As promised in the last chapter, Ptolemy’s first task in eclipse prediction is going to be laying out a table of mean syzygies around which eclipses might be possible, so we can check those to see if an eclipse might occur instead of performing useless calculations where the sun and moon are nowhere near a syzygy. In this post, we’ll go over the construction of that table! Continue reading “Almagest Book VI: Construction of the Table of Mean Syzygies”
Almagest Book V: The Difference at Syzygies – Maximum Lunar Anomaly
Syzygy is one of those words that has popped up very little in theĀ Almagest so every time it does, I’m always thrown off a bit1. Especially when Ptolemy is going to spend an entire chapter discussing a topic that has scarcely even come up. But here we have Ptolemy spending the entirety of chapter $10$, to demonstrate that these modifications we’ve made to the lunar model have a negligible effect because he fears readers might think it does since
the centre of the epicycle does not always … stand exactly at the apogee at those times, but can be removed from the apogee by an arc [of the eccentre] of considerable size, because location precisely at the apogee occurs at the mean syzygies, whereas the determination of true conjunction and opposition requires taking the anomalies of both luminaries into account.
Continue reading “Almagest Book V: The Difference at Syzygies – Maximum Lunar Anomaly”