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Hipparchus

Hipparchus (/hɪˈpɑːrkəs/; Greek: Ἵππαρχος, Hipparkhos; c. 190 – c. 120 BC) was a Greek astronomer, geographer, and mathematician. He is considered the founder of trigonometry,[1] but is most famous for his incidental discovery of the precession of the equinoxes.[2] Hipparchus was born in Nicaea, Bithynia, and probably died on the island of Rhodes, Greece. He is known to have been a working astronomer between 162 and 127 BC.[3]

Hipparchus
19th century engraving based on an engraved amethyst from the Poniatowski gem collection[a]
Bornc. 190 BC
Diedc. 120 BC (around age 70)
Rhodes, Roman Republic
(modern-day Greece)
Occupations

Hipparchus is considered the greatest ancient astronomical observer and, by some, the greatest overall astronomer of antiquity.[4][5] He was the first whose quantitative and accurate models for the motion of the Sun and Moon survive. For this he certainly made use of the observations and perhaps the mathematical techniques accumulated over centuries by the Babylonians and by Meton of Athens (fifth century BC), Timocharis, Aristyllus, Aristarchus of Samos, and Eratosthenes, among others.[6]

He developed trigonometry and constructed trigonometric tables, and he solved several problems of spherical trigonometry. With his solar and lunar theories and his trigonometry, he may have been the first to develop a reliable method to predict solar eclipses.

His other reputed achievements include the discovery and measurement of Earth's precession, the compilation of the first known comprehensive star catalog from the western world, and possibly the invention of the astrolabe, as well as of the armillary sphere that he may have used in creating the star catalogue. Hipparchus is sometimes called the "father of astronomy",[7][8] a title conferred on him by Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre in 1817.[9]

Life and work edit

Hipparchus was born in Nicaea (Greek: Νίκαια), in Bithynia. The exact dates of his life are not known, but Ptolemy attributes astronomical observations to him in the period from 147 to 127 BC, and some of these are stated as made in Rhodes; earlier observations since 162 BC might also have been made by him. His birth date (c. 190 BC) was calculated by Delambre based on clues in his work. Hipparchus must have lived some time after 127 BC because he analyzed and published his observations from that year. Hipparchus obtained information from Alexandria as well as Babylon, but it is not known when or if he visited these places. He is believed to have died on the island of Rhodes, where he seems to have spent most of his later life.

In the second and third centuries, coins were made in his honour in Bithynia that bear his name and show him with a globe.[10]

Relatively little of Hipparchus's direct work survives into modern times. Although he wrote at least fourteen books, only his commentary on the popular astronomical poem by Aratus was preserved by later copyists. Most of what is known about Hipparchus comes from Strabo's Geography and Pliny's Natural History in the first century; Ptolemy's second-century Almagest; and additional references to him in the fourth century by Pappus and Theon of Alexandria in their commentaries on the Almagest.[11][12]

Hipparchus's only preserved work is Commentary on the Phaenomena of Eudoxus and Aratus (Greek: Τῶν Ἀράτου καὶ Εὐδόξου φαινομένων ἐξήγησις). This is a highly critical commentary in the form of two books on a popular poem by Aratus based on the work by Eudoxus.[13] Hipparchus also made a list of his major works that apparently mentioned about fourteen books, but which is only known from references by later authors. His famous star catalog was incorporated into the one by Ptolemy and may be almost perfectly reconstructed by subtraction of two and two-thirds degrees from the longitudes of Ptolemy's stars. The first trigonometric table was apparently compiled by Hipparchus, who is consequently now known as "the father of trigonometry".

Babylonian sources edit

Earlier Greek astronomers and mathematicians were influenced by Babylonian astronomy to some extent, for instance the period relations of the Metonic cycle and Saros cycle may have come from Babylonian sources (see "Babylonian astronomical diaries"). Hipparchus seems to have been the first to exploit Babylonian astronomical knowledge and techniques systematically.[14] Eudoxus in the 4th century BC and Timocharis and Aristillus in the 3rd century BC already divided the ecliptic in 360 parts (our degrees, Greek: moira) of 60 arcminutes and Hipparchus continued this tradition. It was only in Hipparchus's time (2nd century BC) when this division was introduced (probably by Hipparchus's contemporary Hypsikles) for all circles in mathematics. Eratosthenes (3rd century BC), in contrast, used a simpler sexagesimal system dividing a circle into 60 parts. Hipparchus also adopted the Babylonian astronomical cubit unit (Akkadian ammatu, Greek πῆχυς pēchys) that was equivalent to 2° or 2.5° ('large cubit').[15]

Hipparchus probably compiled a list of Babylonian astronomical observations; Gerald J. Toomer, a historian of astronomy, has suggested that Ptolemy's knowledge of eclipse records and other Babylonian observations in the Almagest came from a list made by Hipparchus. Hipparchus's use of Babylonian sources has always been known in a general way, because of Ptolemy's statements, but the only text by Hipparchus that survives does not provide sufficient information to decide whether Hipparchus's knowledge (such as his usage of the units cubit and finger, degrees and minutes, or the concept of hour stars) was based on Babylonian practice.[16] However, Franz Xaver Kugler demonstrated that the synodic and anomalistic periods that Ptolemy attributes to Hipparchus had already been used in Babylonian ephemerides, specifically the collection of texts nowadays called "System B" (sometimes attributed to Kidinnu).[17][pages needed]

Hipparchus's long draconitic lunar period (5,458 months = 5,923 lunar nodal periods) also appears a few times in Babylonian records.[18] But the only such tablet explicitly dated, is post-Hipparchus so the direction of transmission is not settled by the tablets.

Geometry, trigonometry and other mathematical techniques edit

Hipparchus was recognized as the first mathematician known to have possessed a trigonometric table, which he needed when computing the eccentricity of the orbits of the Moon and Sun. He tabulated values for the chord function, which for a central angle in a circle gives the length of the straight line segment between the points where the angle intersects the circle. He may have computed this for a circle with a circumference of 21,600 units and a radius (rounded) of 3,438 units; this circle has a unit length for each arcminute along its perimeter. (This was “proven” by Toomer,[19] but he later “cast doubt“ upon his earlier affirmation.[20] Other authors have argued that a circle of radius 3,600 units may instead have been used by Hipparchus.[21]) He tabulated the chords for angles with increments of 7.5°. In modern terms, the chord subtended by a central angle in a circle of given radius R equals R times twice the sine of half of the angle, i.e.:

 

The now-lost work in which Hipparchus is said to have developed his chord table, is called Tōn en kuklōi eutheiōn (Of Lines Inside a Circle) in Theon of Alexandria's fourth-century commentary on section I.10 of the Almagest. Some claim the table of Hipparchus may have survived in astronomical treatises in India, such as the Surya Siddhanta. Trigonometry was a significant innovation, because it allowed Greek astronomers to solve any triangle, and made it possible to make quantitative astronomical models and predictions using their preferred geometric techniques.[19]

Hipparchus must have used a better approximation for π than the one given by Archimedes of between 3+1071 (≈ 3.1408) and 3+17 (≈ 3.1429). Perhaps he had the approximation later used by Ptolemy, sexagesimal 3;08,30 (≈ 3.1417) (Almagest VI.7).

Hipparchus could have constructed his chord table using the Pythagorean theorem and a theorem known to Archimedes. He also might have used the relationship between sides and diagonals of a cyclic quadrilateral, today called Ptolemy's theorem because its earliest extant source is a proof in the Almagest (I.10).

The stereographic projection was ambiguously attributed to Hipparchus by Synesius (c. 400 AD), and on that basis Hipparchus is often credited with inventing it or at least knowing of it. However, some scholars believe this conclusion to be unjustified by available evidence.[22] The oldest extant description of the stereographic projection is found in Ptolemy's Planisphere (2nd century AD).[23]

Besides geometry, Hipparchus also used arithmetic techniques developed by the Chaldeans. He was one of the first Greek mathematicians to do this and, in this way, expanded the techniques available to astronomers and geographers.

There are several indications that Hipparchus knew spherical trigonometry, but the first surviving text discussing it is by Menelaus of Alexandria in the first century, who now, on that basis, commonly is credited with its discovery. (Previous to the finding of the proofs of Menelaus a century ago, Ptolemy was credited with the invention of spherical trigonometry.) Ptolemy later used spherical trigonometry to compute things such as the rising and setting points of the ecliptic, or to take account of the lunar parallax. If he did not use spherical trigonometry, Hipparchus may have used a globe for these tasks, reading values off coordinate grids drawn on it, or he may have made approximations from planar geometry, or perhaps used arithmetical approximations developed by the Chaldeans.

Lunar and solar theory edit

 
Geometric construction used by Hipparchus in his determination of the distances to the Sun and Moon

Motion of the Moon edit

Hipparchus also studied the motion of the Moon and confirmed the accurate values for two periods of its motion that Chaldean astronomers are widely presumed to have possessed before him. The traditional value (from Babylonian System B) for the mean synodic month is 29 days; 31,50,8,20 (sexagesimal) = 29.5305941... days. Expressed as 29 days + 12 hours + 793/1080 hours this value has been used later in the Hebrew calendar. The Chaldeans also knew that 251 synodic months ≈ 269 anomalistic months. Hipparchus used the multiple of this period by a factor of 17, because that interval is also an eclipse period, and is also close to an integer number of years (4,267 moons : 4,573 anomalistic periods : 4,630.53 nodal periods : 4,611.98 lunar orbits : 344.996 years : 344.982 solar orbits : 126,007.003 days : 126,351.985 rotations).[b] What was so exceptional and useful about the cycle was that all 345-year-interval eclipse pairs occur slightly more than 126,007 days apart within a tight range of only approximately ±12 hour, guaranteeing (after division by 4,267) an estimate of the synodic month correct to one part in order of magnitude 10 million.

Hipparchus could confirm his computations by comparing eclipses from his own time (presumably 27 January 141 BC and 26 November 139 BC according to Toomer[24]) with eclipses from Babylonian records 345 years earlier (Almagest IV.2[12]).

Later al-Biruni (Qanun VII.2.II) and Copernicus (de revolutionibus IV.4) noted that the period of 4,267 moons is approximately five minutes longer than the value for the eclipse period that Ptolemy attributes to Hipparchus. However, the timing methods of the Babylonians had an error of no fewer than eight minutes.[25][26] Modern scholars agree that Hipparchus rounded the eclipse period to the nearest hour, and used it to confirm the validity of the traditional values, rather than to try to derive an improved value from his own observations. From modern ephemerides[27] and taking account of the change in the length of the day (see ΔT) we estimate that the error in the assumed length of the synodic month was less than 0.2 second in the fourth century BC and less than 0.1 second in Hipparchus's time.

Orbit of the Moon edit

It had been known for a long time that the motion of the Moon is not uniform: its speed varies. This is called its anomaly and it repeats with its own period; the anomalistic month. The Chaldeans took account of this arithmetically, and used a table giving the daily motion of the Moon according to the date within a long period. However, the Greeks preferred to think in geometrical models of the sky. At the end of the third century BC, Apollonius of Perga had proposed two models for lunar and planetary motion:

  1. In the first, the Moon would move uniformly along a circle, but the Earth would be eccentric, i.e., at some distance of the center of the circle. So the apparent angular speed of the Moon (and its distance) would vary.
  2. The Moon would move uniformly (with some mean motion in anomaly) on a secondary circular orbit, called an epicycle that would move uniformly (with some mean motion in longitude) over the main circular orbit around the Earth, called deferent; see deferent and epicycle.

Apollonius demonstrated that these two models were in fact mathematically equivalent. However, all this was theory and had not been put to practice. Hipparchus is the first astronomer known to attempt to determine the relative proportions and actual sizes of these orbits. Hipparchus devised a geometrical method to find the parameters from three positions of the Moon at particular phases of its anomaly. In fact, he did this separately for the eccentric and the epicycle model. Ptolemy describes the details in the Almagest IV.11. Hipparchus used two sets of three lunar eclipse observations that he carefully selected to satisfy the requirements. The eccentric model he fitted to these eclipses from his Babylonian eclipse list: 22/23 December 383 BC, 18/19 June 382 BC, and 12/13 December 382 BC. The epicycle model he fitted to lunar eclipse observations made in Alexandria at 22 September 201 BC, 19 March 200 BC, and 11 September 200 BC.

  • For the eccentric model, Hipparchus found for the ratio between the radius of the eccenter and the distance between the center of the eccenter and the center of the ecliptic (i.e., the observer on Earth): 3144 : 327+23;
  • and for the epicycle model, the ratio between the radius of the deferent and the epicycle: 3122+12 : 247+12 .

These figures are due to the cumbersome unit he used in his chord table and may partly be due to some sloppy rounding and calculation errors by Hipparchus, for which Ptolemy criticised him while also making rounding errors. A simpler alternate reconstruction[28] agrees with all four numbers. Hipparchus found inconsistent results; he later used the ratio of the epicycle model (3122+12 : 247+12), which is too small (60 : 4;45 sexagesimal). Ptolemy established a ratio of 60 : 5+14.[29] (The maximum angular deviation producible by this geometry is the arcsin of 5+14 divided by 60, or approximately 5° 1', a figure that is sometimes therefore quoted as the equivalent of the Moon's equation of the center in the Hipparchan model.)

Apparent motion of the Sun edit

Before Hipparchus, Meton, Euctemon, and their pupils at Athens had made a solstice observation (i.e., timed the moment of the summer solstice) on 27 June 432 BC (proleptic Julian calendar). Aristarchus of Samos is said to have done so in 280 BC, and Hipparchus also had an observation by Archimedes. He observed the summer solstices in 146 and 135 BC both accurately to a few hours, but observations of the moment of equinox were simpler, and he made twenty during his lifetime. Ptolemy gives an extensive discussion of Hipparchus's work on the length of the year in the Almagest III.1, and quotes many observations that Hipparchus made or used, spanning 162–128 BC, including an equinox timing by Hipparchus (at 24 March 146 BC at dawn) that differs by 5 hours from the observation made on Alexandria's large public equatorial ring that same day (at 1 hour before noon). Ptolemy claims his solar observations were on a transit instrument set in the meridian.

