Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 17 submissions in the queue.

Submission Preview

Link to Story

Signs of Modern Astronomy Seen in Ancient Babylon

Accepted submission by mendax at 2016-01-29 00:32:22
Science

The New York Times reported recently in an article [nytimes.com] how the ancient Babylonians appear to have used a form of pre-calculus to describe Jupiter’s motion across the night sky relative to distant background stars. They did this only a millennium and a half earlier than the Europeans who were credited with doing the same thing.

For people living in the ancient city of Babylon, Marduk was their patron god, and thus it is not a surprise that Babylonian astronomers took an interest in tracking the comings and goings of the planet Jupiter, which they regarded as a celestial manifestation of Marduk.

What is perhaps more surprising is the sophistication with which they tracked the planet, judging from inscriptions on a small clay tablet dating to between 350 B.C. and 50 B.C. The tablet, a couple of inches wide and a couple of inches tall, reveals that the Babylonian astronomers employed a sort of precalculus in describing Jupiter’s motion across the night sky relative to the distant background stars. Until now, credit for this kind of mathematical technique had gone to Europeans who lived some 15 centuries later.

“That is a truly astonishing find,” said Mathieu Ossendrijver, a professor at Humboldt University in Berlin, who describes his archaeological astronomy discovery in an article on Thursday in the journal Science.

“It’s a figure that describes a graph of velocity against time,” he said. “That is a highly modern concept.”

Mathematical calculations on four other tablets show that the Babylonians realized that the area under the curve on such a graph represented the distance traveled.


Original Submission