Several years ago, I developed a public lecture on the cosmic distance ladder in astronomy from a historical perspective (and emphasising the role of mathematics in building the ladder). I previously blogged about the lecture here; the most recent version of the slides can be found here. Recently, I have begun working with Tanya Klowden (a long time friend with a background in popular writing on a variety of topics, including astronomy) to expand the lecture into a popular science book, with the tentative format being non-technical chapters interspersed with some more mathematical sections to give some technical details. We are still in the middle of the writing process, but we have produced a sample chapter (which deals with what we call the “fourth rung” of the distance ladder – the distances and orbits of the planets – and how the work of Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler and others led to accurate measurements of these orbits, as well as Kepler’s famous laws of planetary motion). As always, any feedback on the chapter is welcome. (Due to various pandemic-related uncertainties, we do not have a definite target deadline for when the book will be completed, but presumably this will occur sometime in the next year.)
The book is currently under contract with Yale University Press. My coauthor Tanya Klowden can be reached at tklowden@gmail.com.
54 comments
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10 October, 2020 at 1:34 pm
zeraoulia Rafik
That is an interesting topic , I have to ask about stars locations , Is there any mathematical law to predict the exact location of starts in the space ?
10 October, 2020 at 1:35 pm
nick kerr
Awesome! “what what” –> “with what”
[Corrected, thanks – T.]
10 October, 2020 at 2:21 pm
Anonymous
Astronomy (as any physical science) developed from the desire to find mathematical patterns among the accumulated observational data.
It is possible that there is an ultimate mathematical theory with the potential to explain every possible observational data.
10 October, 2020 at 2:22 pm
Robert Smart
You’d be wise to run your book past the Renaissance Mathematicus (https://thonyc.wordpress.com/). He’s very strong on how Science is a team effort, not (just) individual geniuses. This is an important message for kids wanting to go into Science. Or you can read his blogs on “The emergence of modern astronomy – a complex mosaic”, currently up to Part XLVI.
10 October, 2020 at 4:57 pm
Anonymous
Kindly read Cultural Foundations of Mathematics by C K Raju before writing anything on this topic.
11 October, 2020 at 2:51 am
Anonymous
I don’t believe reading Hindutva propaganda is a valuable endeavor for Mr. Tao. I’m certain his time would be better spent elsewhere.
10 October, 2020 at 6:48 pm
Curious
On the very first paragraph – the vedas referred to the planets as demons. Any opinion on this? This reference is before the Greek connection to India. The question of precession of equinoxes is claimed to be tabulated long before the greeks https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayan%C4%81%E1%B9%83%C5%9Ba though for the purpose of astrology not for the purpose of knowing as in the Greek culture. Any evidence certain things could have been known prior to Greeks in different cultures?
10 October, 2020 at 10:42 pm
Globules
Thanks, this was interesting. Here are a few things I noticed while reading it:
– Globules
[Thanks for the corrections! – T]
10 October, 2020 at 11:26 pm
Anonymous
free time around his his professional duties.
11 October, 2020 at 12:34 am
uglyowlspotting
I read these pages with pleasure. Thank you.
11 October, 2020 at 3:26 am
Climbing the cosmic distance ladder: Terence Tao book announcement – Hacker News Robot
[…] https://terrytao.wordpress.com/2020/10/10/climbing-the-cosmic-distance-ladder-book-announcement/ […]
11 October, 2020 at 3:49 am
Aaron Santhosh
Hope it comes out quick… Astronomy always intrests me.
11 October, 2020 at 5:29 am
a
Kepler was lucky the planets of the solar system are well behaved. Not all exoplanets follow Kepler’s laws. See “Non-Keplerian Dynamics” https://arxiv.org/abs/1006.3834
11 October, 2020 at 7:54 am
Anonymous
I enjoyed reading the sample chapter. Thank you for writing it. I am looking forward to the book.
Here is one additional (see Globules comment) small mistake I noticed:
[…] draw upon our modern heliocentric understanding of the solar system. to more easily picture […] -> comma instead of period
[…] draw upon our modern heliocentric understanding of the solar system, to more easily picture […]
[Thanks for the correction – T.]
11 October, 2020 at 9:18 am
Eric
> Other astronomersand mathematicians quietly mourned his death but it was not until an ambitiousEnglishman named Isaac Newton set about proving Kepler’s principles that theworld began to realize that Kepler had given us something of far more gravitythan even Tycho Brahe’s observational masterpiece.
Thank you for the chapter, it was a fantastic read. Looking forward to the full publishing of this book!
