Periodic Reporting for period 2 - SN1604 (The Ophiucus Supernova: Post-Aristotelian Stargazing in the European Context (1604-1654))
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-01-01 do 2023-12-31
More specifically, however, the SN1604 research starts from a comprehensive "corpus", or set, of primary sources, which had been assembled in its entirety at the beginning of the project. Hence, a couple of treatises on the "new star" by Raffaello Gualterotti (1544-1638) have been selected as the first object of study for their contextual relevance. A commented edition of these neglected works is currently in progress. A second edition in preparation is the Discorso on the new star by Lodovico delle Colombe (Florence, 1606).
On this background, the main and somehow surprising result of the research project has been the attribution of a pseudonymous astronomical treatise on the “new star” to none less than Galileo Galilei. The attribution was possible thanks to the discovery and analysis of neglected documents at the Biblioteca Nazionale in Florence in the course of the archival survey performed by the P.I. In the past Galileo was suspected as the author of the treatise, although his debated role could not be confirmed without the newly retrieved documentary evidence. Therefore the commented edition of the authentic but overlooked work by Galileo has been set on top of the research agenda of the SN1604 project. The edition is anticipated by a peer-reviewed article about the attribution process in the strict sense.
As planned, the P.I. has received one-to-one training in the fields of archival conservation, history of Renaissance astronomy, and digital humanities. Moreover, several talks on topics related to the research project have been given at seminar meetings, interdisciplinary workshops and international conferences. In particular, a workshop and a conference on topics related to SN1604 have been organized and hosted at the P.I.'s beneficiary institution in 2023.
A sequence of online notices, interviews and press releases has accompanied the implementation of the research project for its public fruition. A series of communication and public engagement activities have been offered as well, including the theatrical staging and adaptation of a vernacular comedy on the new star by Galileo Galilei on the occasion of the 2022 edition of the Researchers' Night.
Now the new collection of sources under analysis can provide a quantitatively and qualitatively different background for a general historiographical re-assessment of the Ophiucus supernova and its significance. The collected "corpus" extends up to five decades after the first outburst, when the main topic of discussion of stellar astronomy shifted to the new scientific frontier on variable stars; it covers contributions coming from all over Europe without limiting itself to those by astronomers in the strict sense, taking into considerations works of literature, medicine, meteorology and astrology, among others. In this way, more influential and epoch-making accounts of the stellar novelty will gain a new and richer contextualization, improving our understanding of their original conception. In short, this more ample assembly of documents would confirm through a wider range of sources Thorndike's claim that the explosion of a supernova was more of a shock to Europe than Copernicus' theories (Thorndike 1941, VI: 68).