Al-Bīrūnī: The plate of the eclipses (published in Suhayl 15) (original) (raw)

2017, Suhayl. International Journal for the History of the Exact and Natural Sciences in Islamic Civilisation, 2017

This paper focuses on an extract from the treatise of al-Bīrūnī (973-1048 AD) "Comprehension of the possible ways for the construction of the astrolabe", where “the plate of the eclipses” is described. This is a device that can be attached on the back side of the astrolabe. It consists of a plate, engraved on both sides, and a grid that can be attached to either side of the plate and can rotate upon it. Given the date of the lunar month, one can find the time of the moon rising and the phase of the moon, using the front side of the plate. Knowing the latitude of the moon at the opposition, one can determine whether there will be a lunar eclipse or not, using the back side of the plate, and can also estimate the magnitude, start time and duration of the eclipse. The results are approximate.

an Algorithm analysis of the lunar eclipse calculation in the book Risālah az-Zain by Ibn Ya’qūb al-Batāwy

2021

The lunar eclipse reckoning algorithm used in the book Risālah az-Zain by Ibn Ya’qūb al-Batāwy uses the Jean Meus Algorithm, but there are some formulas that are different such as calculating the value of K (estimated year of the eclipse), simplification of the formula F (argument for the latitude of the Moon), formula for calculating the value of A (additional correction to get the value of C), correction formula to determine the value of C (time of maximum eclipse), and determination of Pasaran when the eclipse occurs. This research is a type of library research. The analysis process uses descriptive analysis. The primary data used is the book Risālah az-Zain and direct interviews with the author of the book, namely Ibn Ya’qūb al-Batāwy. Secondary data is in the form of documents related to lunar eclipses. The purpose of this study was to determine the lunar eclipse reckoning algorithm in the book Risālah az-Zain and to determine the accuracy of the reckoning by analyzing the ecli...

Jābir b. Aflaḥ on the Limits of Solar and Lunar Eclipses

"The limits of solar and lunar eclipses were computed by Ptolemy in Almagest VI.5 to establish the maximum interval in the argument of latitude in which it was possible for an eclipse to occur when the moon’s mean position in the argument of latitude at each mean syzygy falls within the limits of this interval. To determine these limits, Ptolemy first obtained the true nodal distance of the Moon in the lunar inclined orbit at the apparent syzygy for a minimum possible eclipse. He then added to this true position the maximum difference in the argument of latitude between the mean and true syzygies. The interval obtained, after taking into account the argument of latitude of the lunar nodes, was slightly wider than the maximum interval in the argument of latitude of lunar mean positions at mean syzygies for solar eclipses. This can be seen, either, as a suitable but rough estimate of the correct value or as an inaccurate procedure for deducing the lunar mean position in the argument of latitude at mean syzygies from apparent syzygies. Jābir b. Aflaḥ, the twelfth-century Andalusian astronomer, understood Ptolemy’s procedure in this second sense. He noticed this point and showed the accurate procedure for obtaining lunar mean positions in the argument of latitude at the mean syzygy from the apparent syzygy and thus provided more accurate estimations of the eclipse limits."

On the Available Lunar and Solar Eclipses and Babylonian Chronology

2006

The recently shown two premises (Gurzadyan 2000), i.e. the absence of 56/64 year Venus cycle constraints, at the importance of the 8-year cycle in the Venus Tablet, stimulated new studies on the Chronology of the Ancient Near East (2nd millennium BC). The analysis by B.Banjevic using both premises, however, did not provide anchors of strenght similar to those of Ur III eclipses, while available solar eclipses lack unambiguous links to historical events. The Ultra-Low chronology (Gasche et al 1998), therefore, has to be considered as currently the one most reliably based on ancient astronomical records.

The mystery of ancient eclipses

2023

”The calculated location of the ancient solar eclipses could have an error of up to about 10 kilometers.” This statement by the U.S. Space Administration NASA is a scientific outstretching of how ancient eclipses can be found. When numerous eclipses observed in ancient times are applied to that measure set by science, they reveal a very significant secret of ancient history. Another significant factor is the lunar eclipses of the ancient Ur III dynasty. Can they be found? And what does everything have to be considered in order to find them? Why haven’t scientists discovered the double eclipse of Babylon? ISBN: 978-952-65255-5-6 https://www.bod.fi/kirjakauppa/the-mystery-of-ancient-eclipses-pekka-mansikka-9789526525556 https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Pekka-Mansikka/dp/9526525558 https://www.amazon.es/Mystery-Ancient-eclipses-Pekka-Mansikka/dp/9526525558 PDF-book: 978-952-65255-2-5 III edition Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=48u\_EAAAQBAJ 400 pages 37 chapters Blog of the Mystery of Ancient eclipses: https://pekkamansikka.blogspot.com/

Bīrūnī's Telescopic-Shape Instrument for Observing the Lunar Crescent

Suhayl, 14, pp. 167–188, 2015

This paper deals with an optical aid named barbakh that Abū al-Ray¬ān al-Bīrūnī (973-1048 AD) proposes for facilitating the observation of the lunar crescent in his al-Qānūn al-Mas'ūdī VIII.14. The device consists of a long tube mounted on a shaft erected at the centre of the Indian circle, and can rotate around itself and also move in the vertical plane. The main function of this sighting tube is to provide an observer with a darkened environment in order to strengthen his eyesight and give him more focus for finding the narrow crescent near the western horizon about the beginning of a lunar month. We first briefly review the history of altitude-azimuthal observational instruments, and then present a translation of Bīrūnī's account, visualize the instrument in question by a 3D virtual reconstruction, and comment upon its structure and applicability.

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