Aristarchus around 270 BC derived the Moon's distance from the duration of a lunar eclipse (Hipparchus later found an independent method).
It was commonly accepted in those days that the Earth was a sphere (although its size was only calculated a few years later, by Eratosthenes (See the chapter “The Round Earth and Columbus" in the From Stargazers to Starships FlexBook® resource on www.ck12.org). Astronomers also believed that the Earth was the center of the universe, and that Sun, Moon, planets and stars all orbited around it. It was only natural, then, that Aristarchus assumed that the Moon moved in a large circle around Earth.
Let
An eclipse of the Moon occurs when the Moon passes through the shadow of the Earth, on the opposite side from the Sun (therefore, it must be a full Moon). If
If the moon moves around the Earth at a constant speed --- and it takes time
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