12006144.
  35. ^ Schmadel, Lutz D. (2007). "(1886) Lowell". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 151. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-29925-7_1887. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.
  36. ^ "Lunar crater Lowell". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  37. ^ "Martian crater Lowell". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  38. ^ "Lowell Regio". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology Research Program.
  39. ^ Desk, OV Digital (March 12, 2023). "13 March: Remembering Percival Lowell on Birthday". Observer Voice. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  40. ^ Percival Lowell's 151st Birthday, retrieved March 13, 2023

Further reading Edit

  • K., Zahnel (2001). "Decline and Fall of the Martian Empire". Nature. 412 (6843): 209–13. doi:10.1038/35084148. PMID 11449281. S2CID 22725986.
  • R., Crossley (2000). "Percival Lowell and the history of Mars". Massachusetts Review. 41 (3): 297–318.
  • D., Strauss (1994). "Lowell, Percival, Pickering, W. H. and the founding of the Lowell Observatory". Annals of Science. 51 (1): 37–58. doi:10.1080/00033799400200121.
  • J., Trefil (1988). "Turn-of-the-Century American Astronomer Lowell, Percival". Smithsonian. 18 (10): 34–.
  • B., Meyer W. (1984). "Life on Mars is almost Certain + Lowell, Percival on Exobiology". American Heritage. 35 (2): 38–43.
  • S., Hetherington N. (1981). "Lowell, Percival – Professional Scientist or Interloper". Journal of the History of Ideas. 42 (1): 159–61. doi:10.2307/2709423. JSTOR 2709423.
  • C., Heffernan W. (1981). "Lowell, Percival and the Debate over Extraterrestrial Life". Journal of the History of Ideas. 42 (3): 527–30. doi:10.2307/2709191. JSTOR 2709191.
  • Webb G. E. (1980). "The Planet Mars and Science in Victorian America". Journal of American Culture. 3 (4): 573. doi:10.1111/j.1542-734X.1980.0304_573.x.
  • Hoyt W. G.; G., Wesley W. (1977). "Lowell and Mars". American Journal of Physics. 45 (3): 316–17. Bibcode:1977AmJPh..45..316H. doi:10.1119/1.10630.
  • K., Hofling C. (1964). "Percival Lowell and the Canals of Mars". British Journal of Medical Psychology. 37 (1): 33–42. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8341.1964.tb01304.x. PMID 14116519.

External links Edit

  •   Quotations related to Percival Lowell at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Percival Lowell at Wikimedia Commons
  • Works by Percival Lowell at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Percival Lowell at Internet Archive
  • Works by Percival Lowell at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Lowell Observatory
  • BBC Science: Percival Lowell March 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  • Percival Lowell at Library of Congress, with 17 library catalog records

percival, lowell, march, 1855, november, 1916, american, businessman, author, mathematician, astronomer, fueled, speculation, that, there, were, canals, mars, furthered, theories, ninth, planet, within, solar, system, founded, lowell, observatory, flagstaff, a. Percival Lowell ˈ l oʊ el March 13 1855 November 12 1916 was an American businessman author mathematician and astronomer who fueled speculation that there were canals on Mars and furthered theories of a ninth planet within the Solar System He founded the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff Arizona and formed the beginning of the effort that led to the discovery of Pluto 14 years after his death Percival LowellPercival Lowell during the early 20th centuryBorn 1855 03 13 March 13 1855Boston Massachusetts U S DiedNovember 12 1916 1916 11 12 aged 61 Flagstaff Arizona U S Resting placeMars Hill Lowell ObservatoryNationalityAmericanEducationNoble and Greenough SchoolAlma materHarvard UniversityKnown forMartian canalsAsteroids discovered 793 Arizona April 9 1907 Scientific careerFieldsAstronomySignature Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life and work 1 2 Canals of Mars 1 3 Venus spokes 1 4 Pluto 2 Legacy 3 Publications 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and career EditEarly life and work Edit nbsp Percival Lowell c 1904Percival Lowell was born on March 13 1855 1 2 3 in Boston Massachusetts the first son of Augustus Lowell and Katherine Bigelow Lowell A member of the Brahmin Lowell family his siblings included the poet Amy Lowell the educator and legal scholar Abbott Lawrence Lowell and Elizabeth Lowell Putnam an early activist for prenatal care They were the great grandchildren of John Lowell and on their mother s side the grandchildren of Abbott Lawrence 4 3 5 Percival graduated from the Noble and Greenough School in 1872 and Harvard College in 1876 with distinction in mathematics 5 While at Harvard he joined Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity