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Col Joseph Lenertz
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Edited 6 y ago
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Thanks for the great History share of one of Astronautical Engineering's pioneers. Kepler's 3 Laws of planetary motion are one of the first things we learned in undergrad. Also, Kepler stood on the shoulders of not only Copernicus, but also Tycho Brahe. Tycho did the grunt work of thousands of detailed observations that made Kepler's ability to derive his Laws possible. And then Newton's Principia took it all so much further. These guys are my nerd heroes.
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SGT English/Language Arts Teacher
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6 y
I remember taking a physics class in college and we covered it extensively, too!
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1LT All Source Intelligence
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6 y
Deriving Kepler's Laws from Newton's and using them both to calculate an estimation for the gravitational constant was on my first test in undergrad as well! It's amazing to think that things considered their lives' work is something we use to launch our studies of physics just 400ish short years later.

Also, Tycho Brahe never gets the credit he deserves for not only how much time he saved Kepler, but his relationship with him and his assertions of supernovae that profoundly changed the world's perspective on celestial immutability (of course we take this for granted now, but this was the belief since at least Greece, probably longer). Probably an unfortunate circumstance of the paradigm-shifting of his scientific contemporaries. Thank you for remembering!
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SPC John Waisman
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If true, the universe is not random.
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
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Excellent share David, thank you.
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