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On the Sizes and Distances (Aristarchus)

On the Sizes and Distances (of the Sun and Moon) (Ancient Greek: Περὶ μεγεθῶν καὶ ἀποστημάτων [ἡλίου καὶ σελήνης], romanizedPerì megethôn kaì apostēmátōn [hēlíou kaì selḗnēs]) is widely accepted as the only extant work written by Aristarchus of Samos, an ancient Greek astronomer who lived circa 310–230 BCE. This work calculates the sizes of the Sun and Moon, as well as their distances from the Earth in terms of Earth's radius.

Aristarchus's 3rd century BCE calculations on the relative sizes of, from left, the Sun, Earth and Moon, from a 10th-century CE Greek copy

The book was presumably preserved by students of Pappus of Alexandria's course in mathematics, although there is no evidence of this. The editio princeps was published by John Wallis in 1688, using several medieval manuscripts compiled by Sir Henry Savile.[1] The earliest Latin translation was made by Giorgio Valla in 1488. There is also a 1572 Latin translation and commentary by Frederico Commandino.[2][3]

Symbols edit

The work's method relied on several observations:

  • The apparent size of the Sun and the Moon in the sky.
  • The size of the Earth's shadow in relation to the Moon during a lunar eclipse
  • The angle between the Sun and Moon during a half moon is 90°.

The rest of the article details a reconstruction of Aristarchus' method and results.[4] The reconstruction uses the following variables:

Symbol Meaning
φ Angle between the Moon and the Sun during a half moon (directly measurable)
L Distance from the Earth to the Moon
S Distance from the Earth to the Sun
Radius of the Moon
s Radius of the Sun
t Radius of the Earth
D Distance from the center of Earth to the vertex of Earth's shadow cone
d Radius of the Earth's shadow at the location of the Moon
n Ratio, d/ℓ (a directly observable quantity during a lunar eclipse)
x Ratio, S/L = s/ℓ (which is calculated from φ)

Half Moon edit

Aristarchus began with the premise that, during a half moon, the moon forms a right triangle with the Sun and Earth. By observing the angle between the Sun and Moon, φ, the ratio of the distances to the Sun and Moon could be deduced using a form of trigonometry.

 

From the diagram and trigonometry, we can calculate that

 

The diagram is greatly exaggerated, because in reality, S = 390 L, and φ is extremely close to 90°. Aristarchus determined φ to be a thirtieth of a quadrant (in modern terms, 3°) less than a right angle: in current terminology, 87°. Trigonometric functions had not yet been invented, but using geometrical analysis in the style of Euclid, Aristarchus determined that

 

In other words, the distance to the Sun was somewhere between 18 and 20 times greater than the distance to the Moon. This value (or values close to it) was accepted by astronomers for the next two thousand years, until the invention of the telescope permitted a more precise estimate of solar parallax.

Aristarchus also reasoned that as the angular size of the Sun and the Moon were the same, but the distance to the Sun was between 18 and 20 times further than the Moon, the Sun must therefore be 18–20 times larger.

Lunar eclipse edit

Aristarchus then used another construction based on a lunar eclipse:

 

By similarity of the triangles,   and  

Dividing these two equations and using the observation that the Sun and Moon appear the same size to people on Earth,  , yields

 

The rightmost equation can either be solved for   or  

 

These equations can be made to appear simpler by expressing the lengths   and   in terms of the moon's radius   as a unit, defining   and   Then

 

The above equations give the radii of the Moon and Sun entirely in terms of observable quantities.

The following formulae give the distances to the Sun and Moon in terrestrial units:

 
 

where θ is the apparent radius of the Moon and Sun measured in degrees.

Aristarchus did not use these exact formulae, yet these formulae are likely a good approximation for those of Aristarchus.

Results edit

The above formulae can be used to reconstruct the results of Aristarchus. The following table shows the results of a long-standing (but dubious) reconstruction using n = 2, x = 19.1 (φ = 87°) and θ = 1°, alongside the modern day accepted values.