At his college graduation he gave a speech considered very advanced for its time on the nebular hypothesis He was later awarded honorary degrees from Amherst College and Clark University 6 After graduation he ran a cotton mill for six years 3 nbsp Lowell front row rightmost in Joseon before the departure of the first Korean mission to the United StatesIn the 1880s Lowell traveled extensively in the Far East In August 1883 he served as a foreign secretary and counselor for a special Korean diplomatic mission to the United States 7 He lived in Korea for about two months 3 He also spent significant periods of time in Japan writing books on Japanese religion psychology and behavior His texts are filled with observations and academic discussions of various aspects of Japanese life including language religious practices economics travel in Japan and the development of personality Books by Lowell on the Orient include Noto An Unexplored Corner of Japan 1891 and Occult Japan or the Way of the Gods 1894 the latter from his third and final trip to the region His time in Korea inspired Choson The Land of the Morning Calm 3 1886 Boston The most popular of Lowell s books on the Orient The Soul of the Far East 1888 contains an early synthesis of some of his ideas that in essence postulated that human progress is a function of the qualities of individuality and imagination citation needed The writer Lafcadio Hearn called it a colossal splendid godlike book 8 At his death he left with his assistant Wrexie Leonard an unpublished manuscript of a book entitled Peaks and Plateaux in the Effect on Tree Life 8 Lowell was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1892 9 He moved back to the United States in 1893 3 He became determined to study Mars and astronomy as a full time career after reading Camille Flammarion s La planete Mars 10 He was particularly interested in the canals of Mars as drawn by Italian astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli who was director of the Milan Observatory The Boston geologist George Russel Agassiz noted that Lowell made the decision to begin his observations after hearing that Schiaparelli began to experience failing eyesight 11 Beginning in the winter of 1893 94 using his wealth and influence Lowell dedicated himself to the study of astronomy founding the observatory which bears his name 5 He chose Flagstaff Arizona Territory as the home of his new observatory At an altitude of over 2 100 meters 6 900 feet with few cloudy nights and far from city lights Flagstaff was an excellent site for astronomical observations This marked the first time an observatory had been deliberately located in a remote elevated place for optimal seeing which included enhanced image quality sharpness and steadiness 11 5 At his Flagstaff observatory Lowell favored the use of smaller telescopes rather than larger ones believing that they were usually better for viewing fine planetary details 12 He was assisted in setting up his observatory by William Pickering another observer of Mars who had noted the lines seen by Schiaparelli as well 13 In 1904 Lowell received the Prix Jules Janssen the highest award of the Societe astronomique de France the French astronomical society For the last 23 years of his life astronomy Lowell Observatory and his and others work at his observatory were the focal points of his life World War I very much saddened Lowell a dedicated pacifist This along with some setbacks in his astronomical work described below undermined his health and contributed to his death from a stroke on November 12 1916 aged 61 14 Lowell is buried on Mars Hill near his observatory 15 Lowell claimed to stick to the church though at least one current author describes him as an agnostic 16 Canals of Mars Edit Further information Martian canals nbsp Martian canals depicted by Percival LowellFor some fifteen years 1893 to about 1908 Lowell studied Mars extensively making intricate drawings of the surface markings as he perceived them Lowell published his views in three books Mars 1895 Mars and Its Canals 1906 and Mars As the Abode of Life 1908 With these writings Lowell more than anyone else popularized the long held belief that these markings showed that Mars sustained intelligent life forms 17 18 His works include a detailed description of what he termed the non natural features of the planet s surface including especially a full account of the canals single and double the oases as he termed the dark spots at their intersections and the varying visibility of both depending partly on the Martian seasons He theorized that an advanced but desperate culture had built the canals to tap Mars polar ice caps the last source of water on an inexorably drying planet 19 nbsp Craters on the Mars surface frame 11 imaged by Mariner 