At the end of his career, Hipparchus wrote a book entitled Peri eniausíou megéthous ("On the Length of the Year") regarding his results. The established value for the tropical year, introduced by Callippus in or before 330 BC was 365+14 days.[30] Speculating a Babylonian origin for the Callippic year is difficult to defend, since Babylon did not observe solstices thus the only extant System B year length was based on Greek solstices (see below). Hipparchus's equinox observations gave varying results, but he points out (quoted in Almagest III.1(H195)) that the observation errors by him and his predecessors may have been as large as 14 day. He used old solstice observations and determined a difference of approximately one day in approximately 300 years. So he set the length of the tropical year to 365+141300 days (= 365.24666... days = 365 days 5 hours 55 min, which differs from the modern estimate of the value (including earth spin acceleration), in his time of approximately 365.2425 days, an error of approximately 6 min per year, an hour per decade, and ten hours per century.

Between the solstice observation of Meton and his own, there were 297 years spanning 108,478 days; this implies a tropical year of 365.24579... days = 365 days;14,44,51 (sexagesimal; = 365 days + 14/60 + 44/602 + 51/603), a year length found on one of the few Babylonian clay tablets which explicitly specifies the System B month. Whether Babylonians knew of Hipparchus's work or the other way around is debatable.

Another value for the year that is attributed to Hipparchus (by the astrologer Vettius Valens in the first century) is 365 + 1/4 + 1/288 days (= 365.25347... days = 365 days 6 hours 5 min), but this may be a corruption of another value attributed to a Babylonian source: 365 + 1/4 + 1/144 days (= 365.25694... days = 365 days 6 hours 10 min). It is not clear whether this would be a value for the sidereal year at his time or the modern estimate of approximately 365.2565 days, but the difference with Hipparchus's value for the tropical year is consistent with his rate of precession (see below).

Orbit of the Sun edit

Before Hipparchus, astronomers knew that the lengths of the seasons are not equal. Hipparchus made observations of equinox and solstice, and according to Ptolemy (Almagest III.4) determined that spring (from spring equinox to summer solstice) lasted 9412 days, and summer (from summer solstice to autumn equinox) 92+12 days. This is inconsistent with a premise of the Sun moving around the Earth in a circle at uniform speed. Hipparchus's solution was to place the Earth not at the center of the Sun's motion, but at some distance from the center. This model described the apparent motion of the Sun fairly well. It is known today that the planets, including the Earth, move in approximate ellipses around the Sun, but this was not discovered until Johannes Kepler published his first two laws of planetary motion in 1609. The value for the eccentricity attributed to Hipparchus by Ptolemy is that the offset is 124 of the radius of the orbit (which is a little too large), and the direction of the apogee would be at longitude 65.5° from the vernal equinox. Hipparchus may also have used other sets of observations, which would lead to different values. One of his two eclipse trios' solar longitudes are consistent with his having initially adopted inaccurate lengths for spring and summer of 95+34 and 91+14 days.[31][failed verification] His other triplet of solar positions is consistent with 94+14 and 92+12 days,[12][32][failed verification] an improvement on the results (94+12 and 92+12 days) attributed to Hipparchus by Ptolemy. Ptolemy made no change three centuries later, and expressed lengths for the autumn and winter seasons which were already implicit (as shown, e.g., by A. Aaboe).[citation needed]

Distance, parallax, size of the Moon and the Sun edit

 
Diagram used in reconstructing one of Hipparchus's methods of determining the distance to the Moon. This represents the Earth–Moon system during a partial solar eclipse at A (Alexandria) and a total solar eclipse at H (Hellespont).

Hipparchus also undertook to find the distances and sizes of the Sun and the Moon, in the now-lost work On Sizes and Distances (Greek: Περὶ μεγεθῶν καὶ ἀποστημάτων Peri megethon kai apostematon). His work is mentioned in Ptolemy's Almagest V.11, and in a commentary thereon by Pappus; Theon of Smyrna (2nd century) also mentions the work, under the title On Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon.

Hipparchus measured the apparent diameters of the Sun and Moon with his diopter. Like others before and after him, he found that the Moon's size varies as it moves on its (eccentric) orbit, but he found no perceptible variation in the apparent diameter of the Sun. He found that at the mean distance of the Moon, the Sun and Moon had the same apparent diameter; at that distance, the Moon's diameter fits 650 times into the circle, i.e., the mean apparent diameters are 360650 = 0°33′14″.

Like others before and after him, he also noticed that the Moon has a noticeable parallax, i.e., that it appears displaced from its calculated position (compared to the Sun or stars), and the difference is greater when closer to the horizon. He knew that this is because in the then-current models the Moon circles the center of the Earth, but the observer is at the surface—the Moon, Earth and observer form a triangle with a sharp angle that changes all the time. From the size of this parallax, the distance of the Moon as measured in Earth radii can be determined. For the Sun however, there was no observable parallax (we now know that it is about 8.8", several times smaller than the resolution of the unaided eye).

In the first book, Hipparchus assumes that the parallax of the Sun is 0, as if it is at infinite distance. He then analyzed a solar eclipse, which Toomer presumes to be the eclipse of 14 March 190 BC.[33] It was total in the region of the Hellespont (and in his birthplace, Nicaea); at the time Toomer proposes the Romans were preparing for war with Antiochus III in the area, and the eclipse is mentioned by Livy in his Ab Urbe Condita Libri VIII.2. It was also observed in Alexandria, where the Sun was reported to be obscured 4/5ths by the Moon. Alexandria and Nicaea are on the same meridian. Alexandria is at about 31° North, and the region of the Hellespont about 40° North. (It has been contended that authors like Strabo and Ptolemy had fairly decent values for these geographical positions, so Hipparchus must have known them too. However, Strabo's Hipparchus dependent latitudes for this region are at least 1° too high, and Ptolemy appears to copy them, placing Byzantium 2° high in latitude.) Hipparchus could draw a triangle formed by the two places and the Moon, and from simple geometry was able to establish a distance of the Moon, expressed in Earth radii. Because the eclipse occurred in the morning, the Moon was not in the meridian, and it has been proposed that as a consequence the distance found by Hipparchus was a lower limit. In any case, according to Pappus, Hipparchus found that the least distance is 71 (from this eclipse), and the greatest 83 Earth radii.

In the second book, Hipparchus starts from the opposite extreme assumption: he assigns a (minimum) distance to the Sun of 490 Earth radii. This would correspond to a parallax of 7′, which is apparently the greatest parallax that Hipparchus thought would not be noticed (for comparison: the typical resolution of the human eye is about 2′; Tycho Brahe made naked eye observation with an accuracy down to 1′). In this case, the shadow of the Earth is a cone rather than a cylinder as under the first assumption. Hipparchus observed (at lunar eclipses) that at the mean distance of the Moon, the diameter of the shadow cone is 2+12 lunar diameters. That apparent diameter is, as he had observed, 360650 degrees. With these values and simple geometry, Hipparchus could determine the mean distance; because it was computed for a minimum distance of the Sun, it is the maximum mean distance possible for the Moon. With his value for the eccentricity of the orbit, he could compute the least and greatest distances of the Moon too. According to Pappus, he found a least distance of 62, a mean of 67+13, and consequently a greatest distance of 72+23 Earth radii. With this method, as the parallax of the Sun decreases (i.e., its distance increases), the minimum limit for the mean distance is 59 Earth radii—exactly the mean distance that Ptolemy later derived.

Hipparchus thus had the problematic result that his minimum distance (from book 1) was greater than his maximum mean distance (from book 2). He was intellectually honest about this discrepancy, and probably realized that especially the first method is very sensitive to the accuracy of the observations and parameters. (In fact, modern calculations show that the size of the 189 BC solar eclipse at Alexandria must have been closer to 910ths and not the reported 45ths, a fraction more closely matched by the degree of totality at Alexandria of eclipses occurring in 310 and 129 BC which were also nearly total in the Hellespont and are thought by many to be more likely possibilities for the eclipse Hipparchus used for his computations.)

Ptolemy later measured the lunar parallax directly (Almagest V.13), and used the second method of Hipparchus with lunar eclipses to compute the distance of the Sun (Almagest V.15). He criticizes Hipparchus for making contradictory assumptions, and obtaining conflicting results (Almagest V.11): but apparently he failed to understand Hipparchus's strategy to establish limits consistent with the observations, rather than a single value for the distance. His results were the best so far: the actual mean distance of the Moon is 60.3 Earth radii, within his limits from Hipparchus's second book.

Theon of Smyrna wrote that according to Hipparchus, the Sun is 1,880 times the size of the Earth, and the Earth twenty-seven times the size of the Moon; apparently this refers to volumes, not diameters. From the geometry of book 2 it follows that the Sun is at 2,550 Earth radii, and the mean distance of the Moon is 60+12 radii. Similarly, Cleomedes quotes Hipparchus for the sizes of the Sun and Earth as 1050:1; this leads to a mean lunar distance of 61 radii. Apparently Hipparchus later refined his computations, and derived accurate single values that he could use for predictions of solar eclipses.

See Toomer (1974) for a more detailed discussion.[34]

Eclipses edit

Pliny (Naturalis Historia II.X) tells us that Hipparchus demonstrated that lunar eclipses can occur five months apart, and solar eclipses seven months (instead of the usual six months); and the Sun can be hidden twice in thirty days, but as seen by different nations. Ptolemy discussed this a century later at length in Almagest VI.6. The geometry, and the limits of the positions of Sun and Moon when a solar or lunar eclipse is possible, are explained in Almagest VI.5. Hipparchus apparently made similar calculations. The result that two solar eclipses can occur one month apart is important, because this can not be based on observations: one is visible on the northern and the other on the southern hemisphere—as Pliny indicates—and the latter was inaccessible to the Greek.

Prediction of a solar eclipse, i.e., exactly when and where it will be visible, requires a solid lunar theory and proper treatment of the lunar parallax. Hipparchus must have been the first to be able to do this. A rigorous treatment requires spherical trigonometry, thus those who remain certain that Hipparchus lacked it must speculate that he may have made do with planar approximations. He may have discussed these things in Perí tēs katá plátos mēniaías tēs selēnēs kinēseōs ("On the monthly motion of the Moon in latitude"), a work mentioned in the Suda.

Pliny also remarks that "he also discovered for what exact reason, although the shadow causing the eclipse must from sunrise onward be below the earth, it happened once in the past that the Moon was eclipsed in the west while both luminaries were visible above the earth" (translation H. Rackham (1938), Loeb Classical Library 330 p. 207). Toomer argued that this must refer to the large total lunar eclipse of 26 November 139 BC, when over a clean sea horizon as seen from Rhodes, the Moon was eclipsed in the northwest just after the Sun rose in the southeast.[24] This would be the second eclipse of the 345-year interval that Hipparchus used to verify the traditional Babylonian periods: this puts a late date to the development of Hipparchus's lunar theory. We do not know what "exact reason" Hipparchus found for seeing the Moon eclipsed while apparently it was not in exact opposition to the Sun. Parallax lowers the altitude of the luminaries; refraction raises them, and from a high point of view the horizon is lowered.

Astronomical instruments and astrometry edit

Hipparchus and his predecessors used various instruments for astronomical calculations and observations, such as the gnomon, the astrolabe, and the armillary sphere.

Hipparchus is credited with the invention or improvement of several astronomical instruments, which were used for a long time for naked-eye observations. According to Synesius of Ptolemais (4th century) he made the first astrolabion: this may have been an armillary sphere (which Ptolemy however says he constructed, in Almagest V.1); or the predecessor of the planar instrument called astrolabe (also mentioned by Theon of Alexandria). With an astrolabe Hipparchus was the first to be able to measure the geographical latitude and time by observing fixed stars. Previously this was done at daytime by measuring the shadow cast by a gnomon, by recording the length of the longest day of the year or with the portable instrument known as a scaphe.

 
Equatorial ring of Hipparchus's time.

Ptolemy mentions (Almagest V.14) that he used a similar instrument as Hipparchus, called dioptra, to measure the apparent diameter of the Sun and Moon. Pappus of Alexandria described it (in his commentary on the Almagest of that chapter), as did Proclus (Hypotyposis IV). It was a four-foot rod with a scale, a sighting hole at one end, and a wedge that could be moved along the rod to exactly obscure the disk of Sun or Moon.

Hipparchus also observed solar equinoxes, which may be done with an equatorial ring: its shadow falls on itself when the Sun is on the equator (i.e., in one of the equinoctial points on the ecliptic), but the shadow falls above or below the opposite side of the ring when the Sun is south or north of the equator. Ptolemy quotes (in Almagest III.1 (H195)) a description by Hipparchus of an equatorial ring in Alexandria; a little further he describes two such instruments present in Alexandria in his own time.

Hipparchus applied his knowledge of spherical angles to the problem of denoting locations on the Earth's surface. Before him a grid system had been used by Dicaearchus of Messana, but Hipparchus was the first to apply mathematical rigor to the determination of the latitude and longitude of places on the Earth. Hipparchus wrote a critique in three books on the work of the geographer Eratosthenes of Cyrene (3rd century BC), called Pròs tèn Eratosthénous geographían ("Against the Geography of Eratosthenes"). It is known to us from Strabo of Amaseia, who in his turn criticised Hipparchus in his own Geographia. Hipparchus apparently made many detailed corrections to the locations and distances mentioned by Eratosthenes. It seems he did not introduce many improvements in methods, but he did propose a means to determine the geographical longitudes of different cities at lunar eclipses (Strabo Geographia 1 January 2012). A lunar eclipse is visible simultaneously on half of the Earth, and the difference in longitude between places can be computed from the difference in local time when the eclipse is observed. His approach would give accurate results if it were correctly carried out but the limitations of timekeeping accuracy in his era made this method impractical.

