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7. Description of New Astronomical Tables for the Computation of Anomalies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Abstract

The planets move round the sun in ellipses, in such a manner that the radii vectores describe areas proportional to the times. Now, by means of parallel lines, we can always project an ellipse upon a plane surface so as to make the projection circular, and thus we have to consider the motion of a point in the circumference of a circle, describing round an excentric point areas proportional to the times. The angle AOQ is called, very inappropriately, the excentric anomaly; I prefer to call it the angle of position. If we suppose a point M to move uniformly along the circumference, with the periodic time of the planet, and to have reached M when the actual projection of the planet is at Q, it is clear that the sector AOM must be equivalent to the area ASQ. The angle AOM is the mean anomaly.

Type
Proceedings 1879–80
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1880

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