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  1. 7 de jun. de 2016 · Michael Maestlin and the Comet of 1618. 289. re-argued by Christoph Hunichius (Philosopher and Mathematician in the Paed-. agogium illustre at Stettin)145 in a disputation on comets held in 1608. ...

  2. 30 de sept. de 2015 · Michael Maestlin, a German astronomer, was born Sep. 30, 1550. Maestlin taught astronomy at the University of Tübingen, in southwestern Germany. In the 50 years that had passed since Copernicus proposed that the earth is a planet and moves around the sun, very few astronomers had fully adopted the Copernican hypothesis--just ten, to be precise.

  3. The first known calculation of the golden ratio as a decimal was given in a letter written in 1597 by Michael Mästlin, at the University of Tübingen, to his former student Kepler. He gives "about 0. 6180340" for the length of the longer segment of a line of length 1 divided in the golden ratio. The correct value is 0. 61803398874989484821... .

  4. found: Wikipedia, March 7, 2022 (Michael Maestlin (also Mästlin, Möstlin, or Moestlin) (30 September 1550 - 26 October 1631) was a German astronomer and mathematician, known for being the mentor of Johannes Kepler.

  5. THE COPERNICAN MICHAEL MAESTLIN CASSIOPEIA ASSUMPTIONS OF CONCERNING THE NOVA IN AND THOMAS DIGGES In his very short but highly valuable tract on the nova of 1572,41 Michael Maestlin (1550-1631) did not stop at praising Copernicus as a mathematician («Astronomorum post Ptolemaeum princeps»).42 He left tacit but unmistakeable evidence of sharing the Copernican cosmology.

  6. Maestlin, Michael (1550-1631) Michael Maestlin was a German astronomer and professor of mathematics at Tübingen who taught and corresponded with Johannes Kepler. Although he lectured generally using the Ptolemaic system, he chose also to teach to a select group of students, including Kepler, about the new Copernican system in which Earth and ...