Star catalog edit

Late in his career (possibly about 135 BC) Hipparchus compiled his star catalog. Scholars have been searching for it for centuries.[35] In 2022, it was announced that a part of it was discovered in a medieval parchment manuscript, Codex Climaci Rescriptus, from Saint Catherine's Monastery in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt as hidden text (palimpsest).[36][37]

 
The figure on the left may be Hipparchus, from Raphael’s fresco The School of Athens

Hipparchus also constructed a celestial globe depicting the constellations, based on his observations. His interest in the fixed stars may have been inspired by the observation of a supernova (according to Pliny), or by his discovery of precession, according to Ptolemy, who says that Hipparchus could not reconcile his data with earlier observations made by Timocharis and Aristillus. For more information see Discovery of precession. In Raphael's painting The School of Athens, Hipparchus may be depicted holding his celestial globe, as the representative figure for astronomy. It is not certain that the figure is meant to represent him.[35]

Previously, Eudoxus of Cnidus in the fourth century BC had described the stars and constellations in two books called Phaenomena and Entropon. Aratus wrote a poem called Phaenomena or Arateia based on Eudoxus's work. Hipparchus wrote a commentary on the Arateia—his only preserved work—which contains many stellar positions and times for rising, culmination, and setting of the constellations, and these are likely to have been based on his own measurements.

 
A 19th century artist's impression of Hipparchus[38]

According to Roman sources, Hipparchus made his measurements with a scientific instrument and he obtained the positions of roughly 850 stars. Pliny the Elder writes in book II, 24–26 of his Natural History:[39]

This same Hipparchus, who can never be sufficiently commended, ... discovered a new star that was produced in his own age, and, by observing its motions on the day in which it shone, he was led to doubt whether it does not often happen, that those stars have motion which we suppose to be fixed. And the same individual attempted, what might seem presumptuous even in a deity, viz. to number the stars for posterity and to express their relations by appropriate names; having previously devised instruments, by which he might mark the places and the magnitudes of each individual star. In this way it might be easily discovered, not only whether they were destroyed or produced, but whether they changed their relative positions, and likewise, whether they were increased or diminished; the heavens being thus left as an inheritance to any one, who might be found competent to complete his plan.

This passage reports that

  • Hipparchus was inspired by a newly emerging star
  • he doubts on the stability of stellar brightnesses
  • he observed with appropriate instruments (plural—it is not said that he observed everything with the same instrument)
  • he made a catalogue of stars

It is unknown what instrument he used. The armillary sphere was probably invented only later—maybe by Ptolemy 265 years after Hipparchus. The historian of science S. Hoffmann found clues that Hipparchus may have observed the longitudes and latitudes in different coordinate systems and, thus, with different instrumentation.[16] Right ascensions, for instance, could have been observed with a clock, while angular separations could have been measured with another device.

Stellar magnitude edit

Hipparchus is conjectured to have ranked the apparent magnitudes of stars on a numerical scale from 1, the brightest, to 6, the faintest.[40] This hypothesis is based on the vague statement by Pliny the Elder but cannot be proven by the data in Hipparchus's commentary on Aratus's poem. In this only work by his hand that has survived until today, he does not use the magnitude scale but estimates brightnesses unsystematically. However, this does not prove or disprove anything because the commentary might be an early work while the magnitude scale could have been introduced later.[16]

Nevertheless, this system certainly precedes Ptolemy, who used it extensively about AD 150.[40] This system was made more precise and extended by N. R. Pogson in 1856, who placed the magnitudes on a logarithmic scale, making magnitude 1 stars 100 times brighter than magnitude 6 stars, thus each magnitude is 5100 or 2.512 times brighter than the next faintest magnitude.[41]

Coordinate System edit

It is disputed which coordinate system(s) he used. Ptolemy's catalog in the Almagest, which is derived from Hipparchus's catalog, is given in ecliptic coordinates. Although Hipparchus strictly distinguishes between "signs" (30° section of the zodiac) and "constellations" in the zodiac, it is highly questionable whether or not he had an instrument to directly observe / measure units on the ecliptic.[16][39] He probably marked them as a unit on his celestial globe but the instrumentation for his observations is unknown.[16]

 
Ptolemy's constellation areas (blue polygons) and "signs" of the zodiac had different sizes and extends; it is highly likely Hipparchus considered these units the same. Reconstruction from the Almagest[39]

Delambre in his Histoire de l'Astronomie Ancienne (1817) concluded that Hipparchus knew and used the equatorial coordinate system, a conclusion challenged by Otto Neugebauer in his History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy (1975). Hipparchus seems to have used a mix of ecliptic coordinates and equatorial coordinates: in his commentary on Eudoxus he provides stars' polar distance (equivalent to the declination in the equatorial system), right ascension (equatorial), longitude (ecliptic), polar longitude (hybrid), but not celestial latitude. This opinion was confirmed by the careful investigation of Hoffmann[39] who independently studied the material, potential sources, techniques and results of Hipparchus and reconstructed his celestial globe and its making.

As with most of his work, Hipparchus's star catalog was adopted and perhaps expanded by Ptolemy, who has (since Brahe in 1598) been accused by some[42] of fraud for stating (Syntaxis, book 7, chapter 4) that he observed all 1025 stars—critics claim that, for almost every star, he used Hipparchus's data and precessed it to his own epoch 2+23 centuries later by adding 2°40' to the longitude, using an erroneously small precession constant of 1° per century. This claim is highly exaggerated because it applies modern standards of citation to an ancient author. True is only that "the ancient star catalogue" that was initiated by Hipparchus in the second century BC, was reworked and improved multiple times in the 265 years to the Almagest (which is good scientific practise even today).[43] Although the Almagest star catalogue is based upon Hipparchus's, it is not only a blind copy but enriched, enhanced, and thus (at least partially) re-observed.[16]

Celestial globe edit

 
Reconstruction of Hipparchus's celestial globe according to ancient descriptions and the data in manuscripts by his hand (excellence cluster TOPOI, Berlin, 2015 - published in Hoffmann (2017)[39]).

Hipparchus's celestial globe was an instrument similar to modern electronic computers.[39] He used it to determine risings, settings and culminations (cf. also Almagest, book VIII, chapter 3). Therefore, his globe was mounted in a horizontal plane and had a meridian ring with a scale. In combination with a grid that divided the celestial equator into 24 hour lines (longitudes equalling our right ascension hours) the instrument allowed him to determine the hours. The ecliptic was marked and divided in 12 sections of equal length (the "signs", which he called zodion or dodekatemoria in order to distinguish them from constellations (astron). The globe was virtually reconstructed by a historian of science.

Arguments for and against Hipparchus's star catalog in the Almagest edit

For:

  • common errors in the reconstructed Hipparchian star catalogue and the Almagest suggest a direct transfer without re-observation within 265 years. There are 18 stars with common errors - for the other ~800 stars, the errors are not extant or within the error ellipse. That means, no further statement is allowed on these hundreds of stars.
  • further statistical arguments

Against:

  • Unlike Ptolemy, Hipparchus did not use ecliptic coordinates to describe stellar positions.
  • Hipparchus's catalogue is reported in Roman times to have enlisted about 850 stars but Ptolemy's catalogue has 1025 stars. Thus, somebody has added further entries.
  • There are stars cited in the Almagest from Hipparchus that are missing in the Almagest star catalogue. Thus, by all the reworking within scientific progress in 265 years, not all of Hipparchus's stars made it into the Almagest version of the star catalogue.

Conclusion: Hipparchus's star catalogue is one of the sources of the Almagest star catalogue but not the only source.[43]

Precession of the equinoxes (146–127 BC) edit

Hipparchus is generally recognized as discoverer of the precession of the equinoxes in 127 BC.[44] His two books on precession, On the Displacement of the Solstitial and Equinoctial Points and On the Length of the Year, are both mentioned in the Almagest of Claudius Ptolemy. According to Ptolemy, Hipparchus measured the longitude of Spica and Regulus and other bright stars. Comparing his measurements with data from his predecessors, Timocharis and Aristillus, he concluded that Spica had moved 2° relative to the autumnal equinox. He also compared the lengths of the tropical year (the time it takes the Sun to return to an equinox) and the sidereal year (the time it takes the Sun to return to a fixed star), and found a slight discrepancy. Hipparchus concluded that the equinoxes were moving ("precessing") through the zodiac, and that the rate of precession was not less than 1° in a century.

Geography edit

Hipparchus's treatise Against the Geography of Eratosthenes in three books is not preserved.[45] Most of our knowledge of it comes from Strabo, according to whom Hipparchus thoroughly and often unfairly criticized Eratosthenes, mainly for internal contradictions and inaccuracy in determining positions of geographical localities. Hipparchus insists that a geographic map must be based only on astronomical measurements of latitudes and longitudes and triangulation for finding unknown distances. In geographic theory and methods Hipparchus introduced three main innovations.[46]

He was the first to use the grade grid, to determine geographic latitude from star observations, and not only from the Sun's altitude, a method known long before him, and to suggest that geographic longitude could be determined by means of simultaneous observations of lunar eclipses in distant places. In the practical part of his work, the so-called "table of climata", Hipparchus listed latitudes for several tens of localities. In particular, he improved Eratosthenes' values for the latitudes of Athens, Sicily, and southern extremity of India.[47][48][49] In calculating latitudes of climata (latitudes correlated with the length of the longest solstitial day), Hipparchus used an unexpectedly accurate value for the obliquity of the ecliptic, 23°40' (the actual value in the second half of the second century BC was approximately 23°43'), whereas all other ancient authors knew only a roughly rounded value 24°, and even Ptolemy used a less accurate value, 23°51'.[50]

Hipparchus opposed the view generally accepted in the Hellenistic period that the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and the Caspian Sea are parts of a single ocean. At the same time he extends the limits of the oikoumene, i.e. the inhabited part of the land, up to the equator and the Arctic Circle.[51] Hipparchus's ideas found their reflection in the Geography of Ptolemy. In essence, Ptolemy's work is an extended attempt to realize Hipparchus's vision of what geography ought to be.

Modern speculation edit

Hipparchus was in the international news in 2005, when it was again proposed (as in 1898) that the data on the celestial globe of Hipparchus or in his star catalog may have been preserved in the only surviving large ancient celestial globe which depicts the constellations with moderate accuracy, the globe carried by the Farnese Atlas.[52][53] Evidence suggests that the Farnese globe may show constellations in the Aratean tradition and deviate from the constellations used by Hipparchus.[39]

A line in Plutarch's Table Talk states that Hipparchus counted 103,049 compound propositions that can be formed from ten simple propositions. 103,049 is the tenth Schröder–Hipparchus number, which counts the number of ways of adding one or more pairs of parentheses around consecutive subsequences of two or more items in any sequence of ten symbols. This has led to speculation that Hipparchus knew about enumerative combinatorics, a field of mathematics that developed independently in modern mathematics.[54][55]

Hipparchos was suggested in a 2013 paper to have accidentally observed the planet Uranus in 128 BC and catalogued it as a star, over a millennium and a half before its formal discovery in 1781.[56]

Legacy edit

 
Hipparcos satellite in the Large Solar Simulator, ESTEC, February 1988

Hipparchus may be depicted opposite Ptolemy in Raphael's 1509–1511 painting The School of Athens, although this figure is usually identified as Zoroaster.[35]

The formal name for the ESA's Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission is High Precision Parallax Collecting Satellite, making a backronym, HiPParCoS, that echoes and commemorates the name of Hipparchus.

The lunar crater Hipparchus, the Martian crater Hipparchus, and the asteroid 4000 Hipparchus are named after him.

He was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame in 2004.[57]

Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre, historian of astronomy, mathematical astronomer and director of the Paris Observatory, in his history of astronomy in the 18th century (1821), considered Hipparchus along with Johannes Kepler and James Bradley the greatest astronomers of all time.[58]

The Astronomers Monument at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, California, United States features a relief of Hipparchus as one of six of the greatest astronomers of all time and the only one from Antiquity.[59]

Johannes Kepler had great respect for Tycho Brahe's methods and the accuracy of his observations, and considered him to be the new Hipparchus, who would provide the foundation for a restoration of the science of astronomy.[60]

Translations edit

  • Berger, Ernst Hugo, ed. (1869). Die geographischen Fragmente des Hipparch [The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus] (in German). Leipzig: Teubner. OCLC 981902787.
  • Dicks, D. R., ed. (1960). The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus. University of London classical studies. London: Athlone Press. OCLC 490381.
  • Manitius, Karl, ed. (1894). Hipparchou Tōn Aratou kai Eudoxou Phainomenōn exēgēseōs vivlia tria = Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentariorum libri tres [Hipparchus' Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in three books] (in Ancient Greek and Latin). Leipzig: Teubner. OCLC 1127047584.
  • Cusinato, Bruna; Vanin, Gabriele, eds. (2022) [2013]. Commentari di Ipparco ai Fenomeni di Arato ed Eudosso [Hipparchus' Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus] (in Italian). Translation by Bruna Cusinato; Introduction and astronomical commentary by Gabriele Vanin (3rd ed.). arXiv:2206.08243. Originally published in Vanin, Gabriele (2013). Catasterismi. Feltre: Rheticus-DBS Zanetti. pp. 85–166.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stanisław Poniatowski's collection of contemporary forgeries passed off as antique engraved gems included an amethyst depicting Hipparchus with a star and the subject's name, which was included in a Christie's 1839 auction. From Poniatowski (1833), p. 52: "... Dans le champ de cette pierre on voit une étoile et en beaux caractères le nom du sujet. Améthyste." [In the field of this stone we see a star and in beautiful characters the name of the subject. Amethyst.][61]
    This engraving was used for the title page of William Henry Smyth's 1844 book, as suggested by an 1842 letter Smyth sent to the National Institute for the Promotion of Science, which described "the head of Hipparchus, from the Poniatowski-gem, intended as a vignette illustration of his work".[62] The engraving has subsequently been repeatedly copied and re-used as a representation of Hipparchus, for instance in a 1965 Greek postage stamp commemorating the Eugenides Planetarium in Athens.[63]
  2. ^ These figures use modern dynamical time, not the solar time of Hipparchus's era. E.g., the true 4267-month interval was nearer 126,007 days plus a little over half an hour.

