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Marcello Malpighi and Christian Doppler

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2015

Michael W. Davidson*
Affiliation:
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306

Abstract

Type
Microscopy Pioneers
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 2015 

Marcello Malpighi

(1628–1694)

Marcello Malpighi was a seventeenth-century Italian physiologist who directed his microscope toward biological investigations and became one of the greatest microscopists of all time. Many historians regard Malpighi as the father of microscopical anatomy in both animals and plants, although he was considered more of a practical researcher than a theorist. Malpighi was born in Cavalcuore, Italy, near Bologna as the son of an estate owner who became embroiled in a bitter dispute with his neighbors that lasted most of Malpighi’s life.

Malpighi studied Aristotelian philosophy at the University of Bologna while he was very young and graduated as a medical doctor at the age of 25. For most of his career, Malpighi combined an intense inter-est in scientific research with a fond love of teaching. He was invited to correspond with the Royal Society in 1667 by Henry Oldenburg and became a fellow of the society the next year.

Most of Malpighi’s research was published in the form of journal articles to the Royal Society, an unusual practice for the period, but very common among scientists today. His first publication in 1661 announced his observations on the anatomy of the frog lung. While observing dissected lung tissue, Malpighi discovered a network of tiny thin-walled microtubules, which he named capillaries. He went on to hypothesize that capillaries were the connection between arteries and veins that allowed blood to flow back to the heart.

Malpighi turned his attention to a variety of other animals and in 1669 published the results of his work on the silkworm. He discovered that these insects had no lungs but breathed through a row of holes located on the side of their long bodies. Distribution of the air within the insect occurs through a system of tubules that Malpighi termed trachea. His later studies on plants led him to erroneously believe that tiny tubes found in many plants performed the same function as did trachea in insects. Based on this conclusion, Malpighi hypothesized that plants and animals had similar breathing mechanisms.

Malpighi also conducted a number of studies on chick embryo development and made major contributions to the science of embryology. He produced a series of drawings of the embryo as it developed, a revolutionary piece of work at the time. He also discovered papillae (taste buds) while examining human tongues and recognized that the liver had a glandular nature. Malpighi was the first to attempt a thorough study of the fine anatomical details of the brain. Although most of his theories of brain function were incorrect, he did decipher some of the distribution of gray matter in the brain.

Malpighi’s strong interest in the anatomy of plants was a deviation from the mainstream of research during the 1600s, when most scientists studied humans and other animals. His work encouraged other scientists to explore the cells and tissues of plants, and this is primarily the reason he is noted as a great scientist of plant anatomy. After ten years of study, he submitted a paper about his plant work to the Royal Society that summarized his observations. It was published as a book entitled Anatomia Plantarum (Plant Anatomy), which was an exhaustive comparative study of plants containing many excellent drawings. Among Malpighi’s many contributions to plant anatomy was the discovery of stomata, the pores of leaves.

Christian Doppler

(1803–1853)

Christian Johann Doppler was a nineteenth-century physicist and mathematician who is most often remem-bered for his discovery of the Doppler effect, which is central to modern conceptions of sound and light. He was born on November 29, 1803, in Salzburg, Austria, the son of a stonemason. Though it was planned for him to enter the family trade, his chronically poor health pre-vented him from doing so. Instead, he studied mathematics at the Vienna Polytechnic Institute, graduating in 1825. Afterward, he briefly returned to Salzburg before enrolling at the University of Vienna, where he remained until 1829.

Doppler acted as a mathematical assistant and tutor after completing his studies but had extreme difficulty in receiving a professorship. At one point he almost emmigrated to America in hopes of better prospects, but he finally received an offer from the State Secondary School in Prague. A few years later in 1837, Doppler began teaching at the Polytechnic School located in the same city and was formally appointed to a professorship there in 1841. Then, in the final years of his career, Doppler became director of the Institute of Physics at the University of Vienna.

Although often occupied with his teaching duties, Doppler managed to find time for independent research. His earliest work concerned mathematics, but in 1842 Doppler completed and published the paper “On the Colored Light of Double Stars and Certain Other Stars of the Heavens.” Within the work, he proposed that observed frequency of light and sound waves is dependent on how fast the source and observer are moving relative to each other, a phenomenon commonly referred to as the Doppler effect. He also correctly predicted that his theory would some day be used by astronomers to more accurately measure the movements and distances of stars.

Doppler’s ideas were initially received with a certain amount of skepticism, so, in order to support his claims, he devised an extremely unusual experiment. In 1845, with the help of a colleague, Doppler arranged for a train to carry an open car full of trumpeters back and forth along a section of track. Alongside, another group of musicians stood by and recorded their perceptions of the pitch of the instruments. The innovative test proved successful, confirming Doppler’s prediction that as the trumpets approached the musicians heard a higher pitch, which became noticeably lower as the train passed by.

Demonstrating that the Doppler effect also held true for the frequency of light proved more difficult and was never successfully achieved before Doppler’s death in 1853. The first experiment that revealed a Doppler shift in starlight was carried out at the beginning of the twentieth century. Since that time, however, the Doppler effect has proven invaluable for astronomical observations, paving the way for a host of new scientific discoveries and concepts. Most notably, the motions of stars detected through this manner led to the development of the big bang theory of the universe.