Guest guest Posted December 5, 2008 Report Share Posted December 5, 2008 Julia wrote: " Taking a moment to post, as I've just completed setup on an Excel sheet to plot sidereal longitudes and latitues for all 1026 unique stars catalogued in Ptolemy's " Almagest " and computing position errors for various epochs, enabling many kinds of tests. I can use the date of the whole catalogue or select stars for different criteria of precision in positioning them. " ------------------------- has been having problems of late so that sometimes a message appears multiple times in mailboxes, and some messages simply disappear. Julia, your message was one that never made its way to my mailbox, so I saw it accidentally only this evening (December 4), and copied it to my mail program. You wrote: " ...As error tolerance is reduced by the trade-off of discarding progressively more data, that reference date slides forward within the same decade, but 52 - 54 CE looks fairly reasonable, consistent with his placement of Aldebaran and Antares at 12º40' of their respective signs, rather than the 15º typically cited. " Ernie Wright developed a nice little graphic freeware program called " Almagest Stars " , which incorporates some of Grasshoff's work ... I'm hoping to acquire the text you mentioned... " ------------------------- I think you'll want that book, Julia, for the work you're doing. If you can't find a copy, perhaps I can lend you mine. I bought the book in Berkeley, CA, some years ago. Pricy: reduced from $74 to $50. I think I must have bought it for the star tables which list all of Ptolemy's stars and compares them to true positions in -128. All Ptolemy's errors are listed. Grasshoff notes: " Because of the systematic error in longitude along with the possible older origin of the Almagest coordinates, the positions of the stars are not recalculated for the epoch of Ptolemy (+137), but rather for the epoch -128. (The year of many Hipparchan observations reported in the Almagest) You wrote: " It's just a delight working with the data, even if I don't get around to doing everything I'd like. At least it's a handy list of so many noteworthy stars, about 400 of which have been named by various cultures over time... " -------------------------- This is pure Mercury, so certainly reflects Mercury dasa. And wonderful retirement is following. Blessings, Therese Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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