References edit

  1. ^ Linton, C. M. (2004). From Eudoxus to Einstein: a history of mathematical astronomy. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-521-82750-8.
  2. ^ Toomer, Gerald J. (1996). "Ptolemy and his Greek Predecessors". In Walker, Christopher B. F. (ed.). Astronomy before the Telescope. London: The British Museum Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-7141-1746-1. OCLC 1391175189.
  3. ^ McCluskey, Stephen C. (2000). Astronomies and cultures in early medieval Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-521-77852-7.
  4. ^ Willard, Emma (1854). Astronography, or Astronomical Geography. Troy, New York: Merriam, Moore & Co. p. 246.
  5. ^ Denison Olmsted, Outlines of a Course of Lectures on Meteorology and Astronomy, pp 22
  6. ^ Jones, Alexander Raymond (2017). "Hipparchus". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  7. ^ Newcomb, Simon (1878). Popular Astronomy. New York: Harper. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-665-01376-8. OCLC 612980386.
  8. ^ Glashan, J. C. (1895). "Celestial Mechanics: Ptolemy, Copernicus and Newton". University of Toronto Quarterly. 2 (1): 49. hdl:2027/mdp.39015059411960. ISSN 0042-0247. OCLC 1011693113.
  9. ^ Delambre, Jean Baptiste Joseph (1817). Histoire de l'astronomie ancienne [History of Ancient Astronomy] (in French). Vol. 1. Paris: Ve Courcier. p. lxi. OCLC 594550435. Hipparque, le vrai père de l'Astronomie [Hipparchus, the true father of Astronomy]
  10. ^ "Ancient coinage of Bithynia". snible.org. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  11. ^ Toomer 1978.
  12. ^ a b c Jones 2001.
  13. ^ Modern editions: Manitius 1894 (Ancient Greek and Latin), Cusinato & Vanin 2022 (Italian)
  14. ^ Toomer, Gerald J. (1988). "Hipparchus and Babylonian Astronomy". In Leichty, Erle; Ellis, Maria deJ. (eds.). A Scientific Humanist: studies in memory of Abraham Sachs. Philadelphia: Samuel Noah Kramer Fund, Univ. Museum. pp. 353–362. ISBN 978-0-934718-90-5.
  15. ^ Bowen, A.C.; Goldstein, B.R. (1991). "The Introduction of Dated Observations and Precise Measurement in Greek Astronomy". Archive for History of Exact Sciences. 43 (2): 104.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Hoffmann 2017, Ch. 6 "Befunde", pp. 661–676, doi:10.1007/978-3-658-18683-8_6
  17. ^ Kugler, Franz Xaver (1900). Die Babylonische Mondrechnung [The Babylonian lunar computation]. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder.
  18. ^ Aaboe, Asger (1955). "On the Babylonian origin of some Hipparchian parameters". Centaurus. 4 (2): 122–125. Bibcode:1955Cent....4..122A. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0498.1955.tb00619.x.. On p. 124, Aaboe identifies the Hipparchian equation 5458 syn. mo. = 5923 drac. mo. with the equation of 1,30,58 syn. mo. = 1,38,43 drac. mo. (written in sexagesimal), citing Neugebauer, Otto E. (1955). Astronomical Cuneiform Texts. Vol. 1. London: Lund Humphries. p. 73.
  19. ^ a b Toomer, Gerald J. (1974). "The Chord Table of Hipparchus and the Early History of Greek Trigonometry". Centaurus. 18 (1): 6–28. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0498.1974.tb00205.x. ISSN 0008-8994. OCLC 5155644322.
  20. ^ Toomer 1984, p. 215.
  21. ^ Klintberg, Bo C. (2005). "Hipparchus's 3600′-Based Chord Table and Its Place in the History of Ancient Greek and Indian Trigonometry". Indian Journal of History of Science. 40 (2): 169–203.
  22. ^ Synesius wrote in a letter describing an instrument involving the stereographic projection: "Hipparchus long ago hinted at the unfolding of a spherical surface [on a plane], so as to keep a proper proportion between the given ratios in the different figures, and he was in fact the first to apply himself to this subject. I, however (if it is not presumptuous to make so great a claim), have followed it to its uttermost conclusion, and have perfected it, although for most of the intervening time the problem had been neglected; for the great Ptolemy and the divine band of his successors were content to make only such use of it as sufficed for the night-clock by means of the sixteen stars, which were the only ones that Hipparchus rearranged and entered on his instrument." Translation from Dicks 1960, fragment 63 pp. 102–103.
    Dicks concludes (commentary on fragment 63, pp. 194–207): "Whether Synesius' evidence can be accepted at its face value depends on the view taken as to the strength of the objections raised above. On the whole, it would seem that the value of his testimony has been greatly exaggerated, and its unsatisfactory nature on so many points insufficiently emphasized. At any rate, the 'instrument' he sent to Paeonius was either a modified astrolabic clock of the Vitruvian type or a simple celestial map, and not a planispheric astrolabe. Furthermore, on the evidence available we are not, in my opinion, justified in attributing to Hipparchus a knowledge of either stereographic projection or the planispheric astrolabe."
  23. ^ Neugebauer, Otto (1949). "The Early History of the Astrolabe". Isis. 40 (3): 240–256. doi:10.1086/349045. JSTOR 227240. S2CID 144350543.
  24. ^ a b Toomer, Gerald J. (1980). "Hipparchus' Empirical Basis for his Lunar Mean Motions". Centaurus. 24 (1): 97–109. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0498.1980.tb00367.x.
  25. ^ Stephenson, F. Richard; Fatoohi, Louay J. (1993). "Lunar Eclipse Times Recorded in Babylonian History". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 24 (4): 255–267. doi:10.1177/002182869302400402. ISSN 0021-8286. OCLC 812872940.
  26. ^ Steele, J. M.; Stephenson, F. R.; Morrison, L. V. (1997). "The Accuracy of Eclipse Times Measured by the Babylonians". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 28 (4): 337–345. doi:10.1177/002182869702800404. ISSN 0021-8286. OCLC 5723829772.
  27. ^ Chapront, J.; Chapront-Touzé, M.; Francou, G. (2002). "A new determination of lunar orbital parameters, precession constant and tidal acceleration from LLR measurements". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 387 (2): 700–709. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20020420. S2CID 55131241.
  28. ^ Thurston 2002.
  29. ^ Toomer, Gerald J. (1968). "The Size of the Lunar Epicycle According to Hipparchus". Centaurus. 12 (3): 145–150. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0498.1968.tb00087.x. ISSN 0008-8994. OCLC 4656032977.
  30. ^ Leverington, David (2003). Babylon to Voyager and Beyond: A History of Planetary Astronomy. Cambridge University Press. p. 30. ISBN 9780521808408.
  31. ^ Thurston 2002, p. 67, note 16.
  32. ^ Thurston 2002, note 14.
  33. ^ "Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses". from the original on 25 April 2015. Retrieved 11 August 2009., #04310, Fred Espenak, NASA/GSFC
  34. ^ Toomer, Gerald J. (1974). "Hipparchus on the Distances of the Sun and Moon". Archives for the History of the Exact Sciences. 14 (2): 126–142. doi:10.1007/BF00329826. S2CID 122093782.
  35. ^ a b c Swerdlow, N. M. (1992). "The Enigma of Ptolemy's Catalogue of Stars". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 23 (3): 173–183. Bibcode:1992JHA....23..173S. doi:10.1177/002182869202300303. S2CID 116612700.
  36. ^ Gysembergh, Victor; Williams, Peter J.; Zingg, Emanuel (2022). "New evidence for Hipparchus' Star Catalog revealed by multispectral imaging". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 53 (4): 383–393. doi:10.1177/00218286221128289.
  37. ^ Marchant, Jo (18 October 2022). "First known map of night sky found hidden in Medieval parchment". Nature News. 610 (7933): 613–614. doi:10.1038/d41586-022-03296-1. PMID 36258126. S2CID 252994351. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
  38. ^ Image by Charles Kreutzberger and Louis Sargent, printed in:
    Figuier, Louis (1866). Vies des savants illustres. Librairie Internationale. p. 284. Reprinted with artists' signatures trimmed in:

    Yaggy, Levy W.; Haines, Thomas L. (1880). Museum of Antiquity. Western Publishing House. p. 745.

  39. ^ a b c d e f g Hoffmann 2017.
  40. ^ a b Toomer 1984, p. 16: "The magnitudes range (according to a system which certainly precedes Ptolemy, but is only conjecturally attributed to Hipparchus) from 1 to 6.", pp. 341–399.
  41. ^ Pogson, N. R. (1856). "Magnitudes of Thirty-six of the Minor Planets for the first day of each month of the year 1857". MNRAS. 17: 12. Bibcode:1856MNRAS..17...12P. doi:10.1093/mnras/17.1.12.
  42. ^ Newton, Robert Russell (1977). The Crime of Claudius Ptolemy. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-1990-2 – via Internet Archive.
  43. ^ a b Hoffmann, Susanne M. (2018). "The Genesis of Hipparchus' Celestial Globe". Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry. 18 (4): 281. ISSN 2241-8121.
  44. ^ Jones, Alexander (2010). "Ancient Rejection and Adoption of Ptolemy's Frame of Reference for Longitudes". In Jones, Alexander (ed.). Ptolemy in Perspective. Archimedes. Vol. 23. Springer. p. 36. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2788-7_2. ISBN 978-90-481-2787-0.
  45. ^ Editions of fragments: Berger 1869 (Latin), Dicks 1960 (English).
  46. ^ On Hipparchus's geography see: Berger 1869; Dicks 1960; Neugebauer 1975, pp. 332–338; Shcheglov 2007.
  47. ^ Shcheglov, Dmitriy A. (2010). "Hipparchus on the Latitude of Southern India". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 45 (4): 359–380. ISSN 0017-3916. OCLC 7179548964.
  48. ^ Shcheglov, Dmitriy A. (2006). "Eratosthenes' Parallel of Rhodes and the History of the System of Climata". Klio. 88 (2). Walter de Gruyter: 351–359. doi:10.1524/klio.2006.88.2.351. ISSN 2192-7669. OCLC 7003041189. Academia:191065.
  49. ^ Shcheglov 2007.
  50. ^ Diller A. (1934). "Geographical Latitudes in Eratosthenes, Hipparchus and Posidonius". Klio 27.3: 258–269; cf. Shcheglov 2007, pp. 177–180.
  51. ^ Shcheglov, D.A. (2007). "Ptolemy's Latitude of Thule and the Map Projection in the Pre-Ptolemaic Geography". Antike Naturwissenschaft und Ihre Rezeption (AKAN). 17: 121–151 (esp. 132–139). Academia:213001.
  52. ^ Schaefer, Bradley Elliott (2005). "The epoch of the constellations on the Farnese Atlas and their origin in Hipparchus's lost catalogue". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 36 (2): 167–196. Bibcode:2005JHA....36..167S. doi:10.1177/002182860503600202. S2CID 15431718.
  53. ^ Duke, Dennis W. (February 2006). "Analysis of the Farnese Globe". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 37, Part 1 (126): 87–100. Bibcode:2006JHA....37...87D. doi:10.1177/002182860603700107. S2CID 36841784.
  54. ^ Stanley, Richard P. (1997). "Hipparchus, Plutarch, Schröder, and Hough" (PDF). The American Mathematical Monthly. 104 (4): 344–350. doi:10.2307/2974582. JSTOR 2974582.
  55. ^ Acerbi, F. (2003). (PDF). Archive for History of Exact Sciences. 57 (6): 465–502. doi:10.1007/s00407-003-0067-0. S2CID 122758966. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 July 2011.
  56. ^ René Bourtembourg (2013). "Was Uranus Observed by Hipparchos?". Journal for the History of Astronomy. 44 (4): 377–387. Bibcode:2013JHA....44..377B. doi:10.1177/002182861304400401. S2CID 122482074.
  57. ^ "X-Prize Group Founder to Speak at Induction". El Paso Times. El Paso, Texas. 17 October 2004. p. 59.
  58. ^ Delambre, Jean Baptiste Joseph (1827). Histoire de l'astronomie au dix-huitième siècle [History of astronomy in the 18th century] (in French). Paris: Bachelier. p. 413 (see also pp. xvii and 420).
  59. ^ "Astronomers Monument & Sundial". Griffith Observatory.
  60. ^ Christianson, J. R. (2000). On Tycho's Island: Tycho Brahe and His Assistants, 1570–1601. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p 304.
  61. ^ "Head of Hipparchus", CARC:1839-881, described in Poniatowski's 1830–1833 catalog Catalogue des pierres gravées antiques (VIII.2.60, vol. 1, p. 105, vol. 2, p. 52) and included in Christie's 1839 auction (A catalogue of the very celebrated collection of antique gems of the Prince Poniatowski ..., No. 881), with whereabouts since unknown.
  62. ^ "Stated Meeting, September 12, 1842". Letters and Communications. Bulletin of the Proceedings of the National Institute for the Promotion of Science. 3: 258. 1845.

    Smyth, William Henry (1844). A Cycle of Celestial Objects, for the use of naval, military, and private astronomers. Vol. 2. London: J.W. Parker. Title page. OCLC 1042977120.

  63. ^ Wilson, Robin (1989). "Stamp corner". The Mathematical Intelligencer. 11 (1): 72. doi:10.1007/bf03023779. S2CID 189887329.

