Frontispiece of the Rudolphine Tables of planetary positions,
published by
Kepler
in 1627 in Ulm and dedicated to Tycho's and
Kepler's deceased patron, Rudolph II. The frontispiece is
an allegoric depiction of the Temple of Astronomy.
Taking center stage are
Copernicus and
Tycho,
while Hipparchus and
Ptolemy look on. The central
panel on the base is a map of the island of Hveen. The panel to
the left shows Kepler himself, laboring by candlelight.
The Rudolphine Tables were the first to make use of Kepler's newly formulated
Laws on planetary motions, calibrated using Tycho's store of accurate
planetary observations.
They received a spectacular validation on November 7, 1631,
when the French philosopher and sometimes
astronomer Pierre Gassendi (1592-1655) observed a transit
of Mercury across the solar disk, as predicted by Kepler. Kepler's
prediction of this event was far more accurate than those based on the
Copernican Tables. This success paved the way for the general acceptance
not only of the Rudolphine Tables, but also by extension, of Kepler's
three Laws of planetary motions.
Ptolemy
Copernicus
Tycho
Kepler
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