Posted on February 19, 2021
Key Points
This is an update of my post first published on February 19, 2010:
The German/Polish polymath (a person who is learned in many different fields) Nicolaus Copernicus was born on this day in 1473. He was an astronomer, mathematician, doctor, translator, artist, Catholic clergy, jurist (one who studies, develops or applies the law), governor, military leader, diplomat, and economist. He was a polyglot (a person who speaks many different languages) as well; he spoke German, Latin, and Polish with equal fluency, and he also knew Greek and Italian!
During his lifetime, Copernicus might have been known to many as his powerful uncle’s personal secretary, perhaps, or as the published translator of some poems written in Greek. However, we know him today from his contributions to astronomy and, more generally, to science.
Even though astronomy was just a sideline for Copernicus, he was able to work out the heliocentric, or sun-centered, model of the solar system.
For thousands of years it was thought that the Earth sat still at the center of the universe, and everything people could see in the sky, from the Moon and Sun to the planets and stars, circled around it. People thought this was true because we experience the world this way—as we stand on the Earth, we do not feel as if it is in motion, and we clearly see the Moon, stars, and Sun moving in our skies.
However, in order for our observations of the observed movements of the planets to make sense, we cannot suppose their paths around the Earth to be simple circles. Instead, thinkers like Ptolemy invented little circles cycling around larger circles—epicycles, deferents, and equants—in a very complicated system.
Copernicus demonstrated that, by simply moving Earth out of the central spot and supposing that it was in motion, too, most of those complications fell away.
The fact that the unmoving sun and firmament (the stars) seem to move around the Earth once per day was explained, in the new Copernican system, by the idea that the Earth itself is spinning around like a top, rotating on its axis once a day. So the Earth has two motions—spinning on its axis and revol
ving around the sun.
You probably noticed…
*The sun is not actually the center of the universe. It’s pretty far out from the center of the Milky Way galaxy, even, hanging out in an obscure corner of one of the spiral arms. Nor is the Milky Way galaxy the center of the universe. As a matter of fact, the phrase “the center of the universe” might not even make sense.
Also, there is no firmament. There is no solid shell or sphere onto which stars are glued. Instead, the stars are much larger and much farther away than they seem, great balls of burning gas similar to our sun, and they are at all different distances away from us. Stars—even our sun—are in motion, too, revolving around the center of their galaxies even as the galaxies rush away from each other. Also, the stars certainly aren’t unchanging—new ones are born, older ones die.
The firmament – which of course doesn’t actually exist – is pictured here in gold.
Finally, of course, there are many bodies in the solar system that Copernicus didn’t know about, most noticeably two more planets, Uranus and Neptune.
Ahead of His Time
Copernicus’s Big Idea was a bit too radical for most people of his time, and for more than a century, most people didn’t accept it. Remember, some of Galileo‘s findings confirmed the Copernican system, but he was put on trial and then under house arrest because of it—and that was 100 years later!
Watch a short video about Copernicus.
Find out more about Copernicus’s Big Idea.
Copernicus has been honored with many memorials, with his face on Polish money, with a crater on the moon named for him, and most recently with a new element (atomic
number 112) named copernicium.This salt sculpture of Copernicus can be found in a salt mine in Poland. |
Also on this date:
(original post)
Plan ahead:
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Historical anniversaries in February
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March holidays
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March birthdays
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Historical anniversaries in March