11 October, 2020 at 9:24 am
meinte37
More figures (than the 1) would be most welcome!
11 October, 2020 at 9:34 am
Martin Cohen
A suggested change:
” an ice skater spins faster when pulling her arms closer to her body”
should be
“ice skaters spin faster when pulling their arms closer to their body”.
[Thanks, we will reword this line. -T]
11 October, 2020 at 10:26 am
Terry Tao and Climbing the cosmic distance ladder – The nth Root
[…] Several years ago, I developed a public lecture on the cosmic distance ladder in astronomy from a historical perspective (and emphasising the role of mathematics in building the ladder). I previously blogged about the lecture here; the most recent version of the slides can be found here. Recently, I have begun working with Tanya Klowden (a long time friend with a background in popular writing on a variety of topics, including astronomy) to expand the lecture into a popular science book, with the tentative format being non-technical chapters interspersed with some more mathematical sections to give some technical details. … (What’s new) […]
11 October, 2020 at 12:09 pm
Michael Ruxton
proof reader-like comments, possibly reported by others
far beyond what Aristarchus has laid out => far beyond what Aristarchus had laid out
laboratory on his uncle’s estates at the dissolute Herrevad Abbey => uncle’s estate
mutual respect and driving curiosity lead to each => led each
you almost might not realize it growing within you => you almost might
not realize it is growing within you
He realized that since this change in velocity was inversely proportional
to the distance from the Sun, that he should be able to measure => from the Sun, he should be able to measure
not the only time he nearly invented calculus to solve a problem and the other occasion => to solve a problem, and the
[Thanks for the corrections – T.]
12 October, 2020 at 7:19 am
Michael Ruxton
the true period (also known as the sidereal period) of Mars is given by => of Mars given by
[Thanks for the correction – T.]
11 October, 2020 at 1:21 pm
Raphael
What a wonderful read! The chestnut metaphor could possibly be supplemented by a little hint to Grothendieck? I like the elliptic cake very much. Great read, thank you for putting it out!
11 October, 2020 at 4:10 pm
hrm oin
“Many years later, Alexander Grothendieck was to be born on one of these planets”
11 October, 2020 at 7:16 pm
Lior Silberman
This is a great idea! A couple of corrections:
1. On page 25, “It was not until the fifteenth century, however, that a monk
named Bessarion …” — the word “however” seems misplaced since you are continuing the idea of the previous sentence rather than contradicting it. Maybe “In was indeed not until the fifteenth century that a monk named Bessarion …”
2. On page 31, you claim that NASA was spending 2% of the US GDP on the Apollo project. But NASA’s total budget has never exceeded 1% of the GDP. See for example the second slide of this presentation.
The nominal cost of the Apollo program was $25B-$28B (about half of NASA’s total budget during the program), which was indeed roughly 3% of the US GDP at the time, but the spending was spread over many years.
3. At the very end, when you discuss Kepler’s third law, note that if we know that the acceleration created by the inverse square law does not depend on the mass of the planet, then Kepler’s third law follows from consideration of units: we have a constant of units
, and would like to form a timescale from the constant and a length scale.
11 October, 2020 at 8:18 pm
Lior Silberman
Of course I got the units wrong: the units of the _constant_ are![[\textrm{acceleration}][R^2] = [L]^3[T]^{-2}](https://s0.wp.com/latex.php?latex=%5B%5Ctextrm%7Bacceleration%7D%5D%5BR%5E2%5D+%3D+%5BL%5D%5E3%5BT%5D%5E%7B-2%7D&bg=ffffff&fg=545454&s=0&c=20201002)
12 October, 2020 at 10:38 am
Terence Tao
Thanks for this! I rechecked my sources and I see the error; the Apollo program at one point reached about 2% of federal outlays, but as you note did not reach 2% of GDP.
I’ll find some way to make a brief mention of dimensional analysis into the discussion of Kepler’s third law, though it’s hard to present the notion of units in a manner that is both concise and mathematically correct.
15 October, 2020 at 9:25 am
Anonymous
Dimensional analysis of physical units is very helpful. But it is important to note that such dimensional analysis becomes meaningless for dimensionless(!) “natural units” which are defined by absolute physical constants (e.g. Planck’s units which are used in string theory).