Works cited edit

  • Berger, Ernst Hugo, ed. (1869). Die geographischen Fragmente des Hipparch [The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus] (in German). Leipzig: Teubner. OCLC 981902787.
  • Cusinato, Bruna; Vanin, Gabriele, eds. (2022) [2013]. Commentari di Ipparco ai Fenomeni di Arato ed Eudosso [Hipparchus' Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus] (in Italian). Translation by Bruna Cusinato; Introduction and astronomical commentary by Gabriele Vanin (3rd ed.). arXiv:2206.08243.
  • Dicks, D. R., ed. (1960). The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus. University of London classical studies. London: Athlone Press. OCLC 490381.
  • Hoffmann, Susanne M. (2017). Hipparchs Himmelsglobus: Ein Bindeglied in der babylonisch-griechischen Astrometrie? [Hipparchus' Celestial Globe: A Link in Babylonian-Greek Astrometry?] (in German). Wiesbaden: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-658-18683-8. ISBN 978-3-658-18683-8.
  • Jones, Alexander (2001). "Hipparchus". In Murdin, Paul (ed.). Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Astrophysics. Bristol: Institute of Physics Pub. ISBN 978-0-333-75088-9. OCLC 1193410336.
  • Manitius, Karl, ed. (1894). Hipparchou Tōn Aratou kai Eudoxou Phainomenōn exēgēseōs vivlia tria = Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentariorum libri tres [Hipparchus' Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in three books] (in Ancient Greek and Latin). Leipzig: Teubner. OCLC 1127047584.
  • Neugebauer, Otto E. (1975). A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy. Berlin: Springer. Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.
  • Ptolemy (1984). Toomer, Gerald J. (ed.). Ptolemy's Almagest. London: Duckworth. ISBN 9780387912202.
  • Shcheglov, Dmitry A. (2007). "Hipparchus' Table of Climata and Ptolemy's Geography". Orbis Terrarum. 9: 159–192. ISSN 1385-285X. OCLC 34941672. Academia:214134 214134.
  • Thurston, Hugh (2002). "Greek Mathematical Astronomy Reconsidered". Isis. 93 (1): 58–69. doi:10.1086/343242. ISSN 0021-1753. JSTOR 10.1086/343242. OCLC 907786460. S2CID 145527182.
  • Toomer, Gerald J. (1978). "Hipparchus". In Gillispie, C. C. (ed.). Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 15 (Supplement I, Adams–Sejszner). Scribner. pp. 207–224.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • David Ulansey about Hipparchus's understanding of the precession