4 as it flew by Mars in 1965While this idea excited the public the astronomical community was skeptical Many astronomers could not see these markings and few believed that they were as extensive as Lowell claimed As a result Lowell and his observatory were largely ostracized 20 Although the consensus was that some actual features did exist which would account for these markings 21 in 1909 the sixty inch Mount Wilson Observatory telescope in Southern California allowed closer observation of the structures Lowell had interpreted as canals and revealed irregular geological features probably the result of natural erosion 22 The existence of canal like features was definitively disproved in the 1960s by NASA s Mariner missions Mariner 4 6 and 7 and the Mariner 9 orbiter 1972 did not capture images of canals but instead showed a cratered Martian surface Today the surface markings taken to be canals are regarded as an optical illusion 23 Psychologist Matthew J Sharps has argued that perception of the canals by Lowell and others could have been the result of a combination of psychological factors including individual differences Gestalt reconfiguration and sociocognitive factors 24 Venus spokes Edit nbsp Percival Lowell in 1914 observing Venus in the daytime with the 24 inch 61 cm Alvan Clark amp Sons refracting telescope at Flagstaff ArizonaAlthough Lowell was better known for his observations of Mars he also drew maps of the planet Venus He began observing Venus in detail in mid 1896 soon after the 61 centimetre 24 inch Alvan Clark amp Sons refracting telescope was installed at his new Flagstaff Arizona observatory Lowell observed the planet high in the daytime sky with the telescope s lens stopped down to 3 inches in diameter to reduce the effect of the turbulent daytime atmosphere Lowell observed spoke like surface features including a central dark spot contrary to what was suspected then and known now that Venus has no surface features visible from Earth being covered in an atmosphere that is opaque It has been noted in a 2003 Journal for the History of Astronomy paper and in an article published in Sky and Telescope in July 2003 that Lowell s stopping down of the telescope created such a small exit pupil at the eyepiece it may have become a giant ophthalmoscope giving Lowell an image of the shadows of blood vessels cast on the retina of his own eye 25 26 Pluto Edit Lowell s greatest contribution to planetary studies came during the last decade of his life which he devoted to the search for Planet X a hypothetical planet beyond Neptune Lowell believed that the planets Uranus and Neptune were displaced from their predicted positions by the gravity of the unseen Planet X 27 Lowell started a search program in 1906 A team of human computers led by Elizabeth Williams were employed to calculate predicted regions for the proposed planet The program initially used a camera 5 inches 13 cm in aperture 28 The small field of view of the 42 inch 110 cm reflecting telescope rendered the instrument impractical for searching 28 From 1914 to 1916 a 9 inch 23 cm telescope on loan from Sproul Observatory was used to search for Planet X 28 Lowell did not discover Pluto but later Lowell Observatory observatory code 690 would photograph Pluto in March and April 1915 without realizing at the time that it was not a star 29 In 1930 Clyde Tombaugh working at the Lowell Observatory discovered Pluto near the location expected for Planet X Partly in recognition of Lowell s efforts a stylized P L monogram 30 the first two letters of the new planet s name and also Lowell s initials was chosen as Pluto s astronomical symbol 27 However it would subsequently emerge that the Planet X theory was mistaken citation needed Pluto s mass could not be determined until 1978 when its satellite Charon was discovered This confirmed what had been increasingly suspected Pluto s gravitational influence on Uranus and Neptune is negligible not nearly enough to account for the discrepancies in their orbits 31 In 2006 Pluto was reclassified as a dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union In addition the discrepancies between the predicted and observed positions of Uranus and Neptune were found not to be caused by the gravity of an unknown planet Rather they were due to an erroneous value for the mass of Neptune Voyager 2 s 1989 encounter with Neptune yielded a more accurate value of its mass and the discrepancies disappeared when using this value 32 Legacy Edit nbsp Lowell mausoleum in 2013 nbsp Coat of Arms of Percival LowellAlthough Lowell s theories of the Martian canals of surface features on Venus and of Planet X are now discredited his practice of building observatories at the position where they would best function has been adopted as a principle 27 He also established