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Page vii
ANCIENT AstroNOMY-CHINESE AND CHAL4. THE REIGN OF EPICYCLEs —
FROM PTOLEMY TO COPERNICUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BOOK II THE
DYNAMICAL PERIOD . Discovery OF THE TRUE SOLAR SystEM — Tycho
BRAHE — KEPLE ...
ANCIENT AstroNOMY-CHINESE AND CHAL4. THE REIGN OF EPICYCLEs —
FROM PTOLEMY TO COPERNICUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BOOK II THE
DYNAMICAL PERIOD . Discovery OF THE TRUE SOLAR SystEM — Tycho
BRAHE — KEPLE ...
Page ix
With portrait of Tycho Brahe, instruments, etc., painted on the wall; showing
assistants using the sight, watching the clock, and recording. (From the author's
copy of the Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica). PoRt.RAIT OF JOHANNEs
KEPLER .
With portrait of Tycho Brahe, instruments, etc., painted on the wall; showing
assistants using the sight, watching the clock, and recording. (From the author's
copy of the Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica). PoRt.RAIT OF JOHANNEs
KEPLER .
Page 29
Something of this sort had been proposed by the Egyptians (we are told by
Cicero and others), and was accepted by Tycho Brahe; and was as true a
representation of the relative motions in the solar system as when we suppose
the sun to be ...
Something of this sort had been proposed by the Egyptians (we are told by
Cicero and others), and was accepted by Tycho Brahe; and was as true a
representation of the relative motions in the solar system as when we suppose
the sun to be ...
Page 32
We must here notice that at this stage Copernicus was actually confronted with
the system accepted later by Tycho Brahe, with the earth fixed. But he now
recalled and accepted the views of Pythagoras and others, according to which
the sun is ...
We must here notice that at this stage Copernicus was actually confronted with
the system accepted later by Tycho Brahe, with the earth fixed. But he now
recalled and accepted the views of Pythagoras and others, according to which
the sun is ...
Page 34
Copernicus made this rotation of the earth's axis about the pole of the ecliptic
retrograde * Kepler tells us that Tycho Brahe was pleased (i.e., opposite to the
orbital revolution), and by making it. with this device, and adapted it to his own
system.
Copernicus made this rotation of the earth's axis about the pole of the ecliptic
retrograde * Kepler tells us that Tycho Brahe was pleased (i.e., opposite to the
orbital revolution), and by making it. with this device, and adapted it to his own
system.
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accurate Airy ancient Astronomer Royal astronomical units bright calculations Cape catalogue centre century Chaldaeans Chinese comet Copernicus diameter discovered discovery earth Egyptian epicycles equatorial error excentric explain fact fixed stars Galileo Greenwich Halley heavenly bodies heavens heliometer Hipparchus History of Astronomy Huggins instruments JOHANNEs KEPLER John Herschel Jupiter Jupiter's Kepler Laplace Lick Observatory light line of apses line of sight lunar Mars mathematical mean distance measured ment Mercury meteor miles a second moon nebulae Newton º º observations Observatory orbit parallax period photographic physical planet planetary pole position predicted proper motion proved Ptolemy R. S. Phil records refractor retrograde retrograde motion revolving round ring rotation satellites Saturn seems showing Sir William Herschel Sirius solar eclipse solar system spectra spectroscope spectrum sphere spots stellar sun-spot supposed tables telescope theory tion Trans Tycho Brahe universal gravitation Uranus velocity Venus Verrier
Popular passages
Page 67 - that every particle of matter in the universe attracts every other particle, with a force whose direction is that of the line joining the two, and whose magnitude is directly as the product of their masses, and inversely as the square of their distances from each other.
Page 26 - So he sate and cunningly guided the craft with the helm, nor did sleep fall upon his eyelids, as he viewed the Pleiads and Bootes, that setteth late, and the Bear, which they likewise call the Wain, which turneth ever in one place, and keepeth watch upon Orion, and alone hath no part, in the baths of Ocean. This star, Calypso, the fair goddess, bade him to keep ever on the left as he traversed the deep.
Page 53 - The third, viz. that the squares of the periodic times are proportional to the cubes of the mean distances...
Page 79 - Wherefore if according to what we have already said it should return again about the year 1758, candid posterity will not refuse to acknowledge that this was first discovered by an Englishman.
Page 122 - ... They have not been regarded as so successful as his geometrical analysis of the observed phenomena. It is only just to add that he himself did not attach equal weight to them ; for in answer to objections urged by Lalande to his theory that the spots are depressions, Wilson wrote thus in 1783 : — ' Whether their first production and subsequent numberless changes depend upon the eructation of elastic vapours from below, or upon eddies or whirlpools commencing at the surface, or upon the dissolving...
Page 51 - He then said boldly that it was impossible that so good an observer as Tycho could be wrong by eight minutes* and added, " out of these eight minutes we will construct a new theory that will explain the motions of all the planets.