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Axial precession
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====Hipparchus==== The discovery of precession usually is attributed to [[Hipparchus]] (190β120 BC) of [[Rhodes]] or [[Δ°znik|Nicaea]], a [[Greek astronomy|Greek astronomer]]. According to [[Ptolemy]]'s ''[[Almagest]]'', Hipparchus measured the longitude of [[Spica]] and other bright stars. Comparing his measurements with data from his predecessors, [[Timocharis]] (320β260 BC) and [[Aristillus]] (~280 BC), he concluded that Spica had moved 2Β° relative to the [[September equinox|autumnal equinox]]. He also compared the lengths of the [[tropical year]] (the time it takes the Sun to return to an equinox) and the [[sidereal year]] (the time it takes the Sun to return to a fixed star), and found a slight discrepancy. Hipparchus concluded that the equinoxes were moving ("precessing") through the zodiac, and that the rate of precession was not less than 1Β° in a century, in other words, completing a full cycle in no more than 36,000 years.<ref name=Ptolemy>{{citation |author=Ptolemy |author-link=Ptolemy |title=Ptolemy's Almagest |translator-last=Toomer |translator-first=G. J. |translator-link=Gerald J. Toomer |year=1998 |orig-year=1984 {{circa|150}} |publisher=Princeton University Press |pages=131β141, 321β340 |isbn=0-691-00260-6}}</ref> Virtually all of the writings of Hipparchus are lost, including his work on precession. They are mentioned by Ptolemy, who explains precession as the rotation of the [[celestial sphere]] around a motionless Earth. It is reasonable to presume that Hipparchus, similarly to Ptolemy, thought of precession in [[geocentric]] terms as a motion of the heavens, rather than of the Earth.
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