11 October, 2020 at 11:49 pm
Chris Linton
You might be interested in
in which I have written about the mathematical development of our understanding of the solar system
12 October, 2020 at 12:20 am
Anonymous
P. 28, l. -3: There is overflow into the margin. Therefore, a rewording of the sentence would probably be a good idea.
[The final typesetting is likely to be completely different from that in the draft. -T]
13 October, 2020 at 4:52 pm
Radu Zaharopol
Dear Terry,
I would like to buy the book when it appears. Please keep me posted about the title, when, and where it will appear.
Yours, Radu
13 October, 2020 at 8:18 pm
Anonymous
Awesome slides! Are there any similar popular presentations where you or others instead go down the distance ladder to progressively zoom in on compounds, molecules, atoms, protons, quarks, etc.?
13 October, 2020 at 9:03 pm
Ion Simbotin
The cosmic distance ladder is a fascinating subject and I’m sure your new book will be wonderful. The slides of your talk are definitely satisfying and pass the critical test of giving plenty of credit to Aristarchus; it warms my heart just to see his name mentioned. However, regarding his method for measuring the Earth-Sun distance by making use of the half-moon, with the right angle, etc, it should be remarked that it is rendered useless in practice (despite being a good/correct idea on paper). Sufice it to say that, when the subject was tackled again more seriously after the invention of the telescope, they went straight to using the transit of Venus (instead of the half-moon right-angle idea) for figuring out the distance to the Sun. Unfortunately, it seems that all astronomy textbooks gloss over the nitty-gritty details of this particular idea, which is such a missed opportunity for truly appreciating astronomy with all that entails. In fact, it is quite remarkable (astonishing?) that no amount of technology can make the original idea work (exaggerating slightly to make/force my point). And even if it worked a little better, the Earth-Sun distance would have to rely on the Earth-Moon distance (which remained somewhat shaky/inaccurate for a while). This particular rung (Earth-Moon) is a bit separate and we can bypass it (thankfully) and go straight for the solar system, which is what they did since the 1600s. Modern technology does give us the ability to go back and measure the Earth-Moon distance very precisely, but we don’t rely on this special rung to redo the next rung, and the next, and so on.
14 October, 2020 at 3:16 am
Oliver Knill
thanks for the chapter, it was a page turner. The Kepler-Brahe drama is also displayed well in the book “Heavenly intrigue” by Joshua and Anne-Lee Gilder. This would make for a great movie. For the chestnut metaphor on page 35, it reminds of “Recoltes de Semailles” of Grothendieck who used the soaking nut picture in comparison to his “rising sea” metaphor.
14 October, 2020 at 5:28 pm
Michael Ruxton
Since people are making book recommendations, I read Richard Panek’s book Seeing and Believing a few months ago and thoroughly enjoyed it.
15 October, 2020 at 4:43 am
Pedro Sánchez Terraf
Dear Terry, I’m half a way in the reading and I’m enjoying it very much.
I add some questions/comments that might have not been posted before.
– At the bottom of p.27, should it read “*whose* star”?
– Footnote on p.30: perhaps a comma right after “own good” would make that long phrase easier on the reader.
– On p.31, there are 3 occurrences of “lavish” and derivatives; and one more on p.32. Perhaps a synonym would be of service.
I might be back when I reach the end
Thank you for sharing this!
[Thanks for the corrections and suggestions – T.]
17 October, 2020 at 7:48 pm
James Giammona
This looks like it will be a wonderful book! I’m very excited for it to come out.
(I also have given lectures on the cosmic distance ladder, Hubble’s law, and the CMB to high school physics classes to help instill the idea that one can ask how scientists came up with the Universe being 13.7 GYa and that stars and galaxies are light years away, and can understand the answers.)
I had some comments and suggestions for Ch 4. (Also, I’m surprised that this chapter didn’t include the modern base of the cosmic distance ladder, which IIRC comes from timing radio pulses off of Venus.)
– Is it possible to include an image of the Babylonian cuneiform tablet records?
– Perhaps you could mention that the 24 hr day, and 60 min in an hour, 60 seconds in a min come from the Babylonians beyond saying “the Babylonian records gave rise to calendar and timekeeping systems so accurate that many elements continue to be used in our systems today.”
– What time period did Eudoxus live relative to the Babylonians, the same time? Centuries later? Perhaps including (birth-death) dates along with new names would be helpful to contextualize when these developments are occurring. (Although, it seems it was perhaps a deliberate decision to not include them.)
– I’m glad you mention the connection of epicycles to Fourier series in the mathematical notes at the end. There is a great blog post that first highlighted this connection to me which then makes an analogy with neural networks today: https://wenhaosun.github.io/blog/wenhaosun-blog/2019-12-04-Geocentric-vs-Heliocentric/
– Perhaps you could include an image or reconstruction of the Antikythera mechanism?