Quantity Relation Reconstruction Modern
s/t Sun's radius in Earth radii 6.7 109
t/ℓ Earth's radius in Moon radii 2.85 3.67
L/t Earth-Moon distance in Earth radii 20 60.34
S/t Earth-Sun distance in Earth radii 380 23,481

[citation needed]

The error in this calculation comes primarily from the poor values for x and θ. The poor value for θ is especially surprising, since Archimedes writes that Aristarchus was the first to determine that the Sun and Moon had an apparent diameter of half a degree. This would give a value of θ = 0.25, and a corresponding distance to the Moon of 80 Earth radii, a much better estimate. The disagreement of the work with Archimedes seems to be due to its taking an Aristarchus statement that the lunisolar diameter is 1/15 of a "meros" of the zodiac to mean 1/15 of a zodiacal sign (30°), unaware that the Greek word "meros" meant either "portion" or 7°1/2; and 1/15 of the latter amount is 1°/2, in agreement with Archimedes' testimony.

A similar procedure was later used by Hipparchus, who estimated the mean distance to the Moon as 67 Earth radii, and Ptolemy, who took 59 Earth radii for this value.

Illustrations edit

Some interactive illustrations of the propositions in On Sizes can be found here:

  • Hypothesis 4 states that when the Moon appears to us halved, its distance from the Sun is then less than a quadrant by one-thirtieth of a quadrant [that is, it is less than 90° by 1/30th of 90° or 3°, and is therefore equal to 87°] (Heath 1913:353).
  • Proposition 1 states that two equal spheres are comprehended by one and the same cylinder, and two unequal spheres by one and the same cone which has its vertex in the direction of the lesser sphere; and the straight line drawn through the centres of the spheres is at right angles to each of the circles in which the surface of the cylinder, or of the cone, touches the spheres (Heath 1913:354).
  • Proposition 2 states that if a sphere be illuminated by a sphere greater than itself, the illuminated portion of the former sphere will be greater than a hemisphere (Heath 1913:358).
  • Proposition 3 states that the circle in the Moon which divides the dark and the bright portions is least when the cone comprehending both the Sun and the Moon has its vertex at our eye (Heath 1913:362).
  • Proposition 4 states that the circle which divides the dark and the bright portions in the Moon is not perceptibly different from a great circle in the Moon (Heath 1913:365).
  • Proposition 6 states that the Moon moves [in an orbit] lower than [that of] the Sun, and, when it is halved, is distant less than a quadrant from the Sun (Heath 1913:372).
  • Proposition 7 states that the distance of the Sun from the Earth is greater than 18 times, but less than 20 times, the distance of the Moon from the Earth (Heath 1913:377). In other words, the Sun is 18 to 20 times farther away and wider than the Moon.
  • Proposition 13 states that the straight line subtending the portion intercepted within the earth's shadow of the circumference of the circle in which the extremities of the diameter of the circle dividing the dark and the bright portions in the Moon move is less than double of the diameter of the Moon, but has to it a ratio greater than that which 88 has to 45; and it is less than 1/9th part of the diameter of the Sun, but has to it a ratio greater than that which 21 has to 225. But it has to the straight line drawn from the centre of the Sun at right angles to the axis and meeting the sides of the cone a ratio greater than that which 979 has to 10 125 (Heath 1913:394).
  • Proposition 14 states that the straight line joined from the centre of the Earth to the centre of the Moon has to the straight line cut off from the axis towards the centre of the Moon by the straight line subtending the [circumference] within the Earth's shadow a ratio greater than that which 675 has to 1 (Heath 1913:400).
  • Proposition 15 states that the diameter of the Sun has to the diameter of the Earth a ratio greater than 19/3, but less than 43/6 (Heath 1913:403). This means that the Sun is (a mean of) 6+34 times wider than the Earth, or that the Sun is 13+12 Earth-radii wide. The Moon and Sun must then be 20+14 and 387 Earth-radii away from us in order to subtend an angular size of 2º.
  • Proposition 17a in al-Tusi's medieval Arabic version of the book On Sizes states that the ratio of the distance of the vertex of the shadow cone from the center of the Moon (when the Moon is on the axis [that is, at the middle of an eclipse] of the cone containing the Earth and the Sun) to the distance of the center of the Moon from the center of the Earth is greater than the ratio 71 to 37 and less than the ratio 3 to one (Berggren & Sidoli 2007:218).[5] In other words, that the tip of the Earth's shadow cone is between 108/37 and four times farther away than the Moon.

