Tycho & Kepler

the unlikely partnership that forever changed our understanding of the heavens

Hardcover, 416 pages

English language

Published Jan. 1, 2002 by Walker & Company.

ISBN:
978-0-8027-1390-2
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OCLC Number:
50410222

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"On his deathbed in 1601, the Danish nobleman and greatest naked-eye astronomer, Tycho Brahe, begged his young colleague, Johannes Kepler, "Let me not seem to have lived in vain." For more than thirty years - mostly in his native Denmark and then in Prague under the patronage of the Holy Roman Emperor, Rudolph II - Tycho had meticulously observed the movements of the planets and the positions of the stars.

From these observations he developed his Tychonic system of the universe - a highly original, if incorrect, scheme that attempted to reconcile the ancient belief that the Earth stood still with Nicolaus Copernicus's revolutionary rearrangement of the solar system some fifty years earlier.

Tycho knew that Kepler, the brilliant young mathematician he had engaged to interpret his findings, believed in Copernicus's arrangement, in which all the planets circled the Sun; and he was afraid his system - the product of …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Germany
  • Kepler, Johannes,
  • Brahe, Tycho,
  • Astronomy - General
  • Science/Mathematics
  • Science
  • Biography / Autobiography
  • Kepler's laws
  • History
  • Denmark
  • Scientists - General
  • Brahe, Tycho
  • Kepler, Johannes
  • Science / Astronomy
  • Astronomers
  • 1546-1601
  • 1571-1630
  • Biography