Now, rather than having the planet move uniformly about the observer, Kepler introduces a new circle (blue) around which the planet actually moves. The dashed lines indicate the planet's position at quartiles on its new circle of motion, and the blue dots indicate where it appears to be on the observer's circle. By choosing the correct location for this point of uniform motion, we can always account perfectly for the planet's position at four positions along its orbit, so long as its orbit be symmetrical.
![]() "And since it is correct at [these four points], the error (if any) will retreat to the four regions intermediate to those just mentioned, and will occur at the eights of the period, since the time is measured about C." (p.297) |
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Therefore, let the angles MCK, KCN be bisected by two new lines through C intersecting the circumference at Q, T, R, S. The maximum error, if any, will be about these points. But the hypothesis also places the planet on the lines AQ, AR, AS, AT, at the eights of the period. Now suppose (as is true for Mars) that after the eighths of the periodic time the planet is not destined to appear on the lines AQ, AR, AS, AT, but instead is above the former two at AF, AE, and below the latter two at AG, AD. Therefore, if the former error KAV was 10½°, the present error QAF will hardly amount to a few minutes. For Mars, the magnitude of QAF or RAE is observed to be about 9', while SAG or TAD is about 28' (p.297)
We'll have to make another change to take this difference at the eighths into account:
[M]ove the center of the eccentric downwards to B from the point of uniform motion C, substituting HI for MN. The body of the planet would depart from the points Q, R, S, T, nevertheless remaining on the lines CQ, CR, CS, CT (because the measure of time stays at C), and would arrive at the points marked F, E, G, D... With this done, that error at the eighths of the period will also be absorbed, and the hypothesis will exhibit the longitude perfectly accurately at eight places. (p.297)Here, the planet moves upwards from Q,R to F,E in the upper part of the orbit, and downwards from S,T to G,D in the lower part, as the center of the eccentric moves downwards. Click here for a more exaggerated version. |
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With this done, that error at the eights of the period will also be absorbed, and the hypothesis will exhibit the longitude perfectly accurately at eight places. Thus if any error remains, it will be at the sixteenths of the period, the points in between... And because the error of the second was greatest at the eighths of the period, and this is now absorbed, the part of the old error remaining at the sixteenths will be much smaller. Let us estimate it proportionally: just as the error of the first eccentric was 10½° while that of the second was 9' or 28', that is, one seventieth or one twenty-fifth of the former, let us now make the errors of the second that many times the errors of the third. Plainly, already at the sixteenths of the period, we will have driven the business down to within the limits of observational accuracy. (pp.297-298)