From
LIVE SCIENCE by Charles Quoi
In the epic "Odyssey," one of the cornerstones of Western literature, the
legendary Greek hero Odysseus returns to his queen Penelope after enduring
10 years of sailing the wine dark sea.
Now scientists have pinned down his return to April 16, 1178 B.C., close
to noon local time, according to astronomical references in the epic poem
that seem to pinpoint the total eclipse of the sun on the day that Odysseus
supposedly returned on.
The "Odyssey" is
a millennia-old epic said to be composed by the blind poet Homer. In modern
times, the "Odyssey" is typically seen as fiction. Still, Homer's earlier
epic, the "Iliad" was
centered on the war against Troy, and scientists first uncovered physical
evidence of Troy in the 19th century. This has long raised questions as
to what other historical facts the epics might refer to.
In the "Odyssey," after the decade-long Trojan War,
King Odysseus of the island Ithaca contends with monsters and witches after
he draws the wrath of the sea god Poseidon. After he finally returns home,
Odysseus slays more than 100 unruly suitors all of whom wish to marry Penelope.
The possible solar eclipse comes
up in the 20th book of the "Odyssey," as the suitors begin their final
lunch. At this point, the goddess of war Athena "confounds their minds," making
the suitors laugh uncontrollably and see their food spattered with blood.
The seer Theoclymenus then foresees the death of the suitors, ending by
saying, "The sun has been obliterated from the sky, and an unlucky darkness
invades the world."
The Greek historian Plutarch suggested the prophecy of Theoclymenus referred
to a solar eclipse.
More recently, astronomers Carl Schoch and Paul Neugebauer computed in
the 1920s that a total solar eclipse occurred over the Ionian islands — of
which Ithaca is one — about noon on April 16, 1178 B.C., and would
have coincided roughly a decade before the most often cited estimate for
the sack of Troy — about 1190 B.C.
Still, a great deal of skepticism
remains over whether Theoclymenus refers to this or any eclipse. To shed
light on the issue, researchers Marcelo Magnasco and Constantino Baikouzis
at Rockefeller University in New York decided to analyze other passages
in the "Odyssey" for
astronomical references without assuming an eclipse.
The scientists first created a rough chronology of events depicted in
the "Odyssey." First,
29 days before the supposed eclipse and the massacre of the suitors,
three constellations are mentioned as Odysseus sets out from the island
of Ogygia, where he has spent seven years as a captive of the beautiful
nymph Calypso. Odysseus is told to watch the Pleiades and
late-setting Boötes and keep the Great Bear to his left. Next, five
days before the supposed eclipse, Odysseus arrives in Ithaca as the Star
of Dawn — that is, Venus — rises ahead of the sun.
Finally, the night before the eclipse, there is a new moon.
Also, the messenger of the gods, Hermes, is sent west to Ogygia by the
king of the gods Zeus
to release Odysseus and then immediately returns back east roughly 34
days before the eclipse. The researchers conjecture this trip refers
to an apparent turning point of the motion of the planet Mercury. (Mercury
was the Roman name for Hermes.)
Mercury completes its orbit around
the sun in just roughly 88 days, compared with the year it takes Earth
to do so. This means that Mercury and Earth are somewhat like two cars
moving along separate lanes of a racetrack at different speeds. The effect
of these motions is that Mercury occasionally appears to go backward
or retrograde in the sky from our point of view, Magnasco explained.
This happens for roughly three weeks at a time, about three times a year.
The scientists then searched for potential dates that satisfied all these
astronomical references close to the fall of Troy,
which has over the centuries been estimated to have occurred between
roughly 1250 to 1115 B.C. From these 135 years, they found just one date
satisfied all the references — April 16, 1178 B.C., the same date
as the proposed eclipse.
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