hipparchus, this, article, about, greek, astronomer, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, greek, Ἵππαρχος, hipparkhos, greek, astronomer, geographer, mathematician, considered, founder, trigonometry, most, famous, incidental, discovery, precession, equinoxes, bor. This article is about the Greek astronomer For other uses see Hipparchus disambiguation Hipparchus h ɪ ˈ p ɑːr k e s Greek Ἵpparxos Hipparkhos c 190 c 120 BC was a Greek astronomer geographer and mathematician He is considered the founder of trigonometry 1 but is most famous for his incidental discovery of the precession of the equinoxes 2 Hipparchus was born in Nicaea Bithynia and probably died on the island of Rhodes Greece He is known to have been a working astronomer between 162 and 127 BC 3 Hipparchus19th century engraving based on an engraved amethyst from the Poniatowski gem collection a Bornc 190 BCNicaea Kingdom of Bithynia modern day Iznik Bursa Turkey Diedc 120 BC around age 70 Rhodes Roman Republic modern day Greece OccupationsAstronomerMathematicianGeographer Hipparchus is considered the greatest ancient astronomical observer and by some the greatest overall astronomer of antiquity 4 5 He was the first whose quantitative and accurate models for the motion of the Sun and Moon survive For this he certainly made use of the observations and perhaps the mathematical techniques accumulated over centuries by the Babylonians and by Meton of Athens fifth century BC Timocharis Aristyllus Aristarchus of Samos and Eratosthenes among others 6 He developed trigonometry and constructed trigonometric tables and he solved several problems of spherical trigonometry With his solar and lunar theories and his trigonometry he may have been the first to develop a reliable method to predict solar eclipses His other reputed achievements include the discovery and measurement of Earth s precession the compilation of the first known comprehensive star catalog from the western world and possibly the invention of the astrolabe as well as of the armillary sphere that he may have used in creating the star catalogue Hipparchus is sometimes called the father of astronomy 7 8 a title conferred on him by Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre in 1817 9 Contents 1 Life and work 2 Babylonian sources 3 Geometry trigonometry and other mathematical techniques 4 Lunar and solar theory 4 1 Motion of the Moon 4 2 Orbit of the Moon 4 3 Apparent motion of the Sun 4 4 Orbit of the Sun 4 5 Distance parallax size of the Moon and the Sun 4 6 Eclipses 5 Astronomical instruments and astrometry 6 Star catalog 6 1 Stellar magnitude 6 2 Coordinate System 6 3 Celestial globe 6 4 Arguments for and against Hipparchus s star catalog in the Almagest 7 Precession of the equinoxes 146 127 BC 8 Geography 9 Modern speculation 10 Legacy 11 Translations 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Works cited 16 Further reading 17 External linksLife and work editHipparchus was born in Nicaea Greek Nikaia in Bithynia The exact dates of his life are not known but Ptolemy attributes astronomical observations to him in the period from 147 to 127 BC and some of these are stated as made in Rhodes earlier observations since 162 BC might also have been made by him His birth date c 190 BC was calculated by Delambre based on clues in his work Hipparchus must have lived some time after 127 BC because he analyzed and published his observations from that year Hipparchus obtained information from Alexandria as well as Babylon but it is not known when or if he visited these places He is believed to have died on the island of Rhodes where he seems to have spent most of his later life In the second and third centuries coins were made in his honour in Bithynia that bear his name and show him with a globe 10 Relatively little of Hipparchus s direct work survives into modern times Although he wrote at least fourteen books only his commentary on the popular astronomical poem by Aratus was preserved by later copyists Most of what is known about Hipparchus comes from Strabo s Geography and Pliny s Natural History in the first century Ptolemy s second century Almagest and additional references to him in the fourth century by Pappus and Theon of Alexandria in their commentaries on the Almagest 11 12 Hipparchus s only preserved work is Commentary on the Phaenomena of Eudoxus and Aratus Greek Tῶn Ἀratoy kaὶ Eὐdo3oy fainomenwn ἐ3hghsis This is a highly critical commentary in the form of two books on a popular poem by Aratus based on the work by Eudoxus 13 Hipparchus also made a list of his major works that apparently mentioned about fourteen books but which is only known from references by later authors His famous star catalog was incorporated into the one by Ptolemy and may be almost perfectly reconstructed by subtraction of two and two thirds degrees from the longitudes of Ptolemy s stars The first trigonometric table was apparently compiled by Hipparchus who is consequently now known as the father of trigonometry Babylonian sources editFurther information Babylonian astronomy Earlier Greek astronomers and mathematicians were influenced by Babylonian astronomy to some extent for instance the period relations of the Metonic cycle and Saros cycle may have come from Babylonian sources see Babylonian astronomical diaries Hipparchus seems to have been the first to exploit Babylonian astronomical knowledge and techniques systematically 14 Eudoxus in the 4th century BC and Timocharis and Aristillus in the 3rd century BC already divided the ecliptic in 360 parts our degrees Greek moira of 60 arcminutes and Hipparchus continued this tradition It was only in Hipparchus s time 2nd century BC when this division was introduced probably by Hipparchus s contemporary Hypsikles for all circles in mathematics Eratosthenes 3rd century BC in contrast used a simpler sexagesimal system dividing a circle into 60 parts Hipparchus also adopted the Babylonian astronomical cubit unit Akkadian ammatu Greek pῆxys pechys that was equivalent to 2 or 2 5 large cubit 15 Hipparchus probably compiled a list of Babylonian astronomical observations Gerald J Toomer a historian of astronomy has suggested that Ptolemy s knowledge of eclipse records and other Babylonian observations in the Almagest came from a list made by Hipparchus Hipparchus s use of Babylonian sources has always been known in a general way because of Ptolemy s statements but the only text by Hipparchus that survives does not provide sufficient information to decide whether Hipparchus s knowledge such as his usage of the units cubit and finger degrees and minutes or the concept of hour stars was based on Babylonian practice 16 However Franz Xaver Kugler demonstrated that the synodic and anomalistic periods that Ptolemy attributes to Hipparchus had already been used in Babylonian ephemerides specifically the collection of texts nowadays called System B sometimes attributed to Kidinnu 17 pages needed Hipparchus s long draconitic lunar period 5 458 months 5 923 lunar nodal periods also appears a few times in Babylonian records 18 But the only such tablet explicitly dated is post Hipparchus so the direction of transmission is not settled by the tablets Geometry trigonometry and other mathematical techniques editHipparchus was recognized as the first mathematician known to have possessed a trigonometric table which he needed when computing the eccentricity of the orbits of the Moon and Sun He tabulated values for the chord function which for a central angle in a circle gives the length of the straight line segment between the points where the angle intersects the circle He may have computed this for a circle with a circumference of 21 600 units and a radius rounded of 3 438 units this circle has a unit length for each arcminute along its perimeter This was proven by Toomer 19 but he later cast doubt upon his earlier affirmation 20 Other authors have argued that a circle of radius 3 600 units may instead have been used by Hipparchus 21 He tabulated the chords for angles with increments of 7 5 In modern terms the chord subtended by a central angle in a circle of given radius R equals R times twice the sine of half of the angle i e chord 8 2 R sin 1 2 8 displaystyle operatorname chord theta 2R cdot sin tfrac 1 2 theta nbsp The now lost work in which Hipparchus is said to have developed his chord table is called Tōn en kuklōi eutheiōn Of Lines Inside a Circle in Theon of Alexandria s fourth century commentary on section I 10 of the Almagest Some claim the table of Hipparchus may have survived in astronomical treatises in India such as the Surya Siddhanta Trigonometry was a significant innovation because it allowed Greek astronomers to solve any triangle and made it possible to make quantitative astronomical models and predictions using their preferred geometric techniques 19 Hipparchus must have used a better approximation for p than the one given by Archimedes of between 3 10 71 3 1408 and 3 1 7 3 1429 Perhaps he had the approximation later used by Ptolemy sexagesimal 3 08 30 3 1417 Almagest VI 7 Hipparchus could have constructed his chord table using the Pythagorean theorem and a theorem known to Archimedes He also might have used the relationship between sides and diagonals of a cyclic quadrilateral today called Ptolemy s theorem because its earliest extant source is a proof in the Almagest I 10 The stereographic projection was ambiguously attributed to Hipparchus by Synesius c 400 AD and on that basis Hipparchus is often credited with inventing it or at least knowing of it However some scholars believe this conclusion to be unjustified by available evidence 22 The oldest extant description of the stereographic projection is found in Ptolemy s Planisphere 2nd century AD 23 Besides geometry Hipparchus also used arithmetic techniques developed by the Chaldeans He was one of the first Greek mathematicians to do this and in this way expanded the techniques available to astronomers and geographers There are several indications that Hipparchus knew spherical trigonometry but the first surviving text discussing it is by Menelaus of Alexandria in the first century who now on that basis commonly is credited with its discovery Previous to the finding of the proofs of Menelaus a century ago Ptolemy was credited with the invention of spherical trigonometry Ptolemy later used spherical trigonometry to compute things such as the rising and setting points of the ecliptic or to take account of the lunar parallax If he did not use spherical trigonometry Hipparchus may have used a globe for these tasks reading values off coordinate grids drawn on it or he may have made approximations from planar geometry or perhaps used arithmetical approximations developed by the Chaldeans Lunar and solar theory edit nbsp Geometric construction used by Hipparchus in his determination of the distances to the Sun and Moon Motion of the Moon edit Further information Lunar theory and Orbit of the Moon Hipparchus also studied the motion of the Moon and confirmed the accurate values for two periods of its motion that Chaldean astronomers are widely presumed to have possessed before him The traditional value from Babylonian System B for the mean synodic month is 29 days 31 50 8 20 sexagesimal 29 5305941 days Expressed as 29 days 12 hours 793 1080 hours this value has been used later in the Hebrew calendar The Chaldeans also knew that 251 synodic months 269 anomalistic months Hipparchus used the multiple of this period by a factor of 17 because that interval is also an eclipse period and is also close to an integer number of years 4 267 moons 4 573 anomalistic periods 4 630 53 nodal periods 4 611 98 lunar orbits 344 996 years 344 982 solar orbits 126 007 003 days 126 351 985 rotations b What was so exceptional and useful about the cycle was that all 345 year interval eclipse pairs occur slightly more than 126 007 days apart within a tight range of only approximately 1 2 hour guaranteeing after division by 4 267 an estimate of the synodic month correct to one part in order of magnitude 10 million Hipparchus could confirm his computations by comparing eclipses from his own time presumably 27 January 141 BC and 26 November 139 BC according to Toomer 24 with eclipses from Babylonian records 345 years earlier Almagest IV 2 12 Later al Biruni Qanun VII 2 II and Copernicus de revolutionibus IV 4 noted that the period of 4 267 moons is approximately five minutes longer than the value for the eclipse period that Ptolemy attributes to Hipparchus However the timing methods of the Babylonians had an error of no fewer than eight minutes 25 26 Modern scholars agree that Hipparchus rounded the eclipse period to the nearest hour and used it to confirm the validity of the traditional values rather than to try to derive an improved value from his own observations From modern ephemerides 27 and taking account of the change in the length of the day see DT we estimate that the error in the assumed length of the synodic month was less than 0 2 second in the fourth century BC and less than 0 1 second in Hipparchus s time Orbit of the Moon edit It had been known for a long time that the motion of the Moon is not uniform its speed varies This is called its anomaly and it repeats with its own period the anomalistic month The Chaldeans took account of this arithmetically and used a table giving the daily motion of the Moon according to the date within a long period However the Greeks preferred to think in geometrical models of the sky At the end of the third century BC Apollonius of Perga had proposed two models for lunar and planetary motion In the first the Moon would move uniformly along a circle but the Earth would be eccentric i e at some distance of the center of the circle So the apparent angular speed of the Moon and its distance would vary The Moon would move uniformly with some mean motion in anomaly on a secondary circular orbit called an epicycle that would move uniformly with some mean motion in longitude over the main circular orbit around the Earth called deferent see deferent and epicycle Apollonius demonstrated that these two models were in fact mathematically equivalent However all this was theory and had not been put to practice Hipparchus is the first astronomer known to attempt to determine the relative proportions and actual sizes of these orbits Hipparchus devised a geometrical method to find the parameters from three positions of the Moon at particular phases of its anomaly In fact he did this separately for the eccentric and the epicycle model Ptolemy describes the details in the Almagest IV 11 Hipparchus used two sets of three lunar eclipse observations that he carefully selected to satisfy the requirements The eccentric model he fitted to these eclipses from his Babylonian eclipse list 22 23 December 383 BC 18 19 June 382 BC and 12 13 December 382 BC The epicycle model he fitted to lunar eclipse observations made in Alexandria at 22 September 201 BC 19 March 200 BC and 11 September 200 BC For the eccentric model Hipparchus found for the ratio between the radius of the eccenter and the distance between the center of the eccenter and the center of the ecliptic i e the observer on Earth 3144 327 2 3 and for the epicycle model the ratio between the radius of the deferent and the epicycle 3122 1 2 247 1 2 These figures are due to the cumbersome unit he used in his chord table and may partly be due to some sloppy rounding and calculation errors by Hipparchus for which Ptolemy criticised him while also making rounding errors A simpler alternate reconstruction 28 agrees with all four numbers Hipparchus found inconsistent results he later used the ratio of the epicycle model 3122 1 2 247 1 2 which is too small 60 4 45 sexagesimal Ptolemy established a ratio of 60 5 1 4 29 The maximum angular deviation producible by this geometry is the arcsin of 5 1 4 divided by 60 or approximately 5 1 a figure that is sometimes therefore quoted as the equivalent of the Moon s equation of the center in the Hipparchan model Apparent motion of the Sun edit Before Hipparchus Meton Euctemon and their pupils at Athens had made a solstice observation i e timed the moment of the summer solstice on 27 June 432 BC proleptic Julian calendar Aristarchus of Samos is said to have done so in 280 BC and Hipparchus also had an observation by Archimedes He observed the summer solstices in 146 and 135 BC both accurately to a few hours but observations of the moment of equinox were simpler and he made twenty during his lifetime Ptolemy gives an extensive discussion of Hipparchus s work on the length of the year in the Almagest III 1 and quotes many observations that Hipparchus made or used spanning 162 128 BC including an equinox timing by Hipparchus at 24 March 146 BC at dawn that differs by 5 hours from the observation made on Alexandria s large public equatorial ring that same day at 1 hour before noon Ptolemy claims his solar observations were on a transit instrument set in the meridian At the end of his career Hipparchus wrote a book entitled Peri eniausiou megethous On the Length of the Year regarding his results The established value for the tropical year introduced by Callippus in or before 330 BC was 365 1 4 days 30 Speculating a Babylonian origin for the Callippic year is difficult to defend since Babylon did not observe solstices thus the only extant System B year length was based on Greek solstices see below Hipparchus s equinox observations gave varying results but he points out quoted in Almagest III 1 H195 that the observation errors by him and his predecessors may have been as large as 1 4 day He used old solstice observations and determined a difference of approximately one day in approximately 300 years So he set the length of the tropical year to 365 1 4 1 300 days 365 24666 days 365 days 5 hours 55 min which differs from the modern estimate of the value including earth spin acceleration in his time of approximately 365 2425 days an error of approximately 6 min per year an hour per decade and ten hours per century Between the solstice observation of Meton and his own there were 297 years spanning 108 478 days this implies a tropical year of 365 24579 days 365 days 14 44 51 sexagesimal 365 days 14 60 44 602 51 603 a year length found on one of the few Babylonian clay tablets which explicitly specifies the System B month Whether Babylonians knew of Hipparchus s work or the other way around is debatable Another value for the year that is attributed to Hipparchus by the astrologer Vettius Valens in the first century is 365 1 4 1 288 days 365 25347 days 365 days 6 hours 5 min but this may be a corruption of another value attributed to a Babylonian source 365 1 4 1 144 days 365 25694 days 365 days 6 hours 10 min It is not clear whether this would be a value for the sidereal year at his time or the modern estimate of approximately 365 2565 days but the difference with Hipparchus s value for the tropical year is consistent with his rate of precession see below Orbit of the Sun edit Before Hipparchus astronomers knew that the lengths of the seasons are not equal Hipparchus made observations of equinox and solstice and according to Ptolemy Almagest III 4 determined that spring from spring equinox to summer solstice lasted 941 2 days and summer from summer solstice to autumn equinox 92 1 2 days This is inconsistent with a premise of the Sun moving around the Earth in a circle at uniform speed Hipparchus s solution was to place the Earth not at the center of the Sun s motion but at some distance from the center This model described the apparent motion of the Sun fairly well It is known today that the planets including the Earth move in approximate ellipses around the Sun but this was not discovered until Johannes Kepler published his first two laws of planetary motion in 1609 The value for the eccentricity attributed to Hipparchus by Ptolemy is that the offset is 1 24 of the radius of the orbit which is a little too large and the direction of the apogee would be at longitude 65 5 from the vernal equinox Hipparchus may also have used other sets of observations which would lead to different values One of his two eclipse trios solar longitudes are consistent with his having initially adopted inaccurate lengths for spring and summer of 95 3 4 and 91 1 4 days 31 failed verification His other triplet of solar positions is consistent with 94 1 4 and 92 1 2 days 12 32 failed verification an improvement on the results 94 1 2 and 92 1 2 days attributed to Hipparchus by Ptolemy Ptolemy made no change three centuries later and expressed lengths for the autumn and winter seasons which were already implicit as shown e g by A Aaboe citation needed Distance parallax size of the Moon and the Sun edit Main article On Sizes and Distances Hipparchus nbsp Diagram used in reconstructing one of Hipparchus s methods of determining the distance to the Moon This represents the Earth Moon system during a partial solar eclipse at A Alexandria and a total solar eclipse at H Hellespont Hipparchus also undertook to find the distances and sizes of the Sun and the Moon in the now lost work On Sizes and Distances Greek Perὶ mege8ῶn kaὶ ἀposthmatwn Peri megethon kai apostematon