A Lego Replica of the Antikythera Mechanism 74
A user writes "The Antikythera Mechanism is the oldest known scientific computer, built in Greece at around 100 BCE. Lost for 2000 years, it was recovered from a shipwreck in 1901. But not until a century later was its purpose understood: an astronomical clock that determines the positions of celestial bodies with extraordinary precision. In 2010, a fully-functional replica out of Lego (YouTube video) was built."
I must have this!! (Score:4, Interesting)
I need a parts list and build instructions. Anyone know if they did this? All we got was a Youtube video...
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Re:I must have this!! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I must have this!! (Score:5, Informative)
Because it would be difficult to fit the information for 223 lunar months in a single rotation of a dial, the original machine used a 5 wind spiral to encode the information. This made more space available for the markings required for the eclipse information.
My version of the machine uses a 4 wind spiral. This provides the same benefit as a 5 wind spiral but matches the Full Moon Cycle which may permit future enhancements to accuracy.
This change results in the formula:
Saros4 = Y * 4 * 235 / (223 * 19)
I decided to not use the Corinthian calendar and instead use the standard Gregorian civil calendar in a four wind spiral representing the four year leap year cycle.
Noting that 235 is 5 * 47 and 254 is 2 * 127, the important constants for the construction are:
4, 5, 19, 47, 127, and 223.
The readily available high quality LEGO gear ratios are combinations of 1, 3, and 5. With some challenge 4 is available. With these combinations we can get to gear ratios which are multiplicative combinations of these values. The easy ratios we can get to include: 1, 3, 4, 5, 9, 12, 15, 20, 25, 27, etc.
Ratios of 19, 47, 127, and 223 are impossible to achieve with simple gear ratios because they are prime numbers. We have to look beyond simple gears to differentials.
Re:I must have this!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I must have this!! (Score:4, Insightful)
It would be nice if I walked into a toy store and saw a Lego set with this on the front of the box instead of a Star Wars ship.
It doesn't have to be mutually-exclusive: A Millenium Falcon can be made to predict eclipses. Of course you need a Wookiee to bang on it when it jams.
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Re:So... (Score:5, Funny)
No, you idiot, that's obviously not how it works. If you find a bug in this, you cause the entire celestial system to collapse in on itself, killing us all!
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If I find a bug in this, I can hack any computer ever released in History?
No, it means you need to use these [killsbugsdead.com]in your parents basement.
See "The Making of" too (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to be missed is the time lapse video [youtube.com] of the process of creating the video which was as fascinating as the model itself.
As opposed to (Score:2)
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non-scientific computers? So is there an even earlier computer that was in some way un-scientific?
Sure. The one in the human head.
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Re:As opposed to (Score:4, Interesting)
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As opposed to abacus (Score:3)
is there an even earlier computer that was in some way un-scientific?
Certainly, the abacus is much older and was used for business, as opposed to scientific, calculations.
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The distinction between the two is artificial at best.
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The distinction between the two is artificial at best.
Indeed. I think the term 'computer' originally meant "someone who computes" and there were rooms of people doing mathmatical calculations.
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Yep, some of the ww2 code cracking was done that way. Office after office with ladies doing sheet after sheet of calculations by hand (or aided by mechanical calculators).
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my scientific observation (Score:5, Interesting)
"A device is not truly understood until its function can be duplicated by Legos."
- Tumbleweed's Observation
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I think I understand how an oxy-acetylene torch works, but I don't think I could duplicate its function with legos...
Well, you can duplicate its function with bacon [popsci.com]. That also counts.
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There is a pneumatic set. I don't recommend it, but you could build an oxy-acetylene torch using the pressure vessel, tubes, connectors, and valves.
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"A device that cannot be replicated by legos is not worth understanding."
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"A device that cannot be replicated by legos is not worth understanding."
Excellent. And now I think we can get a nice research grant.
More Information (Score:4, Interesting)
He had a website about his building complex lego machines at: http://acarol.woz.org/ [woz.org]
And specifically information about this one at: http://acarol.woz.org/antikythera_mechanism.html [woz.org]
Unfortunately, the site seems to be down but Google still has a good cache:
http://google.com/search?q=cache:acarol.woz.org/antikythera_mechanism.html [google.com]
http://google.com/search?q=cache:acarol.woz.org/acarol.woz.org [google.com]
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Unfortunately, the site seems to be down but Google still has a good cache
Ahh, yes. The slashdot front page effect. Funny how that works.
