The great Copernicus chase and other adventures in astronomical history

Bibliographic Information

The great Copernicus chase and other adventures in astronomical history

Owen Gingerich

Sky Pub. Corp. , Cambridge University Press, 1992

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Note

Essays originally published in various journals

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Great Copernicus Chase is an anthology of 36 incidents drawn from the history of astronomy. The chapters range from Stonehenge and ancient Egypt, to the Great Comet of 1965, and to Albert Einstein. In this series of articles, arranged roughly chronologically, Professor Gingerich covers all the important periods and developments in astronomy. The book is generously illustrated throughout, and opportunity has been taken to add illustrations to articles that originally had none. The curious reader will learn of the origin of the zodiac, Islamic astronomy, fake astrolabes, the foundation of modern astronomy in the USA, and the discovery of the spiral arms of our Galaxy. Although Professor Gingerich prepared this material primarily for readers interested in the historical background to astronomy, there are many original research discoveries and insights. This is popularization and intellectual history combined. The Copernicus Chase refers to Owen Gingerich's attempt to make a census of all extant copies of De Revolutionibus. Some of the many adventures that have befallen him in this quest feature in the book. The majority of the chapters originally appeared in Sky and Telescope, the monthly astronomy magazine published by Sky Publishing Corporation of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Ancient Egyptian sky magic
  • 2. The origin of the zodiac
  • 3. The basic astronomy of Stonehenge
  • 4. Some puzzles of Ptolemy's star catalog
  • 5. Ptolemy and the maverick motion of Mercury
  • 6. How astronomers finally captured Mercury
  • 7. Islamic astronomy
  • 8. The astronomy of Alfonso the Wise
  • 9. From Aristarchus to Copernicus
  • 10. The Great Copernicus Chase
  • 11. The Tower of the Winds and the Gregorian calendar
  • 12. Tycho Brahe and the Great Comet of 1577
  • 13. Galileo and the phases of Venus
  • 14. The Galileo affair
  • 15. Johannes Kepler and the Rudolphine Tables
  • 16. An astrolabe from Lahore
  • 17. Fake astrolabes
  • 18. Newton, Halley and the comet
  • 19. Eighteenth-century eclipse paths
  • 20. The 1784 autobiography of William Herschel
  • 21. The great comet that never came
  • 22. Unlocking the chemical secrets of the cosmos
  • 23. The discovery of the satellites of Mars
  • 24. The first photograph of a nebula
  • 25. The great comet and the Carte
  • 26. James Lick and the founding of Lick Observatory
  • 27. Atget's eclipse watchers
  • 28. Faintness means farness
  • 29. The mysterious nebulae 1610-1924
  • 30. Harlow Shapley and the Cepheids
  • 31. A search for Russell's original diagram
  • 32. Dreyer and Tycho's world system
  • 33. Robert Trumpler and the dustiness of space
  • 34. The discovery of the spiral arms of the Milky Way
  • 35. The great comet of 1965
  • 36. Albert Einstein: a laboratory in the mind.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

  • NCID
    BA19219368
  • ISBN
    • 0521326885
  • LCCN
    90021855
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Cambridge, Mass.,Cambridge, [England]
  • Pages/Volumes
    xii, 304 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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