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Re: epicycle of Moon -- where is zero?

by Tom Peters-6 :: Rate this Message:

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Op 4-mei-2009, om 19:13 heeft Irv Bromberg het volgende geschreven:

> Dear Calendarists:
>
> In the Ptolemaic model of lunar motion there is an epicycle upon  
> which Moon revolves at nearly the same rate that the center of the  
> epicycle revolves around Earth.
>
> Was the epicycle considered to be going counterclockwise or  
> clockwise, as viewed from the north?
> (The mean lunar orbit goes counterclockwise as viewed from the north.)
>
> It seems possible to closely approximate the nearly elliptical  
> motion of Moon, with an appropriately advancing perigee, using an  
> epicycle going in either direction.
>
> When quoting an angle for the position of Moon upon that epicycle,  
> where is the zero degrees point of origin?

Ptolemy's model for the Moon's motion was actually more complex.  If  
I understand correctly, there was an eccentric circle moving  
counterclockwise, on which an epicycle moved clockwise, on which the  
Moon moved counter-clockwise ("moving in advance over its apogee  
arc").  Almagest V.2 through V.6; Ptolemy treats the derivation of  
the direction of the Moon's mean apogee in V.5 , but I can't identify  
the value of the parameter you are asking for.

Maybe ask Rob van gent, who occasionally is on this list or otherwise  
on HASTRO-L: he implemented the Almagest in computer programs.

--
Tom Peters

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