05567nam 22005655 450 991088609180332120240901130233.03-031-56330-110.1007/978-3-031-56330-0(MiAaPQ)EBC31629538(Au-PeEL)EBL31629538(CKB)34674279400041(DE-He213)978-3-031-56330-0(EXLCZ)993467427940004120240901d2024 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAlessandro Piccolomini’s Early Astronomical Works: II. An Examination of Their Scientific Content /by Elly Dekker1st ed. 2024.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Springer,2024.1 online resource (266 pages)Historical & Cultural Astronomy,2509-31183-031-56329-8 1. De la Sfera del Mondo: an exploration of Piccolomini’s universe -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Piccolomini and the motion of the solar apogee -- 1.3 The sizes of the planets and their distances from the Earth -- 1.4 Concluding remarks -- 2. De le Stelle Fisse: teaching the constellations -- 2.1 Historical notes -- 2.2 Piccolomini’s method -- 2.3 Piccolomini’s new invention -- 2.4 Concluding remarks -- 3. Manuscript notes made by readers of De le Stelle Fisse -- 3.1 Cartographical uses: a 1553 edition of De le Stelle Fisse in the Museo Galileo, Florence -- 3.1.1 The coordinate grids -- 3.1.2 Use of the maps to chart the path of the comet of 1652-53 -- 3.2 Use of the maps to outline constellation figures: a 1570 edition from the Collegio Romano -- 4. The maps in De le Stelle Fisse -- 4.1 Introduction to the maps -- 4.2 Construction of the maps -- 4.3 The globe hypothesis -- 4.4 Piccolomini’s system for indicating direction and orientation -- 5. The Tables in De le Stelle Fisse -- 5.1 An introduction to Piccolomini’s Tables -- 5.2 The daily motion of a star: the relationship between altitude and azimuth -- 5.3 Calculating zenith distance and azimuth -- 5.4 Piccolomini’s Tables and the motion of the Sun -- 5.5 Concluding remarks -- 6. Simultaneous risings and settings in De le Stelle Fisse -- Appendix I: The constellation guide -- Appendix II: Map features in the different editions of De le Stelle Fisse -- Appendix III: Explanations of the names and terms used -- Bibliography -- Index.This book presents the first detailed scientific examination of Alessandro Piccolomini’s two early astronomical works – De la Sfera del Mondo and De le Stelle Fisse. First published in Venice in 1540, the two treatises are amongst the earliest scientific texts written in the vernacular (Italian) and were specifically composed to make astronomical principles and practices available to a lay reader. Whereas De la Sfera del Mondo is essentially an updated adaptation of the theoretical astronomical material contained in Sacrobosco’s De Sphaera, this book examines his views on a number of key topics – such as precession, the motion of the solar apogee and the size and distance of the planets from Earth. The author also presents a radical reassessment of De le Stelle Fisse, focusing on the innovative methods Piccolomini employed to create a viewer-centric approach for identifying the stars. As such, Piccolomini’s guide to the heavens should be seen as a distant forerunner of the successful genre of elementary handbooks that were developed in the late 18th century, and which remain popular with amateur stargazers even in the 21st century. The book also addresses how Piccolomini’s treatises were used by contemporary astronomers by examining the manuscript notes that were left in various surviving copies of his books. It provides a convincing explanation of the unique directional notation on his stellar maps and assesses the relative accuracy of his stellar co-ordinates against contemporary and modern ephemerides and pictorial sources. It also argues that Piccolomini probably designed his distinctive series of maps of the constellations and the related Tables by using a celestial globe to compile his astronomical data. Finally, the author examines the series of refinements and corrections in the successive editions of Piccolomini’s two treatises, thereby showing the extent to which his two early astronomical treatises remained an on-going enterprise for over 60 years. This book is a companion volume to Alessandro Piccolomini’s Early Astronomical Works: I. An Exploration of Their Cultural Significance by Kristen Lippincott in the same series. .Historical & Cultural Astronomy,2509-3118PhysicsHistoryAstronomyObservationsScienceStudy and teachingHistory of Physics and AstronomyAstronomy, Observations and TechniquesScience EducationPhysicsHistory.AstronomyObservations.ScienceStudy and teaching.History of Physics and Astronomy.Astronomy, Observations and Techniques.Science Education.520.92Dekker Elly1771248MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910886091803321Alessandro Piccolomini’s Early Astronomical Works: II. An Examination of Their Scientific Content4257974UNINA