Click to see an enlarged picture
Copernican system. Wikimedia Commons (Public Domain)
Visit our new topic page about Copernican system

Copernican system

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008

Copernican system first modern European theory of planetary motion that was heliocentric, i.e., that placed the sun motionless at the center of the solar system with all the planets, including the earth, revolving around it. Copernicus developed his theory in the early 16th cent. from a study of ancient astronomical records. He retained the ancient belief that the planets move in perfect circles and therefore, like Ptolemy , he was forced to utilize epicycles to explain deviations from uniform motion (see Ptolemaic system ). Thus, the Copernican system was technically only a slight improvement over the Ptolemaic system. However, making the solar system heliocentric removed the largest epicycle and explained retrograde motion in a natural way. By liberating astronomy from a geocentric viewpoint, Copernicus paved the way for Kepler's laws of planetary motion and Newton 's embracing theory of universal gravitation , which describes the force that holds the planets in their orbits.

Bibliography: See E. Rosen, Copernicus and His Successors (1995); T. S. Kuhn, The Copernican Revolution (1997).



Author not available, COPERNICAN SYSTEM., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008



The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

The solar system.(web services)(Brief Article)
Teacher Librarian; 2/1/2006; Mitchoff, Kate Houston; 215 words ; NASA Kids: Solar System httpkids.msfc.nasa.gov/ SolarSystem/ NASA presents information about the planets, the sun, comets, asteroids, and meteor showers. Students can even learn what age or weight they would be on another planet! Older students will want to visit NASAs other site on the solar Read more
Find yields clues to solar system birth
The Boston Globe; 4/22/1998; David L. Chandler, Globe staff; 498 words ; Astronomers yesterday reported the discovery of newborn planetary systems that resemble our own solar system in its infancy, providing images that are like baby pictures showing how our sun and its family of planets grew up to be the solar system we see and inhabit today. To astronomers, the new Read more
Plutos galore: ice dwarfs may dominate the solar system's planetary population. (Cover Story)
Science News; 9/21/1991; Cowen, Ron; 2091 words ; Ask most fifth-graders about the solar system and they'll tell you it consists of the sun and nine planets. Some may even know that the solar system formed about 5 billion years ago from a disk of dust surrounding the young sun. As gravity lumped the dust particles together, some formed chunks Read more
A strange find in Earth's backyard. (1996TL66 is a body in the Solar System with an orbit that swings close to Neptune and astronomers speculate that thousands more such objects may also be there)(Brief Article)
U.S. News & World Report; 6/16/1997; Watson, Trudi; 272 words ; The solar system is the Earth's back yard, close by and easy to study. You'd think humans would know every inch of it by now. But in last week's Nature, scientists report detecting a strange little something that seems unlike any- thing else in the solar system. Dubbed 1996TL66, it is notable for Read more
Jumping Jupiter! Is Our Solar System a Rarity?
The Washington Post; 2/15/1999; Kathy Sawyer; 1121 words ; ... for any possible habitable planet as we know it." That's "bad news" for those in search of extraterrestrial intelligence, said Marcy ... about 5 percent appear to have world-wrecking planets. "The good news is that 95 percent of the sun-like stars don't have these nemeses ... Read more
Comet's tail offers clues to birth of solar system, life's origins
Oakland Tribune; 12/19/2006; Betsy MasonSTAFF; 633 words ; SAN FRANCISCO -- Microscopic bits of dust from the tail of a comet are squashing widely held beliefs about the solar system and giving scientists an unprecedented look at the building blocks of life. The tiny grains, captured by a spacecraft and hurled back to Earth in a capsule in January, contain Read more
Comet's tail offers clues to solar system's birth
Oakland Tribune; 12/25/2006; Betsy MasonSTAFF; 574 words ; SAN FRANCISCO -- Microscopic bits of dust from the tail of a comet are squashing widely held beliefs about the solar system and giving scientists an unprecedented look at the building blocks of life. The tiny grains, captured by a spacecraft and hurled back to Earth in a capsule in January, contain Read more
Solar system may contain 1,000 planets, astronomer says
The Boston Globe; 5/30/1991; David L. Chandler, Globe Staff; 694 words ; SEATTLE -- The solar system may contain about 1,000 planets, not just the nine that are now known, according to a new theory presented here yesterday by astronomer Alan Stern of the University of Colorado. Untold numbers of Pluto-sized planets may have orbited among the known planets after the Read more
Discovering the Solar System.(Young adult review)(Book review)
The Science Teacher; 7/1/2007; Smith, Richard; 375 words ; Discovering the Solar System by David W. Hughes and Carole Stott $29.99. Barron's Educational Series, Hauppauge, NY. 2006. ISBN: 0764179306. Discovering the Solar System is a useful kit for helping students understand our solar system. Included in the kit are twin spiral-bound books, a laminated Read more
Outer limits: solar system at the fringe.(Cover Story)
Science News; 1/14/2006; Cowen, Ron; 2254 words ; Planetary scientist Mike Brown has had plenty of practice finding objects at the fringes of the solar system. In sky images spaced an hour apart, he and his colleagues have identified several of the solar systems--most distant denizens, revealed by their motion relative to the background of fixed Read more

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Copernican system
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia ... Ptolemy ). Scientifically, the Copernican system led to belief in a much larger universe ... universe caused profound shock: the Copernican system challenged the entire system of ancient ... philosophical conception of the universe. Copernican system Copernican ... Read more
heliocentric system
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition see Copernican system . Read more
Ptolemaic system
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English Ptol·e·ma·ic sys·tem (also Ptolemaic theory ) • n. hist. Astron. the theory that the earth is the stationary center of the universe, with the planets moving in epicyclic orbits within surrounding concentric spheres. Compare with Copernican system . Read more
Paul V
Encyclopedia of World Biography ... He was most famous for clashing with Galileo, forbidding him to publicly support the Copernican theory of the universe. Early Life and Career Pope Paul V was born as Camillo Borghese ... advanced by the famous scientist Galileo. Paul opposed Galileo's opinions about the Copernican theory of the universe, which ... Read more
Giordano Bruno
Encyclopedia of World Biography ... Bruno The Italian philosopher and poet Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) attempted to deal with the implications of the Copernican universe. Although he made no scientific discoveries, his ideas had much influence on later scientists and philosophers ... significant set of writings, in which he explained a new method for ... Read more

Related research topics

Online videos

Galileo Sun-Centered System