Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Johann Elert Bode, 1801. Uranographia, sive astrorum descriptio viginti tabulis aeneis incisa ex recentissimis et absolutissimis Astronomorum observationibus [Atlas], and Allgemeine Beschreibung und Nachweisung der Gestirne nebst Verzeichnis der geraden Aufsteigung und der Abweichung von 17240 Sternen.

  2. 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

  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. Bode died in Berlin on November 23, 1826, aged seventy-nine. JANUARY 19 is the bicentenary of the birth of Johann Elert Bode, who at one time was the foremost astronomer in Germany.

  5. Inspirado por estos primeros resultados y el aliento de su mecenas Büsch, Johann Elert Bode envía un ejemplar del libro impreso a Johann Heinrich Lambert (1728-1777) reconocido matemático, físico, astrónomo y filósofo alemán de origen francés, quien quedó impresionado por el trabajo de Bode. A consecuencia Bode fue invitado a ocupar un ...

  6. 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 ...

  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.