- Callippic cycle
In
astronomy andcalendar studies, the Callippic cycle (or Calippic) is a particular approximate common multiple of theyear (specifically thetropical year ) and the synodic month, that was proposed byCallippus in330 BC . It is a period of 76 years, as an improvement on the 19-yearMetonic cycle .A century before Callippus,
Meton invented the cycle of 19 years that counted 6,940 days, which exceeds 235 lunations by almost a third of a day, and 19 tropical years by four tenths of a day. It implicitly gave the solar year a length of 6940/19 = 365 + 1/4 + 1/76 days = 365 d 6 h 18 min 56 s. But Callippus knew that the length of the year was more closely 365 + 1/4 day (= 365d 6h 00m 00s), so he multiplied the 19-year cycle by 4 to reach an integer number of days, and then dropped 1 day from the last 19-year cycle. Thus he constructed a cycle of 76 years that contains 940 lunations and 27,759 days, and has been called the "Callippic" after him.The first year of the first Callippic cycle began at the summer
solstice of330 BC (28 June in theproleptic Julian calendar ), and was subsequently used by later astronomers. InPtolemy 's "Almagest ", for example, he cites ("Almagest" VII 3, H25) observations byTimocharis in the 47th year of the first Callippic cycle (283 BC ), when on the eighth ofAnthesterion , the Pleiades were occulted by theMoon .Evans, James. "The Callippic Cycle." "The History & Practice of Ancient Astronomy". Oxford University Press US. 1998. ISBN 0-19-509539-1. 186–7.]The Callippic calendar originally used the names of months from the
Attic calendar , although later astronomers, such asHipparchus , preferred other calendars, including theEgyptian calendar . Also Hipparchus invented his own Hipparchic calendar cycle as an improvement upon the Callippic cycle. Ptolemy's "Almagest" provided some conversions between the Callippic and Egyptian calendars, such as that Anthesterion 8, 47th year of the first Callippic period was equivalent to day 29 in the month of Athyr, in year 465 ofNabonassar . However, the original, complete form of the Callippic calendar is no longer known.ee also
*
Callippus References
External links
* [http://www.phys.uu.nl/~vgent/astro/almagestephemeris.htm Online Callippic calendar converter as used in Ptolemy's Almagest]
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