How to Measure the Earth’s Radius With Legos

More than 2,000 years ago, pretty much every educated human knew the Earth was round. There are some pretty obvious clues, after all. If you travel south, you see stars and constellations you’ve never seen before (because they’re blocked by Earth’s curvature). When a ship comes into port, you see the top of it before the bottom (because the ocean surface is curved). Finally, when Earth’s shadow falls on the moon in a lunar eclipse, the shadow is a circle. I mean, c’mon!

But this is impressive: Around 240 BC, the Greek mathematician Eratosthenes, head of the famous Library of Alexandria in Egypt, came up with a brilliant way to

→ Continue reading at Wired - Science

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

As AI companies continue to invest heavily, concerns about a bubble continue to grow

As AI companies pour hundreds of billions of dollars into data centers, concerns grow that the industry is inflating a financial bubble that could...

What bubble? The analysts and investors making the bull case for AI | CNN Business

Chipmaker Nvidia posted yet another blockbuster earnings report this month. The stock fell anyway, as many investors worry that the market...

At some food banks, surging demand means a struggle to feed families | CNN Business

In Polk County, Iowa, the Urbandale Food Pantry started giving out turkeys and Thanksgiving sides weeks ago. Demand was so high, with over...