1603 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1603 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Contents
Astronomy
- Johann Bayer publishes the star atlas Uranometria, the first to cover the entire celestial sphere,[1] and introducing a new system of star designation which becomes known as the Bayer designation.
- Dutch explorer Frederick de Houtman publishes his observations of the southern hemisphere constellations.[2]
Exploration
- Acadia, the French colony in North America, is founded.
Mathematics
- Pietro Cataldi finds the sixth and seventh perfect numbers.[3]
Medicine
- Girolamo Fabrici studies leg veins and notices that they have valves which only allow blood to flow toward the heart.
Institutions
- Accademia dei Lincei, the oldest scientific academy in the world, is founded in Rome by Federico Cesi.
Publications
- Johannes Huser of Waldkirch publishes a collected edition of Paracelsus's works.
Births
- September 15 – John Jonston, Polish naturalist and physician (died 1675)
- Abel Tasman, Dutch explorer (died 1659)
Deaths
- February 23 – François Viète, French mathematician (born 1540)
- Robert Alaine, English astronomer (born 1558)