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BROCK UNIVERSITY ASTR 1P01 Introduction to Astronomy I Summary Notes for Unit 3, The Story of Astronomy Dr. S. D’Agostino One of the main goals of this course is not only to describe some of the fascinating facts about our universe, but to understand how we came to know these things. This chapter of our course presents an overview of the history of astronomical discoveries up to the time of Newton. Some histories of astronomy unfairly treat the ancients as if they were backward compared to modern thinkers. In fact ancient astronomers were quite ingenious, and made amazing advances in our understanding of the heavens with careful observations and clever reasoning. Their advances in understanding the cosmos are truly remarkable. The ancients were so good at explaining the heavens that progress in our understanding was subsequently very slow for the next 2000 years! Aristotle, who wrote influential works on what was then called “natural philosophy” (study of the natural world), was taken as an authority for many generations of later scholars. However, there were glimmerings of independent thought, which grew stronger by the 1500s, culminating with the work of the great post-Renaissance thinkers Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, Galileo, and Newton. These great thinkers utterly changed how humans viewed the universe and our place in it, and knowing a little bit about their story and how their arguments carried the day provides a valuable perspective on human intellectual history. Galileo and Newton, in particular, were instrumental in creating modern science, so their amazing work goes well beyond astronomy. The work of ancient astronomers is remarkable, and the work of the post-Renaissance thinkers is no less amazing. Together their story is an exciting and awe-inspiring tale of adventurous thought, pioneering technological developments, strident arguments and counterarguments, and courageous searches for the truth in the face of life-and-death attacks by the orthodoxy. Textbook Reading: Chapter 2, The Rise of Astronomy, Pages 38–71. Learning Objectives: • explain historical evidence from basic observations that the Earth is round • understand Eratosthenes’s calculation of the radius of the Earth • understand that the relative distances and sizes of the Moon and Sun can be estimated from basic observations • explain why ancient astronomers believed the Earth is at the centre of the universe; describe the ancient understanding of the universe, including what planets are and the motions of planets • explain Copernicus’s arguments that the Earth is a planet orbiting the Sun, and explain how his reasoning accounts for the retrograde motion of planets • describe the characteristics of planetary orbits discovered by Kepler as given by his three laws • calculate the period of a planet’s orbit given its radius, or calculate its radius given its period • describe Galileo’s telescopic observations, and discuss why these were so upsetting to Renaissance beliefs about the nature of the universe • describe the general trends in the development of astrophysics in the centuries after Kepler and Galileo • read and understand the essay on “Backyard Astronomy” Questions to Guide Your Reading and Review: • How did ancient Greek astronomers know that the Earth is round? Describe as many arguments as you can. • Describe in detail the reasoning and calculations that Eratosthenes used to determine the size of the Earth. How accurate was his calculation? • How did Aristarchus determine the relative sizes of the Moon and Sun? How accurate were his results? • How did Aristarchus determine the relative distances of the Moon and the Sun? How accurate were his results? • What is the angular size of an astronomical object? How is it measured? What is its unit of measure? • How did Aristarchus determine the relative sizes of the Earth and Moon? How accurate were his results? • What led Aristarchus to propose that the Sun is at the centre of the universe, not the Earth? • What is stellar parallax? When was it first observed? • What were some counterarguments to Aristarchus’s proposal that the Sun is at the centre of the universe? • What is the diameter-distance relation for astronomical objects? How can you use it to determine the diameter of an astronomical object given its distance, or vice versa? • What are planets? How did the ancients recognize that planets are different from stars? • How do the planets move? How do they appear to move as observed from Earth? • What is prograde motion? What is retrograde motion? • What role did retrograde motion have in the acceptance and rejection of various models of the Solar System? How did retrograde motion conflict with ancient ideas about the celestial sphere? • What is an epicycle? How did Ptolemy’s model of the solar system keep the geocentric hypothesis alive? • What were some of the contributions of Islamic and Asian astronomers to our understanding of astronomy? • How did Copernicus’s work support his heliocentric model of the solar system? • What were the major criticisms of Copernicus’s model of the solar system? • What were some of Tycho Brahe’s contributions to our understanding of astronomy? • What were some of Kepler’s contributions to our understanding of astronomy? • Describe Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion? • What were some of Galileo’s contributions to our understanding of astronomy? • Which of Galileo’s observations supported the heliocentric model of the solar system? • What were some of Newton’s contributions to our understanding of astronomy? • Compare and contrast astronomy and astrology.