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History > General History > Antikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly

History > General History

submitted by George Poulos on 05.05.2004

Antikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly

Antikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly - Antikytha mechanism 4 - The Sun-Moon AssemblyAntikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly - Antikythera mechanism - Gears-numbered
Images by Bill Casselman.

These two images give a schematic version of De Solla Price's general gear plan; on the bottom the color picks out the sub-assembly connecting the sun's motion to that of the moon.

The sun marker and the moon marker were driven by the two central gears (the moon axis threaded through the sun's), exactly like the hour and minute hands on a modern clock. The train of gears linking the sun's motion to that of the moon can be described by the meshing pattern and the numbers of teeth.

Antikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly - Antikythera mechanism - within the constellation

The sun gear has 64 teeth. It meshes with the smaller of a 38,48 gear pair. The 48 meshes with the smaller of a 24,127 gear pair. The 127 meshes with the 32 teeth of the moon gear. The ratio of angular speeds can then be calculated as
64 48 127 254
-- X -- X --- = --- = 13.36842..
38 24 32 19

which is an excellent approximation of the astronomical ratio 13.368267.. .

Since the sun-moon linkage involves an odd number of meshings, the two gears will turn in opposite directions. For the display to be realistic the sun and the moon must move the same way. In the device this was accomplished by a vertical "contrate" gear (marked A in De Solla Price's plan) linking the sun gear to an identical gear above it, which thus turned at the same speed but in the opposite direction.

Antikythera mechanism 3 - Sun-Moon Assembly - Antikythera mechanism - gears 1

This image is a still image. To view a java-animated version, go too:

http://www.ams.org/new-in-math/cover/kyth2.html

It shows the operation of the Sun-Moon assembly, with a somewhat fanciful simulation of the display. In the actual device, the zodiac constellations were represented by their Greek names ("Libra" and the end of "Virgo" are decipherable in the relic). The constellation-schemata used here are imitations of the more accurate versions in Find the Constellations by H. A. Rey, Houghton-Mifflin Co., Boston, 1988.

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