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Copernicus

Nicolaus Copernicus was a famous Polish astronomer and mathematician. He was best known for his work “On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres,” which states that the Sun is the center of the solar system.

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What is Nickolaus Copernicus famous for?

Copernicus was the first scientist to postulate that our solar system was heliocentric. Until that time, everyone "knew" that the earth was the center of the solar system - everything else, including the sun, revolved around the earth. Copernicus got considerable grief for his views, and it was several more centuries before it was universally accepted that he was correct - the solar system is heliocentric.

How was nicolaus Copernicus discovery proved?

His suggestion was that the Sun is at the centre of the solar system. It was proved in the 18th century after Isaac Newton's laws of motion and the law of gravity were applied to demonstrate that the Sun is far more massive than all the planets.

How has Nicolas Copernicus discovery benefited society?

it helped all sorts of things from astronauts nasa and other astronomers find out more about the universe.and now that we know that the sun is the center we can proceed in figuring out the solar system.

What did nicolaus Copernicus find out?

He discovered that the Earth and all of the planets revolve around the Sun.

What was Copernicus's major contributions?

He placed the Sun at the center of what is now called the Solar System instead of the Earth.

What was Nicolaus Steno's theory?

What theory he had alot of theorys.

-Jeff Spearman

What did Nicolas Copernicus do for math?

He was the known to be the first to use both math and astronomy.

The scientist who first used a telescope to make discoveries that supported the heliocentric model was?

Galileo Galilei . He only helped support the theory through his observations , he didn't invent the model, Copernicus did.

What theory of Copernicus was strongly opposed by the church and schools?

Copernicus's new theory for the planets of 1543 had the Sun at the centre, instead of the Earth. In this respect it went against the religious teaching of the time. However the Church allowed it to be taught provided it was always described as a theory.

Galileo took up the theory after 1600 and eventually promoted it aggressively as the truth and not just a theory. This led to his trial and conviction for heresy.

The modern theory of Kepler (1609), that is still in use today, uses the same idea of having the Sun at the centre, but it has the planets in elliptical orbits instead of the circles and epicycles of the old theories of Ptolemy and Copernicus. Kepler's theory was backed up by the new theory of dynamics invented by Newton in the late 1600s long after Kepler's time.