When did astronomers realise that the stars were similar to the Sun? I'm not asking for when this was established, but when also the hypothesis was first proposed.
|
|
You have a good question. The answer is - we dont know. We know for sure it happened long time ago, probably at the beginning of science as we know it. You should know that there is no MATERIAL EVIDENCE about any ancient scientist. All text which are presented in posts above are just "official" hypothesis, in reality it could have been very different. Look here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism I would guess a guy who did that for sure had some clue about what stars are. |
|||
|
|
|
As found here, Anaxagoras suggested around 450 BC that the stars are far away Suns. This is the first known person to suggest this. As you may know, although this idea was reinvented numerous times, it didn't really catch on until the mid-1800s, when spectral analyses on the Sun and stars carried out by Fraunhofer and Secchi (see this page) started showing remarkable similarities between Solar and stellar spectra. |
|||
|
|
|
Aristarchos of Samos was the first to talk of a heliocentric system. He certainly put the sun at the center, though he puts stars on a sphere.
His writings have been lost due to the great cleansing of pagan documents by christianity. |
|||||||
|