2010 programme

Sun 4th
14:00-14:30

Jeremiah Horrocks: Father of British Astronomy?

Ian A B Sullivan

Astronomical Society of Victoria, Mornington Peninsular Astronomical Society

Horrocks and his friend were the only viewers of the 1639 transit of Venus, and he died shortly afterward. His posthumous fame as an astronomer is the subject of a recent biography by Peter Aughton who awards him an illustrious title, despite his lowly status and early death. He revised Kepler's planetary tables on the basis of his own observations, first predicted and observed a Venus transit, observed and measured perturbation of planets, and observed and attempted to explain lunar movement, and the occurrence of tides This paper describes these achievements in their historical and pre-Newtonian context, and the grounds for this adulation.

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