Physics, asked by aman1235, 10 months ago

Where Tycho Brahe did his research work on astronomy? Please don't spam!!!​

Answers

Answered by Thinkab13
4

Answer:

Tycho Brahe did research in Uraniborg where there was a lot of instruments with which he can measure the accurate latitude, longitude of star,sun,planets.

Answered by ABHIRAM31oct
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Tycho left Uraniborg with a precious cargo – almost two decades worth of accurate observations of the stars and planets he and his many research workers made there. In Prague, Tycho gave Johannes Kepler a job as his assistant. Together, they began working on a new star catalog, but it was slow work.

Danish name: Tyge Brahe. Danish astronomer who set out to make accurate observations in order to be able to determine whether the Ptolemaic or Copernican system was the more correct. He was sponsored by King Frederick II of Denmark (not to be confused with the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, who lived from 1194-1250), who built him a castle on the island of Hveen (now Ven) between Denmark and Sweden called Uraniborg. This was the first real astronomical observatory, although alchemical researches were pursued in the basement. From Hveen, Brahe used a quadrant circle to sight the planets and stars. His large, accurate instruments yielded measurements which were accurate to within four minutes of arc. He compiled an extensive table of planetary positions and a star catalogue and made the most accurate naked eye astronomical measurements of his day.

Brahe observed the Comet of 1577 and, by parallax measurements, determined that it was farther away than the moon and not an atmospheric phenomenon as Aristotle had claimed. This shattered Aristotle's notion of crystalline spheres, since the comet would have to travel through the spheres in its path through the heavens. He also observed the supernova Eric Weisstein's World of Astronomy of 1572, which inspired him to write De Nova Stella. Brahe developed his own "geoheliocentric theory" of planetary motions, in which the Sun Eric Weisstein's World of Astronomy orbited the Earth Eric Weisstein's World of Astronomy and the other planets orbited the Sun. Eric Weisstein's World of Astronomy Brahe hired Kepler as an assistant to analyze the vast bulk of data which had been collected.

Although popular legend holds that Brahe died from uraemia and complications due to a ruptured bladder following too large a meal, recent research (Pallon 1996) points to mercury poisoning as the more probable cause. Following Brahe's death, Kepler obtained possession of Brahe's observations, and devoted himself to analyzing them. Brahe is reported to have written his own epitaph: "He lived like a sage and died like a fool

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