Background
Paucker was born in the small Estonian village of Simuna.
Paucker was born in the small Estonian village of Simuna.
University of Tartu.
In 1805, he began his studies in astronomy and physics at the University of Dorpat, where his professors included Georg Friedrich Parrot and Johann Wilhelm Andreas Pfaff. Between 1808–1809, Paucker took part in the surveying of the Emajõgi river which was the first geodetic expedition On the territory of Estonia. In 1809 he contributed to the construction of the first optical telegraph line in Russia from Saint St. Petersburg to Tsarskoye Selo.
In 1811, Paucker took over as a lecturer at the University of Dorpat, succeeding Ernst Friedrich Knorre.
In 1813 he was awarded his Doctor of Philosophy for a thesis in solid physics titled De nova explicatione phaenomeni elasticitatis corporum rigidorum. Paucker left Dorpat in 1813 and stayed the rest of his life in Mitau where he was a professor of mathematics at the Mitau Gymnasium and an organizer of the first scientific society in Latvia, the Kurland Society of Literature and Arts.
Russian Academy of Sciences.