the program and setting which made the discovery of Pluto by Clyde Tombaugh possible 33 Lowell has been described by other planetary scientists as the most influential popularizer of planetary science in America before Carl Sagan 34 While eventually disproved Lowell s vision of the Martian canals as an artifact of an ancient civilization making a desperate last effort to survive significantly influences the development of science fiction starting with H G Wells influential 1898 novel The War of the Worlds which made the further logical inference that creatures from a dying planet might seek to invade Earth The image of the dying Mars and its ancient culture was retained in numerous versions and variations in most science fiction works depicting Mars in the first half of the twentieth century see Mars in fiction Even when proven to be factually mistaken the vision of Mars derived from his theories remains enshrined in works that remain in print and widely read as classics of science fiction Lowell s influence on science fiction remains strong The canals figure prominently in Red Planet by Robert A Heinlein 1949 and The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury 1950 The canals and even Lowell s mausoleum heavily influence The Gods of Mars 1918 by Edgar Rice Burroughs as well as all other books in the Barsoom series Asteroid 1886 Lowell discovered by Henry Giclas and Robert Schaldach in 1949 35 as well as crater Lowell on the Moon 36 and crater Lowell on Mars 37 were named after him The Lowell Regio on Pluto was also named in his honor after its discovery by the New Horizons spacecraft in 2015 38 On 13 March 2006 Google celebrated Percival Lowell s 151st Birthday with a doodle The traffic led to a couple instances of vandalism 39 40 Publications EditThe Soul of the Far East 1888 Noto An Unexplored Corner of Japan 1891 Occult Japan or the Way of the Gods 1894 Collected Writings on Japan and Asia including Letters to Amy Lowell and Lafcadio Hearn 5 vols Tokyo Edition Synapse ISBN 978 4 901481 48 9 Choson The Land of the Morning Calm a Sketch of Korea Ticknor 1886 Mars 1895 Mars and Its Canals 1906 Mars As the Abode of Life 1908 The Evolution of Worlds 1910 Full text at nbsp The Evolution of Worlds See also EditLife on Mars Noto Peninsula Wrexie LeonardReferences Edit Eschner Kat March 13 2017 The Bizarre Beliefs of Astronomer Percival Lowell Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved March 12 2021 Agassiz G R 1917 Percival Lowell 1855 1916 PDF Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 52 13 845 847 JSTOR 20025724 a b c d e f Choson the Land of the Morning Calm a Sketch of Korea World Digital Library 1888 Retrieved June 11 2013 Lowell Delmar R The Historic Genealogy of the Lowells of America from 1639 to 1899 Rutland VT The Tuttle Company 1899 283 a b c d Littmann Mark 1985 Planets Beyond Discovering the Outer Solar System Courier pp 62 63 ISBN 0 486 43602 0 Balik Rachel March 13 2010 Happy Birthday Percival Lowell First Man to Imagine Life on Mars Archived March 15 2009 at the Wayback Machine findingdulcinea com See under Empress Myeongseong Progressives vs Conservatives a b Leonard Louise Percival Lowell An Afterglow RG Badger 1921 pp 33 46 Book of Members 1780 2019 Chapter L PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved March 12 2021 Chambers P 1999 Life on Mars The Complete Story London Blandford ISBN 0 7137 2747 0 a b Schorn Ronald A 1998 Planetary astronomy from ancient times to the third millennium College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 0 585 38034 1 OCLC 49414656 Hoyt William Graves 1976 Lowell and Mars Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 0 8165 0435 0 OCLC 2390580 Plotkin Howard 1993 William H Pickering in Jamaica The Founding of Woodlawn and Studies of Mars Journal for the History of Astronomy 24 1 2 101 122 Bibcode 1993JHA 24 101P doi 10 1177 002182869302400104 S2CID 117637626 Croswell Kenneth 1997 Planet Quest The Epic Discovery of Alien Solar Systems p 49 ISBN 0684832526 McKim R 1995 Astronomy on Mars Hill Journal of the British Astronomical Society 105 69 74 Strauss David 2001 Percival Lowell The Culture and Science of a Boston Brahmin Harvard University Press p 280 ISBN 9780674002913 Though Lowell claimed to stick to the church doubtless from my early religious training he was an agnostic and hostile to Christianity Kidger Mark 2005 Astronomical Enigmas Life on Mars the Star of Bethlehem and Other Milky Way Mysteries p 110 ISBN 0801880262 Dunlap David W October 1 2015 Life on Mars You Read It Here First The New York Times Archived from the original on October 2 2015 Retrieved June 17 2022 Guthke Karl S 1990 The Last Frontier Imagining Other Worlds from the Copernican Revolution to Modern Fiction Translated by Helen Atkins Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 