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When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis
tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? -- Rich |
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![]() RichD wrote: When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? I guess the answer depends on who you ask. http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=...8&fr=yfp-t-701 Just like Galileo is often credited for claiming the earth went around the sun. His research was based on Copernicus's work, and who knows where Copernicus got the idea. |
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RichD:
When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? Bast: I guess the answer depends on who you ask. Indeed, it does. My dad was first a ship's navigator and then a pilot in his young years. It was he who first told me about the stars. I remember him asking me when I was not very far along in elementary school "Have they taught you yet that Columbus proved that the Earth is round?" "No? Well, they will. Don't make a fuss over it, but they're wrong. Eratosthenes, who lived hundreds of years B.C., knew the Earth was round and he even made an accurate measurement of its circumference. So educated men have known for more than 2,000 years that the Earth is round." I didn't make a fuss over it when the time came in geography class, but I did tell the teacher to check out Eratosthenes in the encyclopedia. (That was a set of about 30 books printed on paper in those days.) I don't have time to do the searching at the moment, but I have to think that ancient natural philosophers, whether in Greece or Persia or China or parts unknown, knew the extent of the Earth's axial tilt. Just about anyone who gave it some thought could figure it out, even if they believed in a geocentric Universe. Otherwise they would have to think that the Universe wobbled as it orbited the Earth. That could be accounted for, but there were people who were smarter than that. -- I agree with almost everything that you have said and almost everything that you will say in your entire life. usenet *at* davidillig dawt cawm |
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On Sep 21, 2:32*am, RichD wrote:
When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? -- Rich Astronomical discoveries are individual rather than communal and the determination you refer to was first proposed by Copernicus himself .It might be off-topic in a forum devoted almost exclusively to magnification in a homocentric setting but here it is anyway - "..the equator and the earth's axis must be understood to have a variable inclination. For if they stayed at a constant angle, and were affected exclusively by the motion of the center, no inequality of days and nights would be observed."Copernicus Chapter 11 De Revolutionibus http://www.daviddarling.info/images/...gs_changes.jpg The great astronomer did not have the benefit of 21st century imaging to modify his approach which comes down to us as the 'no tilt/no seasons' ideology when effectively he is describing equatorial conditions as there is only residual variations in daylight/darkness at the equatorial latitude as opposed to the North and South poles where the variations are extreme.The greater the distance between the rotational orientation and the ecliptic axis of any planet the more polar the conditions or the more equatorial the climate as the distance shrinks - this uses the Arctic/Antarctic circles as a kind of a terrestrial boundary between equatorial and polar conditions so that a reasonable person can see our planet has a largely equatorial climate. The North/South poles act like a beacon for the orbital behavior of the Earth and while it does take a while to become comfortable with the separate rotation to the central Sun as a component of the orbital motion of the Earth,it does produce so many things to discuss.Rather than the awkward 'tilt from the ecliptic', the polar coordinates turn in a circle to the central Sun as indicative of all locations on the planet so that axial precession has to be replaced along with the explanation for the seasons.It is a 100% certainty that a camera trained on the Earth from Mars will witness the Earth's polar coordinates turn through the circle of illumination at the equinox in such a manner - http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...precession.svg Not only have you your answer,you also have the necessary imaging to demonstrate why that 500 year old explanation needs urgent modification in an era where climate is such an issue.I could say that the present climate scientists don't know what they are talking about ,not for any disagreement I have with them,only that the Earth does have a pronounced equatorial climate and it has yet to make its way into the wider community even though it is so much common sense. If the rotational inclination of Uranus was applied to the Earth,the Arctic circle would extend almost to the equator as the Earth would have an almost total polar climate whereas it has,due to its 23 1/2 degree inclination from the ecliptic axis,a largely equatorial climate. |
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On 21/09/2012 02:32, RichD wrote:
When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? A reasonable list of who, what, when and where is online at: http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/c...;filetype=.pdf (I think this link should be public) It reckons Chuo Li, China 1100BC 30 This list misses out Oenepedes, Greece 450BC 24 http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~...Oenopides.html -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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"RichD" wrote in message ...
When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? -- Rich ============================================= You can do it yourself, find a large rock or boulder or standing stone and mark the ground where the tip of the shadow falls. Do that throughout the year and your sundial becomes an astrolabe. http://danny.oz.au/travel/scotland/p...g-stenness.jpg -- This message is brought to you from the keyboard of Lord Androcles, Zeroth Earl of Medway |
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"Davoud" wrote in message ...
