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OBSERVATIONS – 1 – Days and Years • • • • • Every day the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. At midsummer’s day (in the northern hemisphere) the sun is higher off the southern horizon than at any other time. By midwinter’s day its elevation has gotten lower and lower until it has reached a minimum. Then it begins moving higher again, cycling back and forth between the two extremes annually. As solar elevation increases or decreases, so does day length, varying directly. The longest day corresponds to the highest elevation, the shortest to the lowest, and so on. When the Sun is high in the sky by day the weather is hottest. When it is low, the weather is coldest. When the Sun is between the extreme elevations the weather is similarly between its extreme temperatures. We call this combination of things “seasons”. Over the course of a year we see different stars in the sky between sundown and sunup. That is, the stars do almost exactly the same thing, but it takes an extra day for us to see the same ones in the same relative positions to the sun. This means that we cycle one day past an entire zodiac in the course of a year, the stars seeming to outrun the sun very slightly. Let’s think about these things one (or three) at a time. • Every day the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. This is evidently what the Sun is doing, and there are still people who “believe” that it does exactly that. They have elaborate explanations for why all the observations that science has made are illusions and their “belief” trumps them. The alternative, of course, is that the Sun is not moving around us, but rather that we are rotating beneath it. You can get first-graders to understand this by having them twirl on the playground and describe how the trees, classmates, swing sets, etc. look as they do it. zzzzzzzzzzz NIGHT wheeeee! DAY As we will see, a rotating Earth explains other things’ motions much better than a bunch of revolving other things does. S U N • At midsummer’s day (in the northern hemisphere) the sun is higher off the southern horizon than at any other time. By midwinter’s day its elevation has gotten lower and lower until it has reached a minimum. Then it begins moving higher again, cycling back and forth between the two extremes annually. • As solar elevation increases or decreases, so does day length, varying directly. The longest day corresponds to the highest elevation, the shortest to the lowest, and so on. • When the Sun is high in the sky by day the weather is hottest. When it is low, the weather is coldest. When the Sun is between the extreme elevations the weather is similarly between its extreme temperatures. We call this combination of things “seasons”. The imaginary plane in which the Earth revolves around the Sun is called the “ecliptic”. The axis of the Earth is not perpendicular to the ecliptic, but is inclined from that position by about 23.4° presently. (This number changes gradually over time, but we don’t have time to discuss that.) This means that as the Earth revolves around the Sun its direction of tilt changes, day by day, with respect to the Sun. Note that its actual tilt in space does not change. The northward extension of the North Pole always points toward Polaris, it’s only the orientation with respect to the Sun that changes. Two extreme ends of this system are shown – at midsummer’s (A) and midwinter’s (B) days. A The orange arrows point out the directions that the solar rays come to the Earth. Notice the angle between the raypaths and the North Pole, which has been extended for clarity. The Sun is more nearly overhead at any given latitude at A than at B. Indeed, at A the North Pole is lighted (though still at a low angle) even at midnight and at B it is dark, even at noon! This is like the stick/shadow system that we have seen. Make sure you see why. You should be able to infer that the angle of incidence at any latitude in the northern hemisphere will gradually decrease as the Earth moves away from A toward B, reach a minimum at B, and then begin to increase again toward A, exactly as we see it do across the seasons. B There is another thing going on here that zooming in makes clearer. Remember that the sun is to the right of A and the left of B in the original picture as indicated by the parenthetical Sun in the diagram. When the axis is tilted toward the Sun (A) the length of line segment A1 (representing the arc traveled at night at that latitude) is shorter than A2 (arc traveled by day). In reality this means that night is shorter than day. Note that the opposite is true when the axial tilt is away from the Sun – night is longer than Day. Notice also that this inequality is not true at the Equator. Day and night are always equally long there! A B ( ) You should now see why day length correlates to axial tilt. When the Sun is more directly overhead (in summer) the time we spend on the lighted side of the planet is greater. In winter the opposite of both these things holds. Both things result directly from the axial tilt. You should be able to infer that from the equator (where days and nights are always equally long) to the poles (where it remains dark for months in winter and light for months in summer) the difference in day and night length varies directly with latitude. We will hold off explaining why, but the angle of incidence is also the cause of more efficient warming of the atmosphere (at high angles of incidence – summer) and less efficient heating at low angles (winter). Summer is not warmer becauuse we are closer to the sun. How much closer we are ((a couple of thousand miles, at most) is miniscule in proportion to the distance to the sun (93,000,000 miles, on average). It’s all about the angle of incidence. So it is the axial tilt that gives us seasons, with all that entails – differences in the height of the sun, differences in day length, and differences in climate. • Over the course of a year we see different stars in the sky between sundown and sunup. That is, the stars do almost exactly the same thing, but it takes an extra day for us to see the same ones in the same relative positions to the sun. This means that we cycle one day past an entire zodiac in the course of a year, the stars seeming to outrun the sun very slightly. This picture from your book explains this as well as I’ve ever seen it explained. After each rotation the Earth has moved a little farther along its orbit around the Sun. The next time the Sun “sets” we can see a few stars that were behind the Sun the previous evening at sunset. In January You’d see these stars at midnight. The ones 180° away would be overhead when the sun was overhead and you’d not be able to see them. In July You’d see these stars at midnight. The ones 180° away would be overhead when the sun was overhead and you’d not be able to see them. One last thing. The Earth rotates on its axis just about 365-1/4 times in the time it makes one revolution around the Sun. That is, there are ~ 365-1/4 days in a year. Because the calendar has no mechanism for dealing with a partial day we give three out of four years 365 days, save the quarters, and add them as an extra day in February in leap years. This doesn’t quite fix the problem. In fact, it over-corrects, so in each century year (like 1990) the leap day is omitted and February only has 28 days. This also over-corrects, so in each millennial year (like 2000) the leap day is added back in, even though it’s a century year. So there was a Feb 29th in 2000, but there won’t be one in 2100. Once again, this over-corrects and so … OBSERVATIONS – 2 – Months • Some nights the Moon rises in the east and sets in the west, but it moves more slowly and is “lapped” buy the sun. As this happens we see more or less of it and we call this the Moon’s phases. Consequently, sometimes the Moon rises in the morning and sets in the evening. Indeed, its set/rise happens at a different time each day, creeping later and later. It obviously moves differently than the Sun. • The timing of daily tide cycles corresponds to the timing of a lunar orbit and the phases of the moon correlate to tidal cycles. * Some nights the Moon rises in the east and sets in the west, but it moves more slowly and is “lapped” buy the sun. As this happens we see more or less of it and we call this the Moon’s phases. Also, sometimes the Moon rises in the morning and sets in the evening. Indeed, its set/rise happens at a different time each day, creeping later and later. It obviously appears to move differently than the Sun. The reason the sun seems to lap the Moon is that we rotate on our axis ever so slightly faster than the Moon revolves around us. Thus each night it is not as far along as it was the night before on its orbit. This diagram is very schematic – we do not make that much progress on our orbit in “a few days”. On the other hand, the Moon rotates on its axis at exactly the same rate that it revolves around us. That is why we always see the same face. This is not magic, there is a simple physical basis for it called “tidal locking”. Eventually that same basis will apply to Earth as well and we will rotate at the same rate too. The Moon will no longer rise and set, it will always be above the same spot. That orbital rate means that the Moon returns to its same position with respect to a distant star in about 27.5 days, on average. This is a “sidereal lunar month”. If you study the diagram carefully you will also be able to see why the Moon has phases. Remember that it has day/night too – one side is toward and the other away from the Sun, but that side changes day-byday with respect to our line of sight. One cycle of the phases lasts a full “synodic lunar month” (~29.5 Earth days on average.) The difference in length of these two lunar months is because of the forward movement of the Earth Moon system as the cycle proceeds. This “synodic month” is the basis for all lunar calendars like the ones used for religious purposes in Islamic countries. The situation a few days later. (Imagine the intermediates day by day.) The situation one day A one month cycle of the Moon (At ~3.5 day intervals. Rotation and revolution directions indicated at start.) 1 – NEW MOON *Moon is between Earth and Sun. *Far side is lighted and near side dark. *Rises at dawn and sets at sundown. 3 – FIRST QUARTER *Moon has lagged 1/4 of its orbital path. 5 – FULL MOON *Earth is between Moon and Sun. *Right-hand 1/2 visible. *Near side lighted and far side dark. *Rises at noon, obvious in night sky before midnight. *Rises at sunset and sets at dawn. *Lunar eclipse possible. 7 – THIRD QUARTER *Moon has lagged 3/4 of its orbital path. *Left-hand 1/2 visible. *Rises at midnight and sets at noon, 9 – NEW MOON *Back to beginning of cycle. *Solar eclipse possible. 2 – WAXING CRESCENT *Moon has lagged 1/8 of its orbital path. *Right-hand 1/4 visible. *Rises late morning, obvious in early evening sky. 4 – WAXING Gibbous *Moon has lagged 3/8 of its orbital path. 6 – WANING Gibbous *Moon has lagged 5/8 of its orbital path. *Right-hand 3/4 visible. *Left-hand 3/4 visible. *Rises mid afternoon, obvious in night sky until about 3:00AM. *Rises very early AM, obvious in night sky after about 3:00AM. Sets mid-afternoon. 