– Is there more you could say about this bootstrapping method that Kepler used to refine his orbital predictions? Does it now have a name or is it a more standard procedure? Also, perhaps a diagram would be helpful for explaining this procedure and for acquainting new readers with the properties of ellipses.
– Finally, the discussion of royal patronage for observatories and astrology reminds me of the thesis of the book The Long Space Age by Alexander MacDonald which argues that the Cold War Space Race was preceded by state and private competition to fund larger and more elaborate astronomical observatories. Interesting to see this pattern extended much further back in time!
Once again, this is overall a fantastic work and I enjoy the pacing, tone, and level of detail. Best of luck!
[Thanks for the suggestions! Radio measurements of the planets will be mentioned in the chapter following this one, alongside measurements of the transit of Venus and parallax methods. The Antikythera mechanism more naturally will fit in some earlier chapters that are more focused on the efforts of the ancient Greeks. -T]
18 October, 2020 at 8:22 am
Math - Update
Reblogged this on ILUMINACIÓN MATEMÁTICA and commented:
Kepler´s Dreams and mines…
19 October, 2020 at 3:45 am
Tony O'Connor
Thank you for posting this fascinating article. A brief comment on the remark that Copernicus was a priest. Owen Gingerich in “Copernicus, a very short introduction” states definitely that Copernicus was a not a priest ( p 2 & 8). Dava Sobel states that only a few of the canons at Frauenberg were ordained as priests. Although a canon these days would very likely be a priest it seems that in medieval Poland they were more like church administrators. There is also a lengthy article by Edward Rosen “Copernicus was not a priest” (Proc American Philosophical Society, vol 104, p 635-661, 1960) which traces the different claims that have been made about Copernicus’s status. He seems to be saying that this claim comes from misunderstandings over the years.
[The subsequent discussion in the text emphasizes that Copernicus’s role in the church was indeed as a bureaucrat and expert in
church law -T.]
22 October, 2020 at 7:00 am
Tom Heinzl
Well written and captivating indeed! Some minor comments:
(i) The plural of focus is foci (not focii, p.38, 1st paragraph, 3 times).
(ii) Physics Nobelist Steven Weinberg covers similar material in a similar style (focus on history with maths in technical appendices) in his book “To Explain the World”. He also states that “Copernicus never became a priest” (p.147).
9 November, 2020 at 11:29 pm
Sabino Lamonaca
Very interesting
10 November, 2020 at 5:07 am
Anonymous
Dear Pro Terry,
Now is november. The weather is very cold.What do you have anything new to “warm” all colleagues on this forum?
We really thank you first.
11 November, 2020 at 1:13 am
Roland
“Regiomontanus” is Latin for “the man from Königsberg”, the (Bavarian) place of birth of Johannes Müller. This name was used only after his death the first time by Philipp Melanchthon (ironically, Melanchthon ist Greek for “black earth”, his birthname “Schwartzerdt”), see also https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regiomontanus
14 November, 2020 at 3:47 pm
Frank De Geeter
Thank you for this wonderful treat. It made a very good read, and also had emotional value for me, since most of the stuff that is covered was taught to me by my granddad, more than 50 years ago. He copied (by hand!) several entries on astronomy from an encyclopaedia owned by an uncle of mine. He kindled a lifelong interest in the sciences and mathematics in me. I became a physician and the closest I came to mathematical genius was by attending the lectures on medical physiology by none other than Jean Bourgain’s father (who, incidentally, during one of his lectures declared his son was mad). Anyway, I could be a typical member of the audience that the forthcoming book will target.
What follows is a list of typo’s that I discovered in the sample text as well as more fundamental remarks on content (mainly things that I did not understand quite well). Forgive me if they already have been signaled – I had no time to read all the responses. P means page, p is the number of the paragraph on a given page, and l the line in that paragraph.
P22, p1, l12. I was confused by ‘fixed’, since l6 states that the celestial sphere gently rotates.
P24, p5, l5. ‘but fortunately we can draw’ instead of ‘but we can fortunately draw’
P24, p5, l6. ‘To’ instead of ‘to’
P25, p1, l2. ‘orbits the Earth’instead of ‘orbits around the Earth’
P25, p3, l4. ‘to Plato’s’ instead of ‘to the Plato’s’
P27, p2, l7. I did not understand why the sidereal period would be very nearly insignificant under the geocentric model. It would be my understanding that the difference between sidereal and synodic periods is insignificant in the geocentric model.
