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  1. Simon Marius (Gunzenhausen, 10 de janeiro de 1573 – Ansbach, 5 de janeiro de 1625) foi um astrônomo alemão. Biografia. Em 1614 Marius publicou a obra Mundus Iovalis, descrevendo o planeta Jupiter e suas luas. Na obra, afirmou ter descoberto as quatro maiores luas de Júpiter dias antes de Galileu.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Simon_MariusSimon Marius - Wikipedia

    Known for. Naming the four largest moons of Jupiter, studying Andromeda Galaxy, Jupiter. Scientific career. Fields. Astronomy. Simon Marius ( latinized form of Simon Mayr; 10 January 1573 – 5 January 1625) [1] was a German astronomer. He was born in Gunzenhausen, near Nuremberg, but spent most of his life in the city of Ansbach.

  3. Simon Marius (born January 10, 1573, Gunzenhausen, Bavaria [Germany]—died December 26, 1624, Anspach) was a German astronomer who named the four largest moons of Jupiter: Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto. All four are named after mythological figures with whom Jupiter fell in love.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Simon Marius clamou ter observado as luas de Júpiter no início de Novembro de 1609 (aproximadamente 5 semanas antes de Galileu) e tinha começado a registrar suas observações em Janeiro de 1610, na mesma época que Galileu fez sua primeira observação do sistema.

  5. Learn about Simon Marius, a German astronomer who claimed to have discovered Jupiter's moons before Galileo in 1609. Read Galileo's response to Marius's fraud and plagiarism in his Assayer of 1623.

  6. 20 de jan. de 2021 · Simon Marius (1573-1625) was a German astronomer who studied and named the four largest moons of Jupiter, claimed to have discovered them independently and even before Galileo. He also observed the Andromeda nebula, sunspots, and the supernova of 1572, and published astronomical tables and Euclid's Elements.

  7. 15 de dez. de 2016 · The court astronomer in Ansbach, Germany, Simon Marius began writing down his notes of three unusual objects near the planet Jupiter at the end of December 1609; a fourth appeared a few days...