David Rittenhouse

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David Rittenhouse
Born April 8, 1732
Paper Mill Run, Pennsylvania
Died June 26, 1796
Occupation Astronomer
Inventor
Mathematician


David Rittenhouse (April 8, 1732June 26, 1796) was a renowned American astronomer, inventor, mathematician, surveyor, scientific instrument craftsman, and public official. Rittenhouse was a member of the American Philosophical Society and the first director of the United States Mint.

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Rittenhouse was born near Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in a small village called Paper Mill Run, located along a stream of the same name, the stream itself a tiny tributary of the Wissahickon Creek. He was self-taught and from a young age showed great ability in science and mathematics. At nineteen years old, he started a scientific instrument shop at his father's farm in West Norriton Township, Pennsylvania. His skill with instruments, particularly clocks, led him to construct two orreries, one of which is currently in the library of the University of Pennsylvania and the other is at Peyton Hall of Princeton University. Rittenhouse was one of the first to build a telescope used in the United States.

His telescope, which utilized natural spider webbing to form the reticle, he used to observe and record part of the transit of Venus across the sun on 1769-06-03, as well as the planet's atmosphere.

In 1784, David Rittenhouse and surveyor Andrew Ellicott and their crew completed the unfinished survey of the Mason Dixon line to the southwest corner of Pennsylvania, five degrees from the Delaware River.

In 1785, Rittenhouse made perhaps the first diffraction grating using 50 hairs between two finely threaded screws, with an approximate spacing of about 100 lines per inch. This was roughly the same technique that Joseph von Fraunhofer used in 1821 for his wire diffraction grating.

In 1813, Rittenhouse's nephew (and American Philosophical Society member) William Barton published a biography, Memoirs of the life of David Rittenhouse. Former President of the United States Thomas Jefferson ordered six copies directly from the author.

Other notable events in Rittenhouse's life include:

In 1825, one of William Penn's original squares in Philadelphia, called 'Southwest Square' (being in the southwest quadrant of the original city plan) was renamed Rittenhouse Square in David Rittenhouse's honor. Further to the west on Walnut Street, University of Pennsylvania houses its Physics and Mathematics departments in the 'DRL'--David Rittenhouse Laboratory.

His great excitement at observing the infrequently-occurring transit of Venus (for which he had prepared for a year) resulted in his fainting during the observation. In addition to the work involved in the preparations, Rittenhouse had also been ill the week before the transit. Lying on his back beneath the telescope, trained at the afternoon sun, he regained consciousness after a few minutes and continued his observations. His account of the transit, published in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, does not mention his fainting, though it is otherwise meticulous in its record.

  • Greenslade, Thomas B., "Wire Diffraction Gratings," The Physics Teacher, February 2004. Volume 42 Issue 2, pp. 76-77. [1]




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Persondata
NAME Rittenhouse, David
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION =Astronomer, Inventor, Mathematician
DATE OF BIRTH April 8, 1732
PLACE OF BIRTH Paper Mill Run, Pennsylvania
DATE OF DEATH June 26, 1796
PLACE OF DEATH
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