玛雅人如何能够准确预测几个世纪的日食
How the Mayans were able to accurately predict solar eclipses for centuries

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2025-10-mayans-accurately-solar-eclipses-centuries.html

最近的研究进一步揭示了玛雅文明在预测日食方面惊人准确能力的奥秘,这种能力持续了700多年。一项分析玛雅关键天文文本《德累斯顿古籍》的研究表明,他们的日食预测表并非*主要*设计用于日食预报。相反,它最初是一种月历,旨在与玛雅的260天占星历对齐——这种联系此前一直被忽视。 该表405个月的周期与260天历的倍数密切对应,而非日食周期。重要的是,研究人员发现玛雅人维持准确性并非通过创建新的表格,而是通过*重叠*表格来实现。他们会略微重置后续表格,使用223或358个月的间隔,以纠正累积的天文误差。 这一复杂的系统,通过对历史日食数据的建模得到证实,展示了玛雅人深厚的天文知识以及他们在历法和日食预测方面的创新方法——这种系统植根于他们更广泛的宇宙学理解。

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原文

The Maya Civilization, from Central America, was one of the most advanced ancient civilizations, known for its significant achievements in astronomy and mathematics. This includes accurate calendars and detailed celestial records, but scientists don't fully understand all the details of their calculations. However, new research is shedding light on how they predicted future eclipses with remarkable accuracy.

A study published in the journal Science Advances analyzes the Dresden Codex, the most famous surviving record of Mayan astronomy. In particular, researchers focused on the eclipse prediction table which spans 405 lunar months. Previous studies were unable to fully explain the table's underlying structure or the mechanism Mayans used to keep it updated for centuries. This paper fills in those missing details.

The research overturns a long-held assumption that the table's 405-month length meant it was created solely for predicting eclipses. Instead, the paper's authors state that it was first designed as a lunar calendar to align with the Maya's 260-day astrological calendar.

They used modeling and statistics to show that the 405-month cycle's length of 11,960 days aligns with the 260-day calendar (46 x 260 = 11,960) much more closely than it aligns with the cycles of solar and .

"Mayan calendar specialists anticipated solar eclipses by correlating their occurrences with dates in their 260-day divinatory calendar," wrote the researchers in their paper. "The 405-month eclipse table had emerged from a lunar calendar in which the 260-day divinatory calendar commensurated the lunar cycle." In other words, the Mayan model for predicting solar eclipses grew directly out of their model for tracking the moon and harmonizing their calendars.

The researchers also solved the mystery of how the Mayans were able to be so accurate with their predictions. Previously, it was thought that once one table finished, they would start a new one. But the latest study shows that to maintain correct predictions for over 700 years, the Mayans used a system of overlapping tables. Instead of starting a new table, they would reset the next table to precise internals of 223 or 358 months before the previous table ended to correct for small astronomical errors that accumulate over time.

The research team reached this conclusion by mathematically modeling the table's predictions against a historical database of actual solar eclipses visible to the Maya between 350 and 1150 CE. Updating the table this way ensured that it could predict every observable solar eclipse for centuries.

Written for you by our author Paul Arnold, edited by Gaby Clark, and fact-checked and reviewed by Robert Egan—this article is the result of careful human work. We rely on readers like you to keep independent science journalism alive. If this reporting matters to you, please consider a donation (especially monthly). You'll get an ad-free account as a thank-you.

More information: John Justeson et al, The design and reconstructible history of the Mayan eclipse table of the Dresden Codex, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adt9039

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Citation: How the Mayans were able to accurately predict solar eclipses for centuries (2025, October 26) retrieved 2 November 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2025-10-mayans-accurately-solar-eclipses-centuries.html

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