Often cited as the most productive – and most puzzling –
scientific law at the same time, are there any mysteries behind Bode’s Law?
By: Ringo Bones
This rather “curious” scientific law was named after an 18th
Century German astronomer and mathematician named Johann Elert Bode, but
contrary to popular belief, it was actually discovered by Johann Daniel Titius –
a German mathematician – back in 1766. However, the empirical relation that
gives the approximate distances of the planets from the Sun did not attract
attention to the 18th Century astronomical community until it was
publicized by Johann Elert Bode – whose name has since then associated with it –
back in 1772.
To the uninitiated, Johann Elert Bode (1747-1826) was an
Eighteenth Century era German astronomer who popularized an empirical law that
was later named after him, which gives the approximate distances of the planets
from the Sun. Bode was also famous for naming the planet Uranus that ended the
confusion in the astronomical community at the start of the 19th Century
when the British astronomer William Herschel desired to name the then newly
discovered planet as Georgium Sidius after King George III of England.
After examining the work of fellow German mathematician, Johann
Daniel Titius, Bode noted that the distances of the various planets from the
Sun fell into a curious mathematical sequence. Bode then published a paper which
arbitrarily assigned numbers to the planets: 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 96, and 192.
Thus the planet Mercury was numbered 0, planet Venus 3, planet Earth 6, planet
Mars 12, and so on, each number being double the last one. When 4 was added to
each of these numbers and the result is divided by 10, figures emerged which
almost exactly equaled the planets’ distances from the Sun, measured in
astronomical units. By the way, an astronomical unit is a unit of distance
between the planet Earth and the Sun – which is around 93-million miles or
150-million kilometers.
The only trouble with the law was that back in the time when
Bode published it in 1772, there were no planets found at positions 24 or 192. But
astronomers searching in position 24 located the asteroids – around the start
of the Nineteenth Century – i.e. the discovery of asteroid Ceres in 1801. The
planet Uranus, which was discovered back in 1781, occurs at position 192 and
conforms almost exactly to Bode’s calculations. Only the outermost planets –
Neptune and the dwarf planet Pluto – failed to obey Bode’s Law. Although many
attempts have been made to derive a physical explanation for the law, none has
completely succeeded. Today, many
astronomers dismiss Bode’s Law as a coincidence and that Bode’s Law is not a
rule governing planetary systems. Yet it remains one of the most mysterious
statements of natural law formulated by man.
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