Celestial Globes/Spheres

In astronomy and navigation, the celestial sphere is an imaginary sphere of arbitrarily large radius, concentric with Earth. All objects in the observer's sky can be thought of as projected upon the inside surface of the celestial sphere, as if it were the underside of a dome or a hemispherical screen. The celestial sphere is a practical tool for spherical astronomy, allowing observers to plot positions of objects in the sky when their distances are unknown or unimportant.
21 Pins
·
12y
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
Tycho Brahe
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
World map with encircling zodiac,
Celestial Globe with Clockwork, 1579, made in Vienna, Metropolitan Museum (New York) ~ Gerhard Emmoser
Nassim Haramein
Thanks to Johannes Kepler for figuring out that if you take each of the Platonic Solids and encase each perfectly within a sphere, and then nest them all inside of each other, they produce six layers that correspond to the relative planetary orbits of Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. -Nassim Haramein 4-6-14
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
Map Charting the Movement of the Earth and Planets, from
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
The Situation of the Earth in the Heavens, plate 74 from
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
The Conjunction of the Planets, from
WikiGallery.org, the largest gallery in the world
Planetary orbits, plate 18 from