In his book, The Tychos - Our Geo-axial Binary System, Simon Shack outlines the true model of our solar system. He demonstrates geometrically and geocentrically how Earth, the luminaries and all of the planets move. In truth, Simon had taken all of what Tycho Brahe proposed as the model of our solar system and added one important component: the orbit of the Earth. It is the orbit of the Earth that explains our Great Year, the great year that defines our ages. He also verifies Tycho Brahe’s model in light of scientific discoveries such as binary stars and confirms that Mars and the Sun do orbit in overlapping orbits, just as most of the stars in the galaxy do.
The Tychos model is probably the most understandable piece of science you will ever come across. The Tychos Model fits the Law of Parsimony - It is the simplest explanation that fits the evidence. The Tychos doesn’t jump hoops to explain how our solar system works. It uses what is observed and verifies it with the use of technology, the Tychosium, and the Tychos planetarium.
The model works with uniformly circular orbit,
It uses trochoidal orbits, respecting the laws of geometry,
It uses the same ephemeral data as the Copernicus and,
It uses invariable speeds (planets do not speed up or slow down)
Basics of the Model:
As opposed to the Heliocentric model, the Sun is orbiting around Earth rather than Earth orbiting the Sun.
The Sun and Mars are in overlapping orbits. In the galaxy, two objects orbiting each other in this relationship are called Binary Stars. Tychos Brahe solved for Mars’ irregularity by hypothesizing that Mars and the Sun were in overlapping orbits. Simon Shack was able to confirm this hypothesis with the use of technology in the development of the Tychosium using the Tychos model. It is important to point out again that the Tychosium uses the same ephemeral information provided by NASA and is used in the popular online planetarium, Stellarium. It is consistent with present-day data, the difference being that it does not employ elliptical orbits or varying planetary speeds.
The Earth also has an orbit. The Earth moves very slowly around this orbit in the opposite direction to all other planets, taking 25,344 years. Tycho Brahe’s model, when he died mysteriously at the age of 51, had an unmoving Earth. His assistant Longomontanus, after his death, updated the Tychonic model with Earth’s daily rotation. The cornerstone of the Tychos is the 25,344-year cycle. The work of Tycho Brahe and Longomontanus was completed by Simon Shack with the addition of the 25,344-year orbit of the Earth, called the PVP orbit. The Polaris-Vega-Polaris orbit. This means that Earth does still move, but not at the speed and distances and way as presented in the Heliocentric model.
The trochoidal orbits eliminate the need for planets to speed up and slow down. Epicycles of Earth's evolution are understood when you understand trochoidal orbits. These help us to understand small orbits (retrogrades) and large orbits related to large Earth cycles (sacred geometry)
* To further explore the TYCHOS from an astronomy perspective, please refer to Simon Shack’s book. Exploration of the model can be done in the planetarium designed by Patrik Holmqvist. Both are located at Tychos.space
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