His work is mentioned in Ptolemy s Almagest V 11 and in a commentary thereon by Pappus Theon of Smyrna 2nd century also mentions the work under the title On Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon Hipparchus measured the apparent diameters of the Sun and Moon with his diopter Like others before and after him he found that the Moon s size varies as it moves on its eccentric orbit but he found no perceptible variation in the apparent diameter of the Sun He found that at the mean distance of the Moon the Sun and Moon had the same apparent diameter at that distance the Moon s diameter fits 650 times into the circle i e the mean apparent diameters are 360 650 0 33 14 Like others before and after him he also noticed that the Moon has a noticeable parallax i e that it appears displaced from its calculated position compared to the Sun or stars and the difference is greater when closer to the horizon He knew that this is because in the then current models the Moon circles the center of the Earth but the observer is at the surface the Moon Earth and observer form a triangle with a sharp angle that changes all the time From the size of this parallax the distance of the Moon as measured in Earth radii can be determined For the Sun however there was no observable parallax we now know that it is about 8 8 several times smaller than the resolution of the unaided eye In the first book Hipparchus assumes that the parallax of the Sun is 0 as if it is at infinite distance He then analyzed a solar eclipse which Toomer presumes to be the eclipse of 14 March 190 BC 33 It was total in the region of the Hellespont and in his birthplace Nicaea at the time Toomer proposes the Romans were preparing for war with Antiochus III in the area and the eclipse is mentioned by Livy in his Ab Urbe Condita Libri VIII 2 It was also observed in Alexandria where the Sun was reported to be obscured 4 5ths by the Moon Alexandria and Nicaea are on the same meridian Alexandria is at about 31 North and the region of the Hellespont about 40 North It has been contended that authors like Strabo and Ptolemy had fairly decent values for these geographical positions so Hipparchus must have known them too However Strabo s Hipparchus dependent latitudes for this region are at least 1 too high and Ptolemy appears to copy them placing Byzantium 2 high in latitude Hipparchus could draw a triangle formed by the two places and the Moon and from simple geometry was able to establish a distance of the Moon expressed in Earth radii Because the eclipse occurred in the morning the Moon was not in the meridian and it has been proposed that as a consequence the distance found by Hipparchus was a lower limit In any case according to Pappus Hipparchus found that the least distance is 71 from this eclipse and the greatest 83 Earth radii In the second book Hipparchus starts from the opposite extreme assumption he assigns a minimum distance to the Sun of 490 Earth radii This would correspond to a parallax of 7 which is apparently the greatest parallax that Hipparchus thought would not be noticed for comparison the typical resolution of the human eye is about 2 Tycho Brahe made naked eye observation with an accuracy down to 1 In this case the shadow of the Earth is a cone rather than a cylinder as under the first assumption Hipparchus observed at lunar eclipses that at the mean distance of the Moon the diameter of the shadow cone is 2 1 2 lunar diameters That apparent diameter is as he had observed 360 650 degrees With these values and simple geometry Hipparchus could determine the mean distance because it was computed for a minimum distance of the Sun it is the maximum mean distance possible for the Moon With his value for the eccentricity of the orbit he could compute the least and greatest distances of the Moon too According to Pappus he found a least distance of 62 a mean of 67 1 3 and consequently a greatest distance of 72 2 3 Earth radii With this method as the parallax of the Sun decreases i e its distance increases the minimum limit for the mean distance is 59 Earth radii exactly the mean distance that Ptolemy later derived Hipparchus thus had the problematic result that his minimum distance from book 1 was greater than his maximum mean distance from book 2 He was intellectually honest about this discrepancy and probably realized that especially the first method is very sensitive to the accuracy of the observations and parameters In fact modern calculations show that the size of the 189 BC solar eclipse at Alexandria must have been closer to 9 10 ths and not the reported 4 5 ths a fraction more closely matched by the degree of totality at Alexandria of eclipses occurring in 310 and 129 BC which were also nearly total in the Hellespont and are thought by many to be more likely possibilities for the eclipse Hipparchus used for his computations Ptolemy later measured the lunar parallax directly Almagest V 13 and used the second method of Hipparchus with lunar eclipses to compute the distance of the Sun Almagest V 15 He criticizes Hipparchus for making contradictory assumptions and obtaining conflicting results Almagest V 11 but apparently he failed to understand Hipparchus s strategy to establish limits consistent with the observations rather than a single value for the distance His results were the best so far the actual mean distance of the Moon is 60 3 Earth radii within his limits from Hipparchus s second book Theon of Smyrna wrote that according to Hipparchus the Sun is 1 880 times the size of the Earth and the Earth twenty seven times the size of the Moon apparently this refers to volumes not diameters From the geometry of book 2 it follows that the Sun is at 2 550 Earth radii and the mean distance of the Moon is 60 1 2 radii Similarly Cleomedes quotes Hipparchus for the sizes of the Sun and Earth as 1050 1 this leads to a mean lunar distance of 61 radii Apparently Hipparchus later refined his computations and derived accurate single values that he could use for predictions of solar eclipses See Toomer 1974 for a more detailed discussion 34 Eclipses edit Pliny Naturalis Historia II X tells us that Hipparchus demonstrated that lunar eclipses can occur five months apart and solar eclipses seven months instead of the usual six months and the Sun can be hidden twice in thirty days but as seen by different nations Ptolemy discussed this a century later at length in Almagest VI 6 The geometry and the limits of the positions of Sun and Moon when a solar or lunar eclipse is possible are explained in Almagest VI 5 Hipparchus apparently made similar calculations The result that two solar eclipses can occur one month apart is important because this can not be based on observations one is visible on the northern and the other on the southern hemisphere as Pliny indicates and the latter was inaccessible to the Greek Prediction of a solar eclipse i e exactly when and where it will be visible requires a solid lunar theory and proper treatment of the lunar parallax Hipparchus must have been the first to be able to do this A rigorous treatment requires spherical trigonometry thus those who remain certain that Hipparchus lacked it must speculate that he may have made do with planar approximations He may have discussed these things in Peri tes kata platos meniaias tes selenes kineseōs On the monthly motion of the Moon in latitude a work mentioned in the Suda Pliny also remarks that he also discovered for what exact reason although the shadow causing the eclipse must from sunrise onward be below the earth it happened once in the past that the Moon was eclipsed in the west while both luminaries were visible above the earth translation H Rackham 1938 Loeb Classical Library 330 p 207 Toomer argued that this must refer to the large total lunar eclipse of 26 November 139 BC when over a clean sea horizon as seen from Rhodes the Moon was eclipsed in the northwest just after the Sun rose in the southeast 24 This would be the second eclipse of the 345 year interval that Hipparchus used to verify the traditional Babylonian periods this puts a late date to the development of Hipparchus s lunar theory We do not know what exact reason Hipparchus found for seeing the Moon eclipsed while apparently it was not in exact opposition to the Sun Parallax lowers the altitude of the luminaries refraction raises them and from a high point of view the horizon is lowered Astronomical instruments and astrometry editHipparchus and his predecessors used various instruments for astronomical calculations and observations such as the gnomon the astrolabe and the armillary sphere Hipparchus is credited with the invention or improvement of several astronomical instruments which were used for a long time for naked eye observations According to Synesius of Ptolemais 4th century he made the first astrolabion this may have been an armillary sphere which Ptolemy however says he constructed in Almagest V 1 or the predecessor of the planar instrument called astrolabe also mentioned by Theon of Alexandria With an astrolabe Hipparchus was the first to be able to measure the geographical latitude and time by observing fixed stars Previously this was done at daytime by measuring the shadow cast by a gnomon by recording the length of the longest day of the year or with the portable instrument known as a scaphe nbsp Equatorial ring of Hipparchus s time Ptolemy mentions Almagest V 14 that he used a similar instrument as Hipparchus called dioptra to measure the apparent diameter of the Sun and Moon Pappus of Alexandria described it in his commentary on the Almagest of that chapter as did Proclus Hypotyposis IV It was a four foot rod with a scale a sighting hole at one end and a wedge that could be moved along the rod to exactly obscure the disk of Sun or Moon Hipparchus also observed solar equinoxes which may be done with an equatorial ring its shadow falls on itself when the Sun is on the equator i e in one of the equinoctial points on the ecliptic but the shadow falls above or below the opposite side of the ring when the Sun is south or north of the equator Ptolemy quotes in Almagest III 1 H195 a description by Hipparchus of an equatorial ring in Alexandria a little further he describes two such instruments present in Alexandria in his own time Hipparchus applied his knowledge of spherical angles to the problem of denoting locations on the Earth s surface Before him a grid system had been used by Dicaearchus of Messana but Hipparchus was the first to apply mathematical rigor to the determination of the latitude and longitude of places on the Earth Hipparchus wrote a critique in three books on the work of the geographer Eratosthenes of Cyrene 3rd century BC called Pros ten Eratosthenous geographian Against the Geography of Eratosthenes It is known to us from Strabo of Amaseia who in his turn criticised Hipparchus in his own Geographia Hipparchus apparently made many detailed corrections to the locations and distances mentioned by Eratosthenes It seems he did not introduce many improvements in methods but he did propose a means to determine the geographical longitudes of different cities at lunar eclipses Strabo Geographia 1 January 2012 A lunar eclipse is visible simultaneously on half of the Earth and the difference in longitude between places can be computed from the difference in local time when the eclipse is observed His approach would give accurate results if it were correctly carried out but the limitations of timekeeping accuracy in his era made this method impractical Star catalog editLate in his career possibly about 135 BC Hipparchus compiled his star catalog Scholars have been searching for it for centuries 35 In 2022 it was announced that a part of it was discovered in a medieval parchment manuscript Codex Climaci Rescriptus from Saint Catherine s Monastery in the Sinai Peninsula Egypt as hidden text palimpsest 36 37 nbsp The figure on the left may be Hipparchus from Raphael s fresco The School of Athens Hipparchus also constructed a celestial globe depicting the constellations based on his observations His interest in the fixed stars may have been inspired by the observation of a supernova according to Pliny or by his discovery of precession according to Ptolemy who says that Hipparchus could not reconcile his data with earlier observations made by Timocharis and Aristillus For more information see Discovery of precession In Raphael s painting The School of Athens Hipparchus may be depicted holding his celestial globe as the representative figure for astronomy It is not certain that the figure is meant to represent him 35 Previously Eudoxus of Cnidus in the fourth century BC had described the stars and constellations in two books called Phaenomena and Entropon Aratus wrote a poem called Phaenomena or Arateia based on Eudoxus s work Hipparchus wrote a commentary on the Arateia his only preserved work which contains many stellar positions and times for rising culmination and setting of the constellations and these are likely to have been based on his own measurements nbsp A 19th century artist s impression of Hipparchus 38 According to Roman sources Hipparchus made his measurements with a scientific instrument and he obtained the positions of roughly 850 stars Pliny the Elder writes in book II 24 26 of his Natural History 39 This same Hipparchus who can never be sufficiently commended discovered a new star that was produced in his own age and by observing its motions on the day in which it shone he was led to doubt whether it does not often happen that those stars have motion which we suppose to be fixed And the same individual attempted what might seem presumptuous even in a deity viz to number the stars for posterity and to express their relations by appropriate names having previously devised instruments by which he might mark the places and the magnitudes of each individual star In this way it might be easily discovered not only whether they were destroyed or produced but whether they changed their relative positions and likewise whether they were increased or diminished the heavens being thus left as an inheritance to any one who might be found competent to complete his plan This passage reports that Hipparchus was inspired by a newly emerging star he doubts on the stability of stellar brightnesses he observed with appropriate instruments plural it is not said that he observed everything with the same instrument he made a catalogue of stars It is unknown what instrument he used The armillary sphere was probably invented only later maybe by Ptolemy 265 years after Hipparchus The historian of science S Hoffmann found clues that Hipparchus may have observed the longitudes and latitudes in different coordinate systems and thus with different instrumentation 16 Right ascensions for instance could have been observed with a clock while angular separations could have been measured with another device Stellar magnitude edit Hipparchus is conjectured to have ranked the apparent magnitudes of stars on a numerical scale from 1 the brightest to 6 the faintest 40 This hypothesis is based on the vague statement by Pliny the Elder but cannot be proven by the data in Hipparchus s commentary on Aratus s poem In this only work by his hand that has survived until today he does not use the magnitude scale but estimates brightnesses unsystematically However this does not prove or disprove anything because the commentary might be an early work while the magnitude scale could have been introduced later 16 Nevertheless this system certainly precedes Ptolemy who used it extensively about AD 150 40 This system was made more precise and extended by N R Pogson in 1856 who placed the magnitudes on a logarithmic scale making magnitude 1 stars 100 times brighter than magnitude 6 stars thus each magnitude is 5 100 or 2 512 times brighter than the next faintest magnitude 41 Coordinate System edit It is disputed which coordinate system s he used Ptolemy s catalog in the Almagest which is derived from Hipparchus s catalog is given in ecliptic coordinates Although Hipparchus strictly distinguishes between signs 30 section of the zodiac and constellations in the zodiac it is highly questionable whether or not he had an instrument to directly observe measure units on the ecliptic 16 39 He probably marked them as a unit on his celestial globe but the instrumentation for his observations is unknown 16 nbsp Ptolemy s constellation areas blue polygons and signs of the zodiac had different sizes and extends it is highly likely Hipparchus considered these units the same Reconstruction from the Almagest 39 Delambre in his Histoire de l Astronomie Ancienne 1817 concluded that Hipparchus knew and used the equatorial coordinate system a conclusion challenged by Otto Neugebauer in his History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy 1975 Hipparchus seems to have used a mix of ecliptic coordinates and equatorial coordinates in his commentary on Eudoxus he provides stars polar distance equivalent to the declination in the equatorial system right ascension equatorial longitude ecliptic polar longitude hybrid but not celestial latitude This opinion was confirmed by the careful investigation of Hoffmann 39 who independently studied the material potential sources techniques and results of Hipparchus and reconstructed his celestial globe and its making As with most of his work Hipparchus s star catalog was adopted and perhaps expanded by Ptolemy who has since Brahe in 1598 been accused by some 42 of fraud for stating Syntaxis book 7 chapter 4 that he observed all 1025 stars critics claim that for almost every star he used Hipparchus s data and precessed it to his own epoch 2 2 3 centuries later by adding 2 40 to the longitude using an erroneously small precession constant of 1 per century This claim is highly exaggerated because it applies modern standards of citation to an ancient author True is only that the ancient star catalogue that was initiated by Hipparchus in the second century BC was reworked and improved multiple times in the 265 years to the Almagest which is good scientific practise even today 43 Although the Almagest star catalogue is based upon Hipparchus s it is not only a blind copy but enriched enhanced and thus at least partially re observed 16 Celestial globe edit nbsp Reconstruction of Hipparchus s celestial globe according to ancient descriptions and the data in manuscripts by his hand excellence cluster TOPOI Berlin 2015 published in Hoffmann 2017 39 Hipparchus s celestial globe was an instrument similar to modern electronic computers 39 He used it to determine risings settings and culminations cf also Almagest book VIII chapter 3 Therefore his globe was mounted in a horizontal plane and had a meridian ring with a scale In combination with a grid that divided the celestial equator into 24 hour lines longitudes equalling our right ascension hours the instrument allowed him to determine the hours The ecliptic was marked and divided in 12 sections of equal length the signs which he called zodion or dodekatemoria in order to distinguish them from constellations astron The globe was virtually reconstructed by a historian of science Arguments for and against Hipparchus s star catalog in the Almagest edit For common errors in the reconstructed Hipparchian star catalogue and the Almagest suggest a direct transfer without re observation within 265 years There are 18 stars with common errors for the other 800 stars the errors are not extant or within the error ellipse That means no further statement is allowed on these hundreds of stars further statistical arguments Against Unlike Ptolemy Hipparchus did not use ecliptic coordinates to describe stellar positions Hipparchus s catalogue is reported in Roman times to have enlisted about 850 stars but Ptolemy s catalogue has 1025 stars Thus somebody has added further entries There are stars cited in the Almagest from Hipparchus that are missing in the Almagest star catalogue Thus by all the reworking within scientific progress in 265 years not all of Hipparchus s stars made it into the Almagest version of the star catalogue Conclusion Hipparchus s star catalogue is one of the sources of the Almagest star catalogue but not the only source 43 Precession of the equinoxes 146 127 BC editSee also Precession astronomy Hipparchus is generally recognized as discoverer of the precession of the equinoxes in 127 BC 44 His two books on precession On the Displacement of the Solstitial and Equinoctial Points and On the Length of the Year are both mentioned in the Almagest of Claudius Ptolemy According to Ptolemy Hipparchus measured the longitude of Spica and Regulus and other bright stars Comparing his measurements with data from his predecessors Timocharis and Aristillus he concluded that Spica had moved 2 relative to the autumnal equinox He also compared the lengths of the tropical year the time it takes the Sun to return to an equinox and the sidereal year the time it takes the Sun to return to a fixed star and found a slight discrepancy Hipparchus concluded that the equinoxes were moving precessing through the zodiac and that the rate of precession was not less than 1 in a century Geography editHipparchus