Known copies edit

  • Library of Congress Vatican Exhibit.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Heath, Thomas (1913). Aristarchus of Samos, the Ancient Copernicus. Oxford: Clarendon. p. 323.
  2. ^ Berggren and Sidoli. 2007. 'Aristarchus's On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and the Moon: Greek and Arabic Texts'. Arch. Hist. Exact Sci. 61(3), pp. 213–54. doi:10.1007/s00407-006-0118-4
  3. ^ Noack B. (1992) Aristarch von Samos: Untersuchungen zur Überlieferungsgeschichte der Schrif Περὶ μεγεθῶν καὶ ἀποστημάτων ἡλίου καὶ σελήνης, Wiesbaden.
  4. ^ A video on reconstruction of Aristarchus' method (in Turkish, no subtitles)
  5. ^ Berggren, J. L. & N. Sidoli (2007) (PDF). Archived from the original on April 28, 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link).

Bibliography edit

sizes, distances, aristarchus, work, hipparchus, sizes, distances, hipparchus, sizes, distances, moon, ancient, greek, Περὶ, μεγεθῶν, καὶ, ἀποστημάτων, ἡλίου, καὶ, σελήνης, romanized, perì, megethôn, kaì, apostēmátōn, hēlíou, kaì, selḗnēs, widely, accepted, on. For the work by Hipparchus see On Sizes and Distances Hipparchus On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon Ancient Greek Perὶ mege8ῶn kaὶ ἀposthmatwn ἡlioy kaὶ selhnhs romanized Peri megethon kai apostematōn heliou kai selḗnes is widely accepted as the only extant work written by Aristarchus of Samos an ancient Greek astronomer who lived circa 310 230 BCE This work calculates the sizes of the Sun and Moon as well as their distances from the Earth in terms of Earth s radius Aristarchus s 3rd century BCE calculations on the relative sizes of from left the Sun Earth and Moon from a 10th century CE Greek copy The book was presumably preserved by students of Pappus of Alexandria s course in mathematics although there is no evidence of this The editio princeps was published by John Wallis in 1688 using several medieval manuscripts compiled by Sir Henry Savile 1 The earliest Latin translation was made by Giorgio Valla in 1488 There is also a 1572 Latin translation and commentary by Frederico Commandino 2 3 Contents 1 Symbols 2 Half Moon 3 Lunar eclipse 4 Results 5 Illustrations 6 Known copies 7 See also 8 Notes 9 BibliographySymbols editThe work s method relied on several observations The apparent size of the Sun and the Moon in the sky The size of the Earth s shadow in relation to the Moon during a lunar eclipse The angle between the Sun and Moon during a half moon is 90 The rest of the article details a reconstruction of Aristarchus method and results 4 The reconstruction uses the following variables Symbol Meaning f Angle between the Moon and the Sun during a half moon directly measurable L Distance from the Earth to the Moon S Distance from the Earth to the Sun ℓ Radius of the Moon s Radius of the Sun t Radius of the Earth D Distance from the center of Earth to the vertex of Earth s shadow cone d Radius of the Earth s shadow at the location of the Moon n Ratio d ℓ a directly observable quantity during a lunar eclipse x Ratio S L s ℓ which is calculated from f Half Moon editAristarchus began with the premise that during a half moon the moon forms a right triangle with the Sun and Earth By observing the angle between the Sun and Moon f the ratio of the distances to the Sun and Moon could be deduced using a form of trigonometry nbsp From the diagram and trigonometry we can calculate that S L 1 cos f sec f displaystyle frac S L frac 1 cos varphi sec varphi nbsp The diagram is greatly exaggerated because in reality S 390 L and f is extremely close to 90 Aristarchus determined f to be a thirtieth of a quadrant in modern terms 3 less than a right angle in current terminology 87 Trigonometric functions had not yet been invented but using geometrical analysis in the style of Euclid Aristarchus determined that 18 lt S L lt 20 displaystyle 18 lt frac S L lt 20 nbsp In other words the distance to the Sun was somewhere between 18 and 20 times greater than the distance to the Moon This value or values close to it was accepted by astronomers for the next two thousand years until the invention of the telescope permitted a more precise estimate of solar parallax Aristarchus also reasoned that as the angular size of the Sun and the Moon