Season 1 · Episode 1

Orb: On the Movements of the Earth · S1E1

Aired on October 5, 2024

Science entries in this episode

concept physicshistory-of-science

Aristotelian physics

Rafal cites Aristotle to prove the Earth is at the center in Orb. We explain Aristotelian physics and its link to geocentrism.

invention astronomyhistory-of-science

The astrolabe

In Orb: On the Movements of the Earth, Rafal owns an astrolabe. We explain what this ancient astronomical instrument is, what it does and how it works.

phenomene astronomyphysics

The Earth's rotation and revolution

Hubert explains it in Orb: the Earth moves twice. We separate rotation (day and night) from revolution (seasons), and why we feel nothing.

historique astronomyhistory-of-science

Ptolemy's geocentric model

Before heliocentrism, the Earth sat at the center of the world. We explain Ptolemy's geocentric model, its epicycles, and why it lasted over a thousand years.

historique astronomyhistory-of-science

Heliocentrism

Hubert defends a forbidden idea in Orb: the Sun at the center, the Earth turning. We explain heliocentrism, its history, and why it caused such an uproar.

technique astronomy

Observing the sky with the naked eye

Hubert picks a precise observation spot in Orb. We explain why altitude, a clear sky and the absence of the Moon are the right conditions.

phenomene astronomy

The constellation Orion

Orion's Belt is a clue in Orb, centered on the star Alnilam. We explain this constellation, its three aligned stars and how to spot it.

phenomene astronomyhistory-of-science

Star magnitude

Rafal marvels at seeing a magnitude-six star in Orb. We explain what magnitude is, why the scale runs backwards, and the limit of the naked eye.

technique astronomy

Using an astrolabe

Rafal observes the sky for Hubert in Orb. We walk you through, step by step, how to use an astrolabe to measure a star's altitude and read the time.

concept astronomyhistory-of-science

Why measure a star with an astrolabe

The stars are already engraved on the astrolabe, so why sight one? The instrument is a calculator that derives the time, your orientation and your latitude.