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pins indicate the two foci of the curve. If the length of the loop of string is
unchanged then the nearer the pins are together, the greater will be the
resemblance between the ellipse and the circle, whereas the more the pins are
separated the more elongated does the ellipse become. The orbit of a great
planet is, in general, one of those ellipses which approaches a nearly circular
form. It fortunately happens, however, that the orbit of Mars makes a wider
departure from the circular form than any of the other important planets. It is,
doubtless, to this circumstance that we must attribute the astonishing success
of Kepler in detecting the true shape of a planetary orbit. Tycho’s
observations would not have been sufficiently accurate to have exhibited the
elliptic nature of a planetary orbit which, like that of Venus, differed very
little from a circle.
The more we ponder on this memorable achievement the more striking will
it appear. It must be remembered that in these days we know of the physical
necessity which requires that a planet shall revolve in an ellipse and not in
any other curve. But Kepler had no such knowledge. Even to the last hour of
his life he remained in ignorance of the existence of any natural cause which
ordained that planets should follow those particular curves which geometers
know so well. Kepler’s assignment of the ellipse as the true form of the
planetary orbit is to be regarded as a brilliant guess, the truth of which
Tycho’s observations enabled him to verify. Kepler also succeeded in pointing
out the law according to which the velocity of a planet at different points of
its path could be accurately specified. Here, again, we have to admire the
sagacity with which this marvellously acute astronomer guessed the deep
truth of nature. In this case also he was quite unprovided with any reason for
expecting from physical principles that such a law as he discovered must be
obeyed. It is quite true that Kepler had some slight knowledge of the
existence of what we now know as gravitation. He had even enunciated the
remarkable doctrine that the ebb and flow of the tide must be attributed to the
attraction of the moon on the waters of the earth. He does not, however,
appear to have had any anticipation of those wonderful discoveries which
Newton was destined to make a little later, in which he demonstrated that the
laws detected by Kepler’s marvellous acumen were necessary consequences
of the principle of universal gravitation.
To appreciate the relations of Kepler and Tycho it is necessary to note the
very different way in which these illustrious astronomers viewed the system
of the heavens. It should be observed that Copernicus had already expounded
the true system, which located the sun at the centre of the planetary system.
But in the days of Tycho Brahe this doctrine had not as yet commanded
universal assent. In fact, the great observer himself did not accept the new
views of Copernicus. It appeared to Tycho that the earth not only appeared to
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Buch Great Astronoms - Johannes Kepler"
Great Astronoms
Johannes Kepler
- Titel
- Great Astronoms
- Untertitel
- Johannes Kepler
- Autor
- Robert S. Ball
- Datum
- 1907
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 16
- Schlagwörter
- Astronom, Philosopher, Englisch, English, Astronomie, Philosophie
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Physik