were the same but the distance to the Sun was between 18 and 20 times further than the Moon the Sun must therefore be 18 20 times larger Lunar eclipse editAristarchus then used another construction based on a lunar eclipse nbsp By similarity of the triangles D L t t d displaystyle frac D L frac t t d quad nbsp and D S t s t displaystyle quad frac D S frac t s t nbsp Dividing these two equations and using the observation that the Sun and Moon appear the same size to people on Earth s S ℓ L displaystyle s S ell L nbsp yields ℓ s t d s t s t s t d ℓ t ℓ t s 1 d ℓ displaystyle frac ell s frac t d s t implies frac s t s frac t d ell implies frac t ell frac t s 1 frac d ell nbsp The rightmost equation can either be solved for ℓ t displaystyle ell t nbsp or s t displaystyle s t nbsp ℓ t 1 ℓ s 1 d ℓ s t 1 s ℓ 1 d ℓ displaystyle frac ell t frac 1 dfrac ell s 1 dfrac d ell qquad frac s t frac 1 dfrac s ell 1 dfrac d ell nbsp These equations can be made to appear simpler by expressing the lengths d displaystyle d nbsp and s displaystyle s nbsp in terms of the moon s radius ℓ displaystyle ell nbsp as a unit defining d d ℓ displaystyle hat d d ell nbsp and s s ℓ displaystyle hat s s ell nbsp Then ℓ t 1 s s 1 d s t 1 s 1 d displaystyle frac ell t frac 1 hat s hat s 1 hat d qquad frac s t frac 1 hat s 1 hat d nbsp The above equations give the radii of the Moon and Sun entirely in terms of observable quantities The following formulae give the distances to the Sun and Moon in terrestrial units L t ℓ t 180 p 8 displaystyle frac L t left frac ell t right left frac 180 pi theta right nbsp S t s t 180 p 8 displaystyle frac S t biggl frac s t biggr left frac 180 pi theta right nbsp where 8 is the apparent radius of the Moon and Sun measured in degrees Aristarchus did not use these exact formulae yet these formulae are likely a good approximation for those of Aristarchus Results editThe above formulae can be used to reconstruct the results of Aristarchus The following table shows the results of a long standing but dubious reconstruction using n 2 x 19 1 f 87 and 8 1 alongside the modern day accepted values Quantity Relation Reconstruction Modern s t Sun s radius in Earth radii 6 7 109 t ℓ Earth s radius in Moon radii 2 85 3 67 L t Earth Moon distance in Earth radii 20 60 34 S t Earth Sun distance in Earth radii 380 23 481 citation needed The error in this calculation comes primarily from the poor values for x and 8 The poor value for 8 is especially surprising since Archimedes writes that Aristarchus was the first to determine that the Sun and Moon had an apparent diameter of half a degree This would give a value of 8 0 25 and a corresponding distance to the Moon of 80 Earth radii a much better estimate The disagreement of the work with Archimedes seems to be due to its taking an Aristarchus statement that the lunisolar diameter is 1 15 of a meros of the zodiac to mean 1 15 of a zodiacal sign 30 unaware that the Greek word meros meant either portion or 7 1 2 and 1 15 of the latter amount is 1 2 in agreement with Archimedes testimony A similar procedure was later used by Hipparchus who estimated the mean distance to the Moon as 67 Earth radii and Ptolemy who took 59 Earth radii for this value Illustrations editSome interactive illustrations of the propositions in On Sizes can be found here Hypothesis 4 states that when the Moon appears to us halved its distance from the Sun is then less than a quadrant by one thirtieth of a quadrant that is it is less than 90 by 1 30th of 90 or 3 and is therefore equal to 87 Heath 1913 353 Proposition 1 states that two equal spheres are comprehended by one and the same cylinder and two unequal spheres by one and the same cone which has its vertex in the direction of the lesser sphere and the straight line drawn through the centres of the spheres is at right angles to each of the circles in which the surface of the cylinder or of the cone touches the spheres Heath 1913 354 Proposition 2 states that if a sphere be illuminated by a sphere greater than itself the illuminated portion of the former sphere will be greater than a hemisphere Heath 1913 358 Proposition 3 states that the circle in the Moon which divides the dark and the bright portions is least when the cone comprehending both the Sun and