NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Lunar eclipses and other things
From: Alexandre Eremenko
Date: 2004 Oct 26, 18:32 -0500
From: Alexandre Eremenko
Date: 2004 Oct 26, 18:32 -0500
1. Contrary to some messages on this list, the moon eclipse will occur not "tonight" but TOMORROW night. That is on October 27 for most of the US and at small hours October 28 in Europe. 2. I want to use this opportunity to pay tribute to some people whose efforts made the very business of Cel Nav possible at all, and who are rarely mentioned on this list. The idea of using Moon eclipses to find longitude is credited to HIPPARCHUS, who probably was the greatest astronomer of all times, and possibly, one of the greatest mathematicians. He lived in II century BC. We know almost nothing about his life, and none of his original writing survives. Ptolemy calls him "a hard-working man, and an admirer of Truth". Most of our knowledge about him comes from the references in the books of Ptolemy, but Ptolemy was writing 300 years after Hypparchus. (The time span is like the time span between Newton and us!) Hypparchus own astronomical observations, referred by Ptolemy permit to establish the time when Hipparchus lived, by applying the Lunar theory of Hipparchus backwards in time:-) (So he built a good memorial for himself, did not he?:-) 90% of our knowledge about Moon motion was known to Hypparchus. (part of it is apparently due to "Chaldeans" of whom we know nothing). Most of this theory was derived by Hypparchus by careful reduction of the eclipse observations of Chaldeans and of hismelf. The method of finding longitude by the eclipses of the Moon (and Sun) remained the ONLY method of finding longitude for almost 20 centuries! This was the only method Columbus could use. (Though he was not very successfull with this, due to the general collapse of knowledge and educcation, which came soon after Ptolemy and lasted for about 1500 years). This was also the only practiceable method on land, to make geographic maps. (The direct measurements of distances on land was VERY imprecise). Hipparchus theory of the Moon motion was not superceeded until Tycho Brahe (XVI cent AD), who added a correction term of 40' amplitude. Neither Copernicus, nor Kepler added much to the Lunar theory in the sense of prediction of the Moon motion. Only due to Newton's mechanics further improvements became possible. However, Newton himself failed to explain the known irregulatities in the Moon motion. He could not overcome the mathematical difficulties. The whole gravitation theory was seriously questioned because of this faillure. It is only due to the efforts of the great Euler and Claiaut that approximately in 1750-s the Moon motion was shown to be consistent with and explainable by the Newton mechanics. (Euler was found eligible for 300 pounds of the Longitude Prize, and Meyer who actually developed the tables based on Euler's theory got 3000 pounds. More precisely, these 3000 pounds were delivered to Meyer's widow:-( 3. This story confirms the sad truth that only the people who made the very last step in certain invention are recognized and remembered, no matter how relatively small their contribution could be. The real giants, to whom we owe most of our knowledge, tend to be forgotten. This tendency in increasing in our time, with general decline of interest to history, and I afraid, to science itself. For example Norie (1828) mentions people like Hipparchus, Mercator and Newton (and Newton is always endowed with an epitet like "immortal". You won't find this in the modern version of Bowdich:-) Alex.