s treatise Against the Geography of Eratosthenes in three books is not preserved 45 Most of our knowledge of it comes from Strabo according to whom Hipparchus thoroughly and often unfairly criticized Eratosthenes mainly for internal contradictions and inaccuracy in determining positions of geographical localities Hipparchus insists that a geographic map must be based only on astronomical measurements of latitudes and longitudes and triangulation for finding unknown distances In geographic theory and methods Hipparchus introduced three main innovations 46 He was the first to use the grade grid to determine geographic latitude from star observations and not only from the Sun s altitude a method known long before him and to suggest that geographic longitude could be determined by means of simultaneous observations of lunar eclipses in distant places In the practical part of his work the so called table of climata Hipparchus listed latitudes for several tens of localities In particular he improved Eratosthenes values for the latitudes of Athens Sicily and southern extremity of India 47 48 49 In calculating latitudes of climata latitudes correlated with the length of the longest solstitial day Hipparchus used an unexpectedly accurate value for the obliquity of the ecliptic 23 40 the actual value in the second half of the second century BC was approximately 23 43 whereas all other ancient authors knew only a roughly rounded value 24 and even Ptolemy used a less accurate value 23 51 50 Hipparchus opposed the view generally accepted in the Hellenistic period that the Atlantic and Indian Oceans and the Caspian Sea are parts of a single ocean At the same time he extends the limits of the oikoumene i e the inhabited part of the land up to the equator and the Arctic Circle 51 Hipparchus s ideas found their reflection in the Geography of Ptolemy In essence Ptolemy s work is an extended attempt to realize Hipparchus s vision of what geography ought to be Modern speculation editHipparchus was in the international news in 2005 when it was again proposed as in 1898 that the data on the celestial globe of Hipparchus or in his star catalog may have been preserved in the only surviving large ancient celestial globe which depicts the constellations with moderate accuracy the globe carried by the Farnese Atlas 52 53 Evidence suggests that the Farnese globe may show constellations in the Aratean tradition and deviate from the constellations used by Hipparchus 39 A line in Plutarch s Table Talk states that Hipparchus counted 103 049 compound propositions that can be formed from ten simple propositions 103 049 is the tenth Schroder Hipparchus number which counts the number of ways of adding one or more pairs of parentheses around consecutive subsequences of two or more items in any sequence of ten symbols This has led to speculation that Hipparchus knew about enumerative combinatorics a field of mathematics that developed independently in modern mathematics 54 55 Hipparchos was suggested in a 2013 paper to have accidentally observed the planet Uranus in 128 BC and catalogued it as a star over a millennium and a half before its formal discovery in 1781 56 Legacy edit nbsp Hipparcos satellite in the Large Solar Simulator ESTEC February 1988 Hipparchus may be depicted opposite Ptolemy in Raphael s 1509 1511 painting The School of Athens although this figure is usually identified as Zoroaster 35 The formal name for the ESA s Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission is High Precision Parallax Collecting Satellite making a backronym HiPParCoS that echoes and commemorates the name of Hipparchus The lunar crater Hipparchus the Martian crater Hipparchus and the asteroid 4000 Hipparchus are named after him He was inducted into the International Space Hall of Fame in 2004 57 Jean Baptiste Joseph Delambre historian of astronomy mathematical astronomer and director of the Paris Observatory in his history of astronomy in the 18th century 1821 considered Hipparchus along with Johannes Kepler and James Bradley the greatest astronomers of all time 58 The Astronomers Monument at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles California United States features a relief of Hipparchus as one of six of the greatest astronomers of all time and the only one from Antiquity 59 Johannes Kepler had great respect for Tycho Brahe s methods and the accuracy of his observations and considered him to be the new Hipparchus who would provide the foundation for a restoration of the science of astronomy 60 Translations editBerger Ernst Hugo ed 1869 Die geographischen Fragmente des Hipparch The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus in German Leipzig Teubner OCLC 981902787 Dicks D R ed 1960 The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus University of London classical studies London Athlone Press OCLC 490381 Manitius Karl ed 1894 Hipparchou Tōn Aratou kai Eudoxou Phainomenōn exegeseōs vivlia tria Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentariorum libri tres Hipparchus Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in three books in Ancient Greek and Latin Leipzig Teubner OCLC 1127047584 Cusinato Bruna Vanin Gabriele eds 2022 2013 Commentari di Ipparco ai Fenomeni di Arato ed Eudosso Hipparchus Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in Italian Translation by Bruna Cusinato Introduction and astronomical commentary by Gabriele Vanin 3rd ed arXiv 2206 08243 Originally published in Vanin Gabriele 2013 Catasterismi Feltre Rheticus DBS Zanetti pp 85 166 See also editAristarchus of Samos c 310 c 230 BC a Greek mathematician who calculated the distance from the Earth to the Sun Eratosthenes c 276 c 194 195 BC a Greek mathematician who calculated the circumference of the Earth and also the distance from the Earth to the Sun Greek mathematics On the Sizes and Distances Aristarchus On the Sizes and Distances Hipparchus Posidonius c 135 c 51 BC a Greek astronomer and mathematician who calculated the circumference of the Earth Notes edit Stanislaw Poniatowski s collection of contemporary forgeries passed off as antique engraved gems included an amethyst depicting Hipparchus with a star and the subject s name which was included in a Christie s 1839 auction From Poniatowski 1833 p 52 Dans le champ de cette pierre on voit une etoile et en beaux caracteres le nom du sujet Amethyste In the field of this stone we see a star and in beautiful characters the name of the subject Amethyst 61 This engraving was used for the title page of William Henry Smyth s 1844 book as suggested by an 1842 letter Smyth sent to the National Institute for the Promotion of Science which described the head of Hipparchus from the Poniatowski gem intended as a vignette illustration of his work 62 The engraving has subsequently been repeatedly copied and re used as a representation of Hipparchus for instance in a 1965 Greek postage stamp commemorating the Eugenides Planetarium in Athens 63 These figures use modern dynamical time not the solar time of Hipparchus s era E g the true 4267 month interval was nearer 126 007 days plus a little over half an hour References edit Linton C M 2004 From Eudoxus to Einstein a history of mathematical astronomy Cambridge University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0 521 82750 8 Toomer Gerald J 1996 Ptolemy and his Greek Predecessors In Walker Christopher B F ed Astronomy before the Telescope London The British Museum Press p 81 ISBN 978 0 7141 1746 1 OCLC 1391175189 McCluskey Stephen C 2000 Astronomies and cultures in early medieval Europe Cambridge University Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 521 77852 7 Willard Emma 1854 Astronography or Astronomical Geography Troy New York Merriam Moore amp Co p 246 Denison Olmsted Outlines of a Course of Lectures on Meteorology and Astronomy pp 22 Jones Alexander Raymond 2017 Hipparchus Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 August 2017 Newcomb Simon 1878 Popular Astronomy New York Harper p 5 ISBN 978 0 665 01376 8 OCLC 612980386 Glashan J C 1895 Celestial Mechanics Ptolemy Copernicus and Newton University of Toronto Quarterly 2 1 49 hdl 2027 mdp 39015059411960 ISSN 0042 0247 OCLC 1011693113 Delambre Jean Baptiste Joseph 1817 Histoire de l astronomie ancienne History of Ancient Astronomy in French Vol 1 Paris Ve Courcier p lxi OCLC 594550435 Hipparque le vrai pere de l Astronomie Hipparchus the true father of Astronomy Ancient coinage of Bithynia snible org Retrieved 26 April 2021 Toomer 1978 a b c Jones 2001 Modern editions Manitius 1894 Ancient Greek and Latin Cusinato amp Vanin 2022 Italian Toomer Gerald J 1988 Hipparchus and Babylonian Astronomy In Leichty Erle Ellis Maria deJ eds A Scientific Humanist studies in memory of Abraham Sachs Philadelphia Samuel Noah Kramer Fund Univ Museum pp 353 362 ISBN 978 0 934718 90 5 Bowen A C Goldstein B R 1991 The Introduction of Dated Observations and Precise Measurement in Greek Astronomy Archive for History of Exact Sciences 43 2 104 a b c d e f Hoffmann 2017 Ch 6 Befunde pp 661 676 doi 10 1007 978 3 658 18683 8 6 Kugler Franz Xaver 1900 Die Babylonische Mondrechnung The Babylonian lunar computation Freiburg im Breisgau Herder Aaboe Asger 1955 On the Babylonian origin of some Hipparchian parameters Centaurus 4 2 122 125 Bibcode 1955Cent 4 122A doi 10 1111 j 1600 0498 1955 tb00619 x On p 124 Aaboe identifies the Hipparchian equation 5458 syn mo 5923 drac mo with the equation of 1 30 58 syn mo 1 38 43 drac mo written in sexagesimal citing Neugebauer Otto E 1955 Astronomical Cuneiform Texts Vol 1 London Lund Humphries p 73 a b Toomer Gerald J 1974 The Chord Table of Hipparchus and the Early History of Greek Trigonometry Centaurus 18 1 6 28 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0498 1974 tb00205 x ISSN 0008 8994 OCLC 5155644322 Toomer 1984 p 215 Klintberg Bo C 2005 Hipparchus s 3600 Based Chord Table and Its Place in the History of Ancient Greek and Indian Trigonometry Indian Journal of History of Science 40 2 169 203 Synesius wrote in a letter describing an instrument involving the stereographic projection Hipparchus long ago hinted at the unfolding of a spherical surface on a plane so as to keep a proper proportion between the given ratios in the different figures and he was in fact the first to apply himself to this subject I however if it is not presumptuous to make so great a claim have followed it to its uttermost conclusion and have perfected it although for most of the intervening time the problem had been neglected for the great Ptolemy and the divine band of his successors were content to make only such use of it as sufficed for the night clock by means of the sixteen stars which were the only ones that Hipparchus rearranged and entered on his instrument Translation from Dicks 1960 fragment 63 pp 102 103 Dicks concludes commentary on fragment 63 pp 194 207 Whether Synesius evidence can be accepted at its face value depends on the view taken as to the strength of the objections raised above On the whole it would seem that the value of his testimony has been greatly exaggerated and its unsatisfactory nature on so many points insufficiently emphasized At any rate the instrument he sent to Paeonius was either a modified astrolabic clock of the Vitruvian type or a simple celestial map and not a planispheric astrolabe Furthermore on the evidence available we are not in my opinion justified in attributing to Hipparchus a knowledge of either stereographic projection or the planispheric astrolabe Neugebauer Otto 1949 The Early History of the Astrolabe Isis 40 3 240 256 doi 10 1086 349045 JSTOR 227240 S2CID 144350543 a b Toomer Gerald J 1980 Hipparchus Empirical Basis for his Lunar Mean Motions Centaurus 24 1 97 109 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0498 1980 tb00367 x Stephenson F Richard Fatoohi Louay J 1993 Lunar Eclipse Times Recorded in Babylonian History Journal for the History of Astronomy 24 4 255 267 doi 10 1177 002182869302400402 ISSN 0021 8286 OCLC 812872940 Steele J M Stephenson F R Morrison L V 1997 The Accuracy of Eclipse Times Measured by the Babylonians Journal for the History of Astronomy 28 4 337 345 doi 10 1177 002182869702800404 ISSN 0021 8286 OCLC 5723829772 Chapront J Chapront Touze M Francou G 2002 A new determination of lunar orbital parameters precession constant and tidal acceleration from LLR measurements Astronomy amp Astrophysics 387 2 700 709 doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20020420 S2CID 55131241 Thurston 2002 Toomer Gerald J 1968 The Size of the Lunar Epicycle According to Hipparchus Centaurus 12 3 145 150 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0498 1968 tb00087 x ISSN 0008 8994 OCLC 4656032977 Leverington David 2003 Babylon to Voyager and Beyond A History of Planetary Astronomy Cambridge University Press p 30 ISBN 9780521808408 Thurston 2002 p 67 note 16 Thurston 2002 note 14 Five Millennium Catalog of Solar Eclipses Archived from the original on 25 April 2015 Retrieved 11 August 2009 04310 Fred Espenak NASA GSFC Toomer Gerald J 1974 Hipparchus on the Distances of the Sun and Moon Archives for the History of the Exact Sciences 14 2 126 142 doi 10 1007 BF00329826 S2CID 122093782 a b c Swerdlow N M 1992 The Enigma of Ptolemy s Catalogue of Stars Journal for the History of Astronomy 23 3 173 183 Bibcode 1992JHA 23 173S doi 10 1177 002182869202300303 S2CID 116612700 Gysembergh Victor Williams Peter J Zingg Emanuel 2022 New evidence for Hipparchus Star Catalog revealed by multispectral imaging Journal for the History of Astronomy 53 4 383 393 doi 10 1177 00218286221128289 Marchant Jo 18 October 2022 First known map of night sky found hidden in Medieval parchment Nature News 610 7933 613 614 doi 10 1038 d41586 022 03296 1 PMID 36258126 S2CID 252994351 Retrieved 22 October 2022 Image by Charles Kreutzberger and Louis Sargent printed in Figuier Louis 1866 Vies des savants illustres Librairie Internationale p 284 Reprinted with artists signatures trimmed in Yaggy Levy W Haines Thomas L 1880 Museum of Antiquity Western Publishing House p 745 a b c d e f g Hoffmann 2017 a b Toomer 1984 p 16 The magnitudes range according to a system which certainly precedes Ptolemy but is only conjecturally attributed to Hipparchus from 1 to 6 pp 341 399 Pogson N R 1856 Magnitudes of Thirty six of the Minor Planets for the first day of each month of the year 1857 MNRAS 17 12 Bibcode 1856MNRAS 17 12P doi 10 1093 mnras 17 1 12 Newton Robert Russell 1977 The Crime of Claudius Ptolemy Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 1990 2 via Internet Archive a b Hoffmann Susanne M 2018 The Genesis of Hipparchus Celestial Globe Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry 18 4 281 ISSN 2241 8121 Jones Alexander 2010 Ancient Rejection and Adoption of Ptolemy s Frame of Reference for Longitudes In Jones Alexander ed Ptolemy in Perspective Archimedes Vol 23 Springer p 36 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 2788 7 2 ISBN 978 90 481 2787 0 Editions of fragments Berger 1869 Latin Dicks 1960 English On Hipparchus s geography see Berger 1869 Dicks 1960 Neugebauer 1975 pp 332 338 Shcheglov 2007 Shcheglov Dmitriy A 2010 Hipparchus on the Latitude of Southern India Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 45 4 359 380 ISSN 0017 3916 OCLC 7179548964 Shcheglov Dmitriy A 2006 Eratosthenes Parallel of Rhodes and the History of the System of Climata Klio 88 2 Walter de Gruyter 351 359 doi 10 1524 klio 2006 88 2 351 ISSN 2192 7669 OCLC 7003041189 Academia 191065 Shcheglov 2007 Diller A 1934 Geographical Latitudes in Eratosthenes Hipparchus and Posidonius Klio 27 3 258 269 cf Shcheglov 2007 pp 177 180 Shcheglov D A 2007 Ptolemy s Latitude of Thule and the Map Projection in the Pre Ptolemaic Geography Antike Naturwissenschaft und Ihre Rezeption AKAN 17 121 151 esp 132 139 Academia 213001 Schaefer Bradley Elliott 2005 The epoch of the constellations on the Farnese Atlas and their origin in Hipparchus s lost catalogue Journal for the History of Astronomy 36 2 167 196 Bibcode 2005JHA 36 167S doi 10 1177 002182860503600202 S2CID 15431718 Duke Dennis W February 2006 Analysis of the Farnese Globe Journal for the History of Astronomy 37 Part 1 126 87 100 Bibcode 2006JHA 37 87D doi 10 1177 002182860603700107 S2CID 36841784 Stanley Richard P 1997 Hipparchus Plutarch Schroder and Hough PDF The American Mathematical Monthly 104 4 344 350 doi 10 2307 2974582 JSTOR 2974582 Acerbi F 2003 On the shoulders of Hipparchus A reappraisal of ancient Greek combinatorics PDF Archive for History of Exact Sciences 57 6 465 502 doi 10 1007 s00407 003 0067 0 S2CID 122758966 Archived from the original PDF on 21 July 2011 Rene Bourtembourg 2013 Was Uranus Observed by Hipparchos Journal for the History of Astronomy 44 4 377 387 Bibcode 2013JHA 44 377B doi 10 1177 002182861304400401 S2CID 122482074 X Prize Group Founder to Speak at Induction El Paso Times El Paso Texas 17 October 2004 p 59 Delambre Jean Baptiste Joseph 1827 Histoire de l astronomie au dix huitieme siecle History of astronomy in the 18th century in French Paris Bachelier p 413 see also pp xvii and 420 Astronomers Monument amp Sundial Griffith Observatory Christianson J R 2000 On Tycho s Island Tycho Brahe and His Assistants 1570 1601 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 304 Head of Hipparchus CARC 1839 881 described in Poniatowski s 1830 1833 catalog Catalogue des pierres gravees antiques VIII 2 60 vol 1 p 105 vol 2 p 52 and included in Christie s 1839 auction A catalogue of the very celebrated collection of antique gems of the Prince Poniatowski No 881 with whereabouts since unknown Stated Meeting September 12 1842 Letters and Communications Bulletin of the Proceedings of the National Institute for the Promotion of Science 3 258 1845 Smyth William Henry 1844 A Cycle of Celestial Objects for the use of naval military and private astronomers Vol 2 London J W Parker Title page OCLC 1042977120 Wilson Robin 1989 Stamp corner The Mathematical Intelligencer 11 1 72 doi 10 1007 bf03023779 S2CID 189887329 Works cited editBerger Ernst Hugo ed 1869 Die geographischen Fragmente des Hipparch The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus in German Leipzig Teubner OCLC 981902787 Cusinato Bruna Vanin Gabriele eds 2022 2013 Commentari di Ipparco ai Fenomeni di Arato ed Eudosso Hipparchus Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in Italian Translation by Bruna Cusinato Introduction and astronomical commentary by Gabriele Vanin 3rd ed arXiv 2206 08243 Dicks D R ed 1960 The Geographical Fragments of Hipparchus University of London classical studies London Athlone Press OCLC 490381 Hoffmann Susanne M 2017 Hipparchs Himmelsglobus Ein Bindeglied in der babylonisch griechischen Astrometrie Hipparchus Celestial Globe A Link in Babylonian Greek Astrometry in German Wiesbaden Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 658 18683 8 ISBN 978 3 658 18683 8 Jones Alexander 2001 Hipparchus In Murdin Paul ed Encyclopedia of Astronomy and Astrophysics Bristol Institute of Physics Pub ISBN 978 0 333 75088 9 OCLC 1193410336 Manitius Karl ed 1894 Hipparchou Tōn Aratou kai Eudoxou Phainomenōn exegeseōs vivlia tria Hipparchi in Arati et Eudoxi Phaenomena commentariorum libri tres Hipparchus Commentaries on the Phenomena of Aratus and Eudoxus in three books in Ancient Greek and Latin Leipzig Teubner OCLC 1127047584 Neugebauer Otto E 1975 A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy Berlin Springer Part 1 Part 2 Part 3 Ptolemy 1984 Toomer Gerald J ed Ptolemy s Almagest London Duckworth ISBN 9780387912202 Shcheglov Dmitry A 2007 Hipparchus Table of Climata and Ptolemy s Geography Orbis Terrarum 9 159 192 ISSN 1385 285X OCLC 34941672 Academia 214134 214134 Thurston Hugh 2002 Greek Mathematical Astronomy Reconsidered Isis 93 1 58 69 doi 10 1086 343242 ISSN 0021 1753 JSTOR 10 1086 343242 OCLC 907786460 S2CID 145527182 Toomer Gerald J 1978 Hipparchus In Gillispie C C ed Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 15 Supplement I Adams Sejszner Scribner pp 207 224 Further reading editClerke Agnes Mary 1911 Hipparchus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed p 516 Dreyer John L E 1953 A History of Astronomy from Thales to Kepler New York Dover Heath Thomas 1921 A History of Greek Mathematics Oxford Clarendon Vol 1 Vol 2 Lloyd G E R 1973 Greek science after Aristotle New York Norton ISBN 978 0 393 04371 6 Neugebauer Otto E 1956 Notes on Hipparchus In Weinberg Saul S ed The Aegean and the Near East Studies Presented to Hetty Goldman Locust Valley NY J J Augustin O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Hipparchus MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Thomson J Oliver 1948 History of Ancient Geography Cambridge University Press External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hipparchus David Ulansey about Hipparchus s understanding of the precession A brief view by Carmen Rush on Hipparchus stellar catalog Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Geography nbsp Mathematics nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hipparchus amp oldid 1216210482, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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