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  1. In Johann Elert Bode. Among his other publications was Uranographia (1801), a collection of 20 star maps accompanied by a catalog of 17,240 stars and nebulae. In 1776 he propounded a theory of the solar constitution similar to that developed in 1795 by Sir William Herschel. He gave currency to the empirical rule known… Read More; star atlases

  2. Search for: 'Johann Elert Bode' in Oxford Reference ». (1747–1826)A German astronomer who popularized the theory, known later as Bode's law, that there is a simple arithmetical relationship between the distances from the Sun to the planets of the solar system. After the discovery of Neptune, which did not conform with the ‘law’, the idea ...

  3. Bode, Johann Elert (1747-1826) Johann Bode was a German mathematician and astronomer best known for his popularization of an empirical mathematical rule giving the relative mean distances between the Sun and planets. Often referred to simply as Bode's Law, this rule had been discovered earlier by Johann Titius (1729–1796) of Wittenberg and so ...

  4. Creator: Johann Elert Bode Reference number: L&P/8/98 The Royal Society is a Fellowship of many of the world's most eminent scientists and is the oldest scientific academy in continuous existence. Follow us

  5. Bode, Johann Elert (1747-1826). Astrónomo alemán, nacido en Hamburgo el 19 de enero de 1747 y fallecido en Berlín el 23 de noviembre de 1826. Descubridor de numerosos racimos de estrellas, nebulosas y otros objetos celestes, está considerado como uno de los padres de la Astronomía moderna. Divulgó la ley de progresión doble de los radios ...

  6. Johann Daniel Titius (1729–1796) Johann Elert Bode (1747–1826) The first mention of a series approximating Bode's law is found in a textbook by D. Gregory (1715): [2] "... supposing the distance of the Earth from the Sun to be divided into ten equal Parts, of these the distance of Mercury will be about four, of Venus seven, of Mars fifteen, of Jupiter fifty two, and that of Saturn ninety ...

  7. BODE, JOHANN ELERT (1747–1826), German astronomer, was born at Hamburg on the 19th of January 1747. Devoted to astronomy from his earliest years, he eagerly observed the heavens at a garret window with a telescope made by himself, and at nineteen began his career with the publication of a short work on the solar eclipse of the 5th of August 1766.