the Moon has its vertex at our eye Heath 1913 362 Proposition 4 states that the circle which divides the dark and the bright portions in the Moon is not perceptibly different from a great circle in the Moon Heath 1913 365 Proposition 6 states that the Moon moves in an orbit lower than that of the Sun and when it is halved is distant less than a quadrant from the Sun Heath 1913 372 Proposition 7 states that the distance of the Sun from the Earth is greater than 18 times but less than 20 times the distance of the Moon from the Earth Heath 1913 377 In other words the Sun is 18 to 20 times farther away and wider than the Moon Proposition 13 states that the straight line subtending the portion intercepted within the earth s shadow of the circumference of the circle in which the extremities of the diameter of the circle dividing the dark and the bright portions in the Moon move is less than double of the diameter of the Moon but has to it a ratio greater than that which 88 has to 45 and it is less than 1 9th part of the diameter of the Sun but has to it a ratio greater than that which 21 has to 225 But it has to the straight line drawn from the centre of the Sun at right angles to the axis and meeting the sides of the cone a ratio greater than that which 979 has to 10 125 Heath 1913 394 Proposition 14 states that the straight line joined from the centre of the Earth to the centre of the Moon has to the straight line cut off from the axis towards the centre of the Moon by the straight line subtending the circumference within the Earth s shadow a ratio greater than that which 675 has to 1 Heath 1913 400 Proposition 15 states that the diameter of the Sun has to the diameter of the Earth a ratio greater than 19 3 but less than 43 6 Heath 1913 403 This means that the Sun is a mean of 6 3 4 times wider than the Earth or that the Sun is 13 1 2 Earth radii wide The Moon and Sun must then be 20 1 4 and 387 Earth radii away from us in order to subtend an angular size of 2º Proposition 17a in al Tusi s medieval Arabic version of the book On Sizes states that the ratio of the distance of the vertex of the shadow cone from the center of the Moon when the Moon is on the axis that is at the middle of an eclipse of the cone containing the Earth and the Sun to the distance of the center of the Moon from the center of the Earth is greater than the ratio 71 to 37 and less than the ratio 3 to one Berggren amp Sidoli 2007 218 5 In other words that the tip of the Earth s shadow cone is between 108 37 and four times farther away than the Moon Known copies editLibrary of Congress Vatican Exhibit See also editAristarchus of Samos 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 Hipparchus c 190 c 120 BC a Greek mathematician who measured the radii of the Sun and the Moon as well as their distances from the Earth 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 Heath Thomas 1913 Aristarchus of Samos the Ancient Copernicus Oxford Clarendon p 323 Berggren and Sidoli 2007 Aristarchus s On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and the Moon Greek and Arabic Texts Arch Hist Exact Sci 61 3 pp 213 54 doi 10 1007 s00407 006 0118 4 Noack B 1992 Aristarch von Samos Untersuchungen zur Uberlieferungsgeschichte der Schrif Perὶ mege8ῶn kaὶ ἀposthmatwn ἡlioy kaὶ selhnhs Wiesbaden A video on reconstruction of Aristarchus method in Turkish no subtitles Berggren J L amp N Sidoli 2007 Aristarchus s On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and the Moon Greek and Arabic Texts Archive for History of Exact Sciences Vol 61 no 3 213 254 PDF Archived from the original on April 28 2011 Retrieved 2011 11 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Bibliography editGomez Alberto 2023 Decoding Aristarchus Berlin Peter Lang Verlag ISBN 9783631892619 Heath Thomas 1913 Aristarchus of Samos the Ancient Copernicus Oxford Clarendon This was later reprinted see ISBN 0 486 43886 4 van Helden A Measuring the Universe Cosmic Dimensions from Aristarchus to Halley Chicago Univ of Chicago Pr 1985 ISBN 0 226 84882 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title On the Sizes and Distances Aristarchus amp oldid 1213778953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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