1680 9 pp 355 56 Croswell Kenneth 1997 Planet Quest The Epic Discovery of Alien Solar Systems p 48 ISBN 0684832526 Kidger Mark 2005 Astronomical Enigmas Life on Mars the Star of Bethlehem and Other Milky Way Mysteries p 111 ISBN 0801880262 Guthke Karl S 1990 The Last Frontier Imagining Other Worlds from the Copernican Revolution to Modern Fiction Translated by Helen Atkins Cornell University Press pp 356 ISBN 0 8014 1680 9 Baxter Stephen 2005 Glenn Yeffeth ed H G Wells Enduring Mythos of Mars War of the Worlds Fresh Perspectives on the H G Wells Classic BenBalla 186 87 ISBN 1 932100 55 5 Sharps Matthew 2018 Percival Lowell and the Canals of Mars Skeptical Inquirer 42 3 41 46 SkyandTelescope com News from Sky amp Telescope Venus Spokes An Explanation at Last Archived from the original on February 21 2009 Retrieved June 5 2008 Sheehan W amp Dobbins T The spokes of Venus an illusion explained Journal for the History of Astronomy ISSN 0021 8286 Vol 34 Part 1 No 114 pp 53 63 2003 via SAO NASA Astrophysics Data System ADS a b c Rabkin Eric S 2005 Mars a tour of the human imagination Greenwood Publishing Group p 95 ISBN 0 275 98719 1 a b c Tombaugh C W 1946 The Search for the Ninth Planet Pluto Astronomical Society of the Pacific Leaflets 5 209 73 80 Bibcode 1946ASPL 5 73T Buie Marc W August 11 2008 Orbit Fit and Astrometric record for 134340 SwRI Space Science Department Retrieved February 21 2010 Symbol nbsp in case unicode character not shown in text Kutner Marc Leslie 2003 Astronomy A Physical Perspective Cambridge University Press p 523 ISBN 0 521 52927 1 Standage Tom 2000 The Neptune File A Story of Astronomical Rivalry and the Pioneers of Planet Hunting ISBN 0802713637 p 188 Shaw H R 1994 Craters Cosmos and Chronicles A New Theory of Earth Stanford University Press p 494 ISBN 0 8047 2131 9 Zahnle K Arndt Nick Cockell Charles Halliday Alex Nisbet Euan Selsis Franck Sleep Norman H 2007 Emergence of a Habitable Planet Space Science Reviews 129 1 3 35 78 Bibcode 2007SSRv 129 35Z doi 10 1007 s11214 007 9225 z S2CID 12006144 Schmadel Lutz D 2007 1886 Lowell Dictionary of Minor Planet Names Springer Berlin Heidelberg p 151 doi 10 1007 978 3 540 29925 7 1887 ISBN 978 3 540 00238 3 Lunar crater Lowell Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Research Program Martian crater Lowell Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Research Program Lowell Regio Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Research Program Desk OV Digital March 12 2023 13 March Remembering Percival Lowell on Birthday Observer Voice Retrieved March 13 2023 Percival Lowell s 151st Birthday retrieved March 13 2023Further reading EditK Zahnel 2001 Decline and Fall of the Martian Empire Nature 412 6843 209 13 doi 10 1038 35084148 PMID 11449281 S2CID 22725986 R Crossley 2000 Percival Lowell and the history of Mars Massachusetts Review 41 3 297 318 D Strauss 1994 Lowell Percival Pickering W H and the founding of the Lowell Observatory Annals of Science 51 1 37 58 doi 10 1080 00033799400200121 J Trefil 1988 Turn of the Century American Astronomer Lowell Percival Smithsonian 18 10 34 B Meyer W 1984 Life on Mars is almost Certain Lowell Percival on Exobiology American Heritage 35 2 38 43 S Hetherington N 1981 Lowell Percival Professional Scientist or Interloper Journal of the History of Ideas 42 1 159 61 doi 10 2307 2709423 JSTOR 2709423 C Heffernan W 1981 Lowell Percival and the Debate over Extraterrestrial Life Journal of the History of Ideas 42 3 527 30 doi 10 2307 2709191 JSTOR 2709191 Webb G E 1980 The Planet Mars and Science in Victorian America Journal of American Culture 3 4 573 doi 10 1111 j 1542 734X 1980 0304 573 x Hoyt W G G Wesley W 1977 Lowell and Mars American Journal of Physics 45 3 316 17 Bibcode 1977AmJPh 45 316H doi 10 1119 1 10630 K Hofling C 1964 Percival Lowell and the Canals of Mars British Journal of Medical Psychology 37 1 33 42 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8341 1964 tb01304 x PMID 14116519 External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Percival Lowell nbsp Quotations related to Percival Lowell at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Percival Lowell at Wikimedia Commons Works by Percival Lowell at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Percival Lowell at Internet Archive Works by Percival Lowell at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Lowell Observatory BBC Science Percival Lowell Archived March 7 2017 at the Wayback Machine Percival Lowell at Library of Congress with 17 library catalog records Portals nbsp Biography nbsp United States nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Percival Lowell amp oldid 1179838237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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