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The Hill-Brown theory of the moon's motion: its coming-to-be and short-lived ascendancy (1877-1984)

Part of the Sources and Studies in the History of Mathematics and Physical Sciences series
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This book, in three parts, describes three phases in the development of the modern theory and calculation of the Moon's motion. Part I explains the crisis in lunar theory in the 1870s that led G.W. Hill to lay a new foundation for an analytic solution, a preliminary orbit he called the "variational curve." Part II is devoted to E.W. Brown's completion of the new theory as a series of successive perturbations of Hill's variational curve. Part III describes the revolutionary developments in time-measurement and the determination of Earth-Moon and Earth-planet distances that led to the replacement of the Hill-Brown theory in 1984.

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£89.50
Product Details
Springer
1441959378 / 9781441959379
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
523.33
30/07/2014
English
321 pages
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