P28, p3, l8. ‘and it’ instead of ‘and at it’
P33, p2, l12. No sure that ‘Apogee’ needs a capital letter
P33, p4, l3. ‘lead each’ instead of ‘lead to each’
P34, p2, l5. ‘with Kepler not to let all his work’ instead of ‘with Kepler to not let all his work’
P34, p4, l14. ‘right’ instead of ‘right’?
P35, p2, l6. ‘to a somewhat’ instead of ‘to somewhat minor’
P36, p3. Is partly repetitive of the preceding paragraph: the moving vantage point is already discussed there.
P37, p1. I am still puzzled which are the angles and sides considered in the reasoning. I would presume that the side is between the Sun and Mars, but which angles are used and were known to Kepler. Perhaps this could be further addressed in the mathematical section. Illustrations, such as in your talk, would be enlightening.
P37, p2, l9-10. ‘angular velocity’ instead of ‘angle of velocity’. ‘the difference in angular velocity between the two planets’ instead of ‘the difference in angle of velocity of the two planets’
P37, p3, l14. ‘approximation for the’ instead of ‘approximation the’
P38, p1, l1, l4 and l6. ‘foci’ instead of ‘focii’
P38, p2, l4. Perhaps better ‘inner part of the ellipse’ instead of ‘center of the ellipse’
P40, p2, l4. ‘possible to’ instead of ‘possible them to’
P40, p4, l8. ‘respect to an’ instead of ‘respect an’
P41, p2. The derivation of E could be easier from its definition; the derivation as given is ‘backwards’ from formula (4.1), whereas that formula itself follows from the definition of angular velocity
P43, p1, l3. ‘In the Tychonic model’ instead of ‘In Tychonic model’
P43, p2, 6. I was utterly confused by the ‘uninhabited point’. Of course, I can see that for the mathematical description of a movement, it is immaterial whether or not a rotating point represents a celestial body. But surely, commuting the terms of equation (4.8) cannot make vanish the Sun.
[Thanks, these corrections will be incorporated into the next revision of the ms. -T]
15 November, 2020 at 3:36 am
Sabino Lamonaca
Where will it be possible to buy the book?
16 November, 2020 at 1:28 pm
Anonymous
If the universe can be modelled by compact 4D manifold, the simplest candidates for its topology are S^4 (4D sphere) or RP^4 (the 4D real projective space – which is non-orientable!)
28 November, 2020 at 2:38 pm
arch1
P.23
which constellation -> which of them (or, which Zodiacal constellation)?
“the Moon wobbles through the same ecliptic…”: “wobbles” is a bit vague. Somehow clarify that you’re talking about transverse rather than longitudinal displacements relative to a uniform cycle around the ecliptic.
“Mostly, the planets moved in an east to west direction along the ecliptic, but occasionally they would slow and reverse direction, moving west to east in retrograde motion for a while before resuming their east to west travel again.”: I think “east” and “west” need to be swapped here (as a check: a solar day is longer than a sidereal day because from noon to noon, Earth has to rotate eastward about 360+1 degrees relative to the fixed stars to “catch up” with the one-degree *eastward* apparent movement of the Sun over the previous day. And the planets’ dominant direction relative to the fixed stars is the same as that of the Sun).
28 November, 2020 at 8:59 pm
arch1
P.24:
own number of spheres -> own set of spheres?
“Aristotle went on to make further modifications, primarily adding “unrolling” spheres to cancel out the motion of an inner sphere from impacting the next one out”:
Per Aristotle’s unwinding spheres the unrolling spheres were just a means to enable all planets’ spheres to be connected in one big system. If you still think them worth mentioning, you might want to do so in an aside, something like:
“Aristotle went on to make further modifications, primarily integrating all of the planets’ spheres into a single connected system (this involved adding “unrolling” spheres to cancel the motions of the spheres carrying each planet so that the motion of the next planet would be unaffected by that of the previous planet).“
Last line: system. to more -> system to more
1 December, 2020 at 9:10 pm
Someone who doesn't know
Hello World. This is really a great article. Thank you.
