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- and their accuracy. Erling Poulsen
Tycho preferred a different method as can be seen on the picture. He writes that to be sure that your aim is right, the brightness of the star must be equal in both slits, that means the star often look different in the two slits and therefore must have a small angular size. Tycho (as everybody else) believed that light travelled in straight lines and he could then measure their angular diameter.
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![]() He could not measure a stellar parallax (it must be smaller than 1') so if the Earth moved around the Sun then the stars must be in a very great distance, and he could measure their angular diameter (he believed) then he could calculate the physical size of the stars and the result were stellar diameters greater than the size of the orbit of the Earth (Tychonis Brahe Dani Opera Omnia VI, page 197, København 1913-1929). The result was impossible and the Earth must be in the center of the Universe.
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