RichD: When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? Bast: I guess the answer depends on who you ask. Indeed, it does. My dad was first a ship's navigator and then a pilot in his young years. It was he who first told me about the stars. I remember him asking me when I was not very far along in elementary school "Have they taught you yet that Columbus proved that the Earth is round?" "No? Well, they will. Don't make a fuss over it, but they're wrong. Eratosthenes, who lived hundreds of years B.C., knew the Earth was round and he even made an accurate measurement of its circumference. So educated men have known for more than 2,000 years that the Earth is round." I didn't make a fuss over it when the time came in geography class, but I did tell the teacher to check out Eratosthenes in the encyclopedia. (That was a set of about 30 books printed on paper in those days.) I don't have time to do the searching at the moment, but I have to think that ancient natural philosophers, whether in Greece or Persia or China or parts unknown, knew the extent of the Earth's axial tilt. Just about anyone who gave it some thought could figure it out, even if they believed in a geocentric Universe. Otherwise they would have to think that the Universe wobbled as it orbited the Earth. That could be accounted for, but there were people who were smarter than that. - Not only did educated men know, but they also had built a computer to model it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism Ancient Greek technology was destroyed by Roman barbarians and not duplicated until Victorian England, long after Galileo Galilei challenged the Roman Barbarian Church. - This message is brought to you from the keyboard of Lord Androcles, Zeroth Earl of Medway |
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On Sep 21, 8:30*am, Martin Brown
wrote: On 21/09/2012 02:32, RichD wrote: When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? A reasonable list of who, what, when and where is online at: http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/c..._query?1979A%2... Regards, Martin Brown Years ago you could get away with that stuff but not in front of a genuine astronomer. In antiquity they used a shadow at the Solstice to determine the circumference of the Earth,something quite different than daily orientation.so your referenced paper is not only a non starter,it has all the usual empirical pretension and none of the substance.The same with the Galileo affair,the technical issues as the Pope understood them was far more involved and with greater depth than shown by any of contemporaries and I wouldn't even entertain a discussion here among those for whom magnification constitutes astronomy and a few mathematicians pretending to know something. For a more comprehensive and accurate,do you hear this Brown, an accurate use of a shadow at the solstice,there are only a very few accurate perspectives and Stecchini,apart from his few quirks,happens to be one of them - "Eratosthenes was not the first to measure the circumference of the Earth, but the first to argue, contrary to the opinion of Aristotle, that the calculations about the circumference of the Earth could be accepted as proven in terms of the new scientific style. A series of ancient authors credits Eratosthenes as having introduced the calculation of the degree as equal to 700 stadia, but there is not a single writer who indicates that he based himself on an empirical survey of the ground. Contemporary scholars exalt Eratosthenes as a great scientist and as a pioneer in mathematical geography, but none of the ancient writers who were acquainted with his works indicate this. If Eratosthenes had been such an innovator, Ptolemy who discusses at length the problem of the dimensions of the Earth in the Prolegomena to his Geography would have said at least some words to this effect. Theon of Smyrna and Proklos, who lived in Alexandria do not make any reference to the alleged discovery of Eratosthenes in their extensive commentaries on ancient mathematical science. Strabo, who had before his eyes the writings of Eratosthenes and discusses them at length, does not ascribe to Eratosthenes any specific achievement in the field of empirical geodesy or of theoretical geography. Strabo mentions repeatedly the figure of 700 stadia to the degree, but justifies it only in these words: “We suppose as Hipparchos, that the size of the Earth is 252,000 stadia, a figure given also by Eratosthenes.” He would not have spoken in these terms if Eratosthenes had provided a complete mathematical demonstration." http://www.metrum.org/measures/measurements.htm The next time you post some reference that you pull out of thin air,be sure to know what you are talking about first both historically and technicallyy. |
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On 21 Sep, 03:47, "Bast" wrote:
RichD wrote: When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? I guess the answer depends on who you ask. http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=...Ed5ebvZx4?p=Wh... Just like Galileo is often credited for claiming the earth went around the sun. His research was based on Copernicus's work, and who knows where Copernicus got the idea. He used data collected by Tycho Brahe |
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![]() JT wrote: On 21 Sep, 03:47, "Bast" wrote: RichD wrote: When and how did astronomers determine that the earth's axis tilts from the ecliptic, and its value? I guess the answer depends on who you ask. http://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=...Ed5ebvZx4?p=Wh... Just like Galileo is often credited for claiming the earth went around the sun. His research was based on Copernicus's work, and who knows where Copernicus got the idea. He used data collected by Tycho Brahe That would be a neat trick considering, I believe, Tycho Brache was born after Copernicus died. |
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