2 December, 2020 at 10:36 am
arch1
P. 25:
para 2: using extensive use of epicycles -> making extensive use of epicycles
para 2: a major shift -> the next major shift?
para 3: There were several unlikely things that -> Several unlikely things
P. 26:
para 3: only published one other book in his lifetime -> only published one book other than De revolutionibus (about which more below) in his lifetime [Kepler’s major work hadn’t yet been mentioned]
P.27:
para 1, “He did, of course, write out his heliocentric model…”: Assumes the reader knows what a heliocentric model is, and that Copernicus had developed one. Will those points be covered in earlier chapters, and if not, are these safe assumptions?
para 1: better refine -> refine
para 2, “[synodic period] is simply the amount of time it takes for a planet to return to the same place in the sky.”: I don’t think this is right. Synodic period of a planet is the time between successive conjunctions or successive oppositions of that planet relative to the Earth and Sun. The planet will in general not be in the same place in the sky as viewed from Earth at those two times.
I’ll stop here as I feel I may be overly flooding your comments section. Thanks for the great and enjoyable read!
3 December, 2020 at 7:11 am
YahyaAA1
An informative read – thanks!
Brief comments: Some sentences are too complex to parse easily. You might simplify them by separating the ideas they connect into separate sentences. Perhaps with another sentence to make the connection!
On page 27, the definitions of the sidereal and synodic periods don’t clarify the difference between the two. As a test, could a naïve reader use these definitions to say which is longer?
On page 28, you could simplify “If you have ever taken a basic physics class, you will have learned …” to “If you ever take a basic physics class, you will learn …”?
Page 39 has this: “… his thoughtful and detailed consideration
on these subjects _calls back to_ his excitement over the Platonic solids …”, where perhaps “… _recalls_ …” would read better.
Some minutiae: Other commenters have probably caught all the typos I found, but I didn’t see these mentioned:
Page 37, “to give a good approximation the | orbit …” seems to need an “of” before “the | orbit …”.
Page 38: “the velocity of the a | planet …” has a superfluous “the”.
Page 40 has an extra “them” in the sentence: “Most other astronomers, even his good friend Galileo Galilei, regarded the three laws and the mathematical model of our solar system they make possible them to be only interesting curiosities about the heavens.”
I look forward to the eventual publication of your book.
25 February, 2021 at 8:43 pm
James Somers
If anyone here is interested, a group of us have crowdsourced a few dynamic illustrations for this chapter over at https://observablehq.com/@jsomers/we-need-more-tiny-knowledge-projects-heres-one.
The illustrations attempt to give a flavor for what it would be like to contemplate the night sky as Kepler once did—showing the peculiar motion of the “wandering stars” against the rest of the night sky.
11 December, 2021 at 2:04 am
Victor Kleptsyn
Thank you very much for these slides!
I have one question concerning Aristarchus’ “step to the Moon”. Namely, there are two ways to determine the size of Earth’s umbra at the Moon’s orbit:
– by measuring the time the Moon can stay inside the shadow (the one you mention in your talk)
– by looking at the Earth’s shadow on the Moon when the Moon is _partially_ covered by it and comparing the apparent radii of the Moon and of the shadow; that’s what’s mentioned here (sorry for a reference in Russian) : https://elementy.ru/nauchno-populyarnaya_biblioteka/431102/Geometriya_zvezdnogo_neba .
The first one is easier to be measured with better precision, but requires a history of observations (to find the longest eclipse). The second one could be done with just one eclipse, so Aristarchus definitely could do it himself, but is difficult technically (radius 2R and radius 3R circle traces are not that much different, though one can imagine some kind of a “measuring device” to distinguish between these).
Is there any reference to how Aristarchus have measured this quotient? I have tried to check his “On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon”, but unless I have missed something, he starts with declaring this quotient as one of six hypothesis at the very beginning, namely, as his hypothesis 5: “Size of the shadow is twice the size of the moon” (e.g., in a French translation here — https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k62820h/f9.item.texteImage ). And I didn’t find any discussion on that afterwards…
Again, thank you very much!
19 December, 2021 at 10:58 pm
Terence Tao
This appears to be an educated guess; Heath’s ” Aristarchus of Samos, the Ancient Copernicus” on page 329 attributes this reconstruction to page 225 of Tannery’s “Recherches sur l’histoire de l’astronomie ancienne”, but I unfortunately do not have access to this latter manuscript.
3 May, 2022 at 5:20 am
Philosophy of science and the blockchain: A book review – Windows On Theory
[…] (The right graph is adapted from Terry Tao’s excellent cosmic distance ladder presentation; I was happy to hear Tao is planning to turn it into a popular science book.) […]
27 May, 2022 at 11:49 pm
A book review – Windows On Theory |
[…] (The right graph is adapted from Terry Tao’s excellent cosmic distance ladder presentation; I was happy to hear Tao is planning to turn it into a popular science book.) […]