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Ahh, yes. The slashdot front page effect. Funny how that works.
maybe we should build a slashdot-effect-machine out of LEGO
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Built by Andrew Carol who is an engineer for Apple.
Steve Jobs is going to purchase Lego Inc. and shorten the name to Ego.
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-a.d.-
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Are there gears in Minecraft now?
Antikythera Reconstruction ? (Score:3, Interesting)
This has as much to do with the Antikythera mechanism as a software simulation. The mechanism has no differential gears, which are used on this lego construct because its creator played with them during his experiments with Babbage's Difference Engine. The beauty of the Antikythera machine lies in its pin-and-slot mechanism for modelling epicyclic trajectories which are of course nowhere to be found in this "reconstruction".
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This has as much to do with the Antikythera mechanism as a software simulation. The mechanism has no differential gears, which are used on this lego construct because its creator played with them during his experiments with Babbage's Difference Engine.
Nope, the main reason for using differential gears is that with normal Lego gear pieces only certain ratios are achievable... which unfortunately do not include those needed by the Antikythera mechanism. So they had to obtain those by averaging two obtainable rations. And, in order to perform this "averaging" you need differential gears.
So this is a mechanism achieving the same purpose as Antikythera, but implemented using a completely different way due to different constraints.
See Building complex machin [woz.org]
NOT a replica (Score:2, Informative)
it's an implementation of the same math that that the Antikythera mechanism does but it's done in a completely different fashion.
Woz explains the device on his own page as well as the math behind it: http://acarol.woz.org/antikythera_mechanism.html [woz.org]
There is also an article about his LEGO device: http://www.fastcodesign.com/1662831/how-one-engineer-redesigned-an-ancient-greek-mechanical-computer-out-of-legos [fastcodesign.com]
more information about the Antikythera mechanism can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiky [wikipedia.org]
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More importantly, we can only speculate about features that have been lost to history. Estimates of the gear count range from 30 to 70. No one today known for sure.
Still, it is an impressive bit of lego work!
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HP Labs managed to recover the instruction manual that was written on the side of the machine, so the archaeologists are more or
less certain they know the purpose of each internal gear, as well as the dials and indicators.
High resolution image [hp.com]
Fascinating to know that someone was designing interactive user interface 2000 years ago...
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HP Labs managed to recover the instruction manual that was written on the side of the machine
I didn't see a translation anywhere, but I'm pretty sure it says "replace toner cartridge now".
Ahh LEGO... (Score:1)
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I think high loads in general would be out. I don't think it would be possible for instance to have a full size model of the golden gate bridge and expect it to stay up.
If you tried to make a solid sphere a light year across out of legos I think it would collapse into a black hole. (And the galaxies financial system would collapse trying to pay for it.)
Anti-kythera? (Score:2)
So what's this "kythera" that they were so afraid of? Is it coming?
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C'thulu's ex-wife.
Really impressive (Score:2)
It's really an accomplishment to have been able to piece out the internal structure of the badly corroded artifact and deduce its function and how it worked. It's also remarkable to have built one out of Legos. What a coincidence that the dimensions of the Lego parts were very close to the same dimensions of the parts in the artifact; if not the Lego machine would be a working model, not a replica.
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The term BCE has been used since the 19th century. It predates everybody here, and it also predates the term "politically correct".
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Double the gears? (Score:2)
A quick blurb says it uses twice as many gears as the original, perhaps because they had to use off-the-shelf teeth counts. I'd like to see a reconstruction of the original, not a reconstruction of the function.
Arthur C. Clarke said about the Antikythera (Score:1)
Arthur C. Clarke on the TV show "Mysterious World" said if the Antikythera Mechanism had not been lost, we might have populated all the stars visible to the naked eye. What he meant was that the lost of the Antikythera Mechanism set back computing by 2000 years. He reasoned that if it had not been lost, that we might have been 2000 years farther along in computing. It really does boggle my mind to think what could have been if this had become widely known and used, would we have really gone to the stars
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