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interesting words to be learned about astronomy. Plato would not consider
anybody ignorant of geometry worthy of his company. Today, ignorance of
astronomy is worse. And I am ignorant of it. But I have found a place to Learn:
http://www.synapses.co.uk/astro/astro.html
Here's a small sample from glossary at the site:
Corona
Cusp
Declination
Deuteron
Doppler effect
double convex
Draconic month
ecliptic & inclination
ecliptic, ecliptic plane
epicycles
event horizon
Fraunhofer lines
Heliopause
Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram, H-R Diagram
inverse square law
Kepler's first law
Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
Kepler's second law
Kepler's third law
Kerr black hole
kinetic energy
formerly known as etaoin...
I was posting in Beheaded Words. I'm really grateful a small but valued group has been looking
at them for past couple weeks. I think a lot of people get overwhelmed by the amount of
technical stuff you have to learn in astronomy. Maybe we can lure them in with some simple
beginnings. I'm so ignorant of astronomy it hurts. I hate being ignorant.
But these early astronomers are amazing in how they carried out their observations and worked calculations to support their theories--and without the aid of a telescope. Galileo was just up ahead of Kepler, but I must edit here: I don't know what effect Gallileo's telescope had on Kepler's math. [Did we have to wait for Newton to factor in gravitational pull of the planets upon each other?] Or any of the astronomers preceding Galileo. Of course, that's as much a waste of time to consider as adding twenty years to Mozart's life and trying to predict how his music may have developed.
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