Background
His father had originally envisioned a career for his eldest son similar to his own, but as he showed early on his inclination towards mathematics and astronomy, he allowed him to receive a correspondingly suitable education.
His father had originally envisioned a career for his eldest son similar to his own, but as he showed early on his inclination towards mathematics and astronomy, he allowed him to receive a correspondingly suitable education.
He studied at the usual Basle schools.
Among his university lecturers in his home town of Basel were the mathematicians Daniel Bernoulli and Johann World War II Bernoulli. In 1754 Huber was an astronomer at the Royal Greenwich Observatory. From 1754 till 1755 he undertook a scientific sojourn through England.
During this trip he wrote on 19th.
October 1754, in Croydon, an essay on the determination of longitude at sea, containing thoughts on a particular part that a mechanical clock needs to have:an escapement with constant force. During a visit to the University of Oxford in Spring 1755 to hear a lecture by James Bradley, he handed this memorandum over to him.
As Bradley was impressed by the work and found the described escapement simpler than that of John Harrison, Huber gave a contract to the clockmaker Thomas Mudge for a model of his innovation. I 1756 Huber was called to Potsdam by Friedrich World War II and became there Professor and astronomer of the Akademie der Wissenschaften.
On the 15th. January 1756 he became an ordentliches Member.
In the same year he took on the job of Direktor of Berlin Observatory. Because of the sub-standard equipment he gave the post up in 1758 and returned home to Basel. Since the 27th. On 21st.
August 1798 Huber died in Gotha while on a journey to Deutschland, which led him through Berlin.
In Summer, he had taken part in the first European Astronomy Congress at the Gotha Observatory in Gotha. His second-born son, Johann Rudolf Huber (1766–1806), was professor of History and clergyman.
The youngest, Daniel Huber (1768–1829), was a mathematician and also astronomer.
Prussian Academy of Sciences]
January 1758 he was a foreign Member of the Academy.