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  1. Johann Elert Bode (Hamburgo, Alemania, 19 de enero de 1747-Berlín, 23 de noviembre de 1826) fue un astrónomo alemán. Considerado en su tiempo el más grande astrónomo de su país, Bode llegó a ser miembro de la Academia de Ciencias de Berlín y director del observatorio astronómico de la capital alemana.

  2. Johann Elert Bode ( German: [ˈboːdə]; 19 January 1747 – 23 November 1826) was a German astronomer known for his reformulation and popularisation of the TitiusBode law. Bode determined the orbit of Uranus and suggested the planet's name.

  3. Johann Elert Bode (born Jan. 19, 1747, Hamburg [Germany]—died Nov. 23, 1826, Berlin) was a German astronomer best known for his popularization of Bode’s law, or the Titius-Bode rule, an empirical mathematical expression for the relative mean distances between the Sun and its planets.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Johann Elert Bode. Related Topics: astronomy. solar system. Bode’s law, empirical rule giving the approximate distances of planets from the Sun. It was first announced in 1766 by the German astronomer Johann Daniel Titius but was popularized only from 1772 by his countryman Johann Elert Bode.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Bode, Johann Elert (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.

  6. Johann Elert Bode was born on January 19, 1747 in Hamburg, Germany, the son of Johann Jakob Bode (1719-1799), a merchant in Hamburg, and his wife Anna Margarethe b. Kruse (1720-1800), and the first of nine brothers and sisters.

  7. Astronomos. Johann Elert Bode. Hamburgo, 1747 - 1826. Fue considerado en su tiempo el más grande astrónomo de Alemania. Miembro de la Academia de Ciencias de Berlín y director del observatorio astronómico de la capital alemana.