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  1. Babylonian astronomy: a new understanding of column.Lis Brack-Bernsen - 2020 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 74 (6):605–640.
    The most discussed and mysterious column within the Babylonian astronomy is column phi. It is closely connected to the lunar velocity and to the duration of the Saros. This paper presents new ideas for the development and interpretation of column phi. It combines the excellent Goal-Year method (for the prediction of Lunar Six time intervals) with old ideas and practices from the "schematic astronomy". Inspired by the old "TU11" rule for prediction of times of lunar eclipses, it proposes that column (...)
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  • Observation and Theory in Babylonian Astronomy.Asger Aaboe* - 1980 - Centaurus 24 (1):14-35.
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  • Greek angles from Babylonian numbers.Dennis Duke - 2010 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 64 (3):375-394.
    Models of planetary motion as observed from Earth must account for two principal anomalies: the nonuniform speed of the planet as it circles the zodiac, and the correlation of the planet’s position with the position of the Sun. In the context of the geometrical models used by the Greeks, the practical difficulty is to somehow isolate the motion of the epicycle center on the deferent from the motion of the planet on its epicycle. One way to isolate the motion of (...)
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  • Babylonian astronomy: a new understanding of column Φ: Schematic astronomy, old prediction rules, riddles, loose ends, and new ideas.Lis Brack-Bernsen - 2020 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 74 (6):605-640.
    The most discussed and mysterious column within the Babylonian astronomy is columnΦ. It is closely connected to the lunar velocity and to the duration of the Saros. This paper presents new ideas for the development and interpretation of columnΦ. It combines the excellent Goal-Year method with old ideas and practices from the “schematic astronomy”. Inspired by the old “TU11” rule for prediction of times of lunar eclipses, it proposes that columnΦ, in a similar way, used the sum of the Lunar (...)
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  • Two Lunar Texts of the Achaemenid Period from Babylon.Asger Aaboe & Abraham Sachs - 1969 - Centaurus 14 (1):1-22.
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