8 – WANING CRESCENT *Moon has lagged 7/8 of its orbital path. *Left-hand 1/4 visible. *Rises late evening, obvious until very early AM. * The timing of daily tide cycles corresponds to the timing of a lunar orbit and the phases of the moon correlate to tidal cycles. It is not quite accurate to say that the Moon revolves around the Earth. What actually happens is that the two objects revolve around a common center of mass called the barycenter. (“Center of mass” is just a translation of the Greek roots.) It is also not quite accurate to say that the Moon’s gravity causes tides. It is the entire gravity system of the two that does it. One high tide each day is a direct result of the Moon’s gravity on the water, the other is the inertial result of the wobbly path taken by the Earth as the two of us revolve around the Sun. There is a smaller tidal effect from the Earth/Sun system. At new moon and full moon the lunar and solar bulges coincide on the Earth’s surface and we get particularly large tide ranges (low lows and high highs) called spring tides. They have nothing to do with the spring season, occurring once a (lunar) month all year. At first and third quarters the two tides are 90° out of phase and tend to cancel each other. Because the lunar bulge is the larger it is still seen as high tide, but the range is very small (high lows and low highs) because low tide occurs where the solar high is. These we call neap tides. Solid black line shows path of barycenter on common orbit around Sun. Dashed line shows path of center of Earth. Dotted line shows path of center of Moon. Earth/Moon system wobbles along its orbit! So, we see lunar phases because, to a first approximation, the Moon revolves around us and so its lighted face becomes more or less visible depending on where it is in the orbit. This cycle takes about 29.5 days from start to finish, but because there is also motion of the Earth with respect to the Sun this is actually longer than the time it takes the Moon to complete an true orbit – about 27.5 days. As with days/year, the “about” is important in both cases. What a lunar month is depends on who you ask, that is, whether they are thinking of synodic or sidereal months (or one of the other three potential definitions). At any rate, though the synodic lunar phase is the original basis for calendar months it is obvious that the length of all modern calendar months, except possibly February, are longer than a true lunar month, however defined. Early calendar makers wanted to cram 12 Moons into a year to match the 12 constellations, but that didn’t work because the lunar, daily, and annual periods are simply mismatched and cannot be brought into phase. Ultimately what we got was this: “Thirty days hath September …”. OBSERVATIONS – 3 – Other Planets • There are other star-like objects that move in yet a different way. Day by day they rise in the east and set in the west like the other things, but sometimes they outrun the stars and sun and sometimes they lag behind them. • These objects are called “planets” from a root that means “wanderer”. We will use Venus as an example. The planets (including Earth (blue) and Venus (green)) orbit the Sun because of the interactions of two things. Their inertia gives them a momentum in a direction tangent to their orbital direction (green arrows). Were there no other force acting upon them they would continue in a straight line in that same direction (dotted arrows). What keeps them from doing so is their gravitational attraction to the Sun (red arrows). Were it not for their momentum they would fall directly into the Sun. These two things are in precise balance. There is no magic here, things in orbit automatically balance these two things. Otherwise they either escape the orbit or fall into the thing they orbit. You should realize that the effect of this is that we are perpetually falling into the sun and perpetually missing it! Because Venus orbits closer to the sun than Earth (it has an “inferior orbit”) the gravitational attraction on it is greater, and it falls faster. This means that its momentum must be proportionally greater to ensure that it keeps missing the Sun. That is, it moves faster. Because it’s orbital path is shorter and its orbital velocity faster it completes one revolution around the sun in a distinctly shorter time than Earth – about 223 Earth Days rather than ~365. It outruns us, in other words. To be specific (but not absolutely precise) Earth takes about 1.64 times longer to make its journey than Venus does. An Earth Year is different from a Venutian year. Let’s look at the consequences. Earth makes roughly 30° of arc in the course of a month. In the same time, Venus makes about 49° of arc. The radial dotted lines mark out 30° segments of the orbits. The numerals indicate the relative positions of the two bodies at the same time. For a hypothetical example, at time 0 Earth and Venus are both at a corresponding point on their orbits and are aligned with respect to the Sun. (Earth returns to this point in one year, Venus does not. At time 1 Earth has advanced 30° and Venus 49°. 6 7 5 11 4 8 3 10 5 2 9 3 9 At time 2 Earth is 60° into its orbit and Venus 98°. 6 1 10 And so on … Venus outruns us. Examine the diagram and follow it step by step. Note that Venus completes its year in about 7-1/3 Earth months, between positions 7 and 8. Its position is shown by lighter images beyond that. 4 12 8 7 0 1 11 0/12 2 First let’s examine how the Sun and Venus look to Earthlings through a year. At “time 0” (the beginning of the year) the Sun is immediately behind Venus when viewed from Earth. Like the Moon, Venus will be “new” and would appear relatively dark if you could see it. It would also be up only in daylight hours so spotting it would be a real trick, particularly against the sun. There are telescopic images of Venus crossing the Sun, but it doesn’t happen quickly, so don’t expect a movie. You can probably find such images on the web if you look. Our convention will be to show the line of sight to the Sun with a black arrow and the line of sight to Venus with a green one. Additionally, what is illustrated will be what is seen from Earth at either sunup or sundown as appropriate. We start with sunup. At time 1, because we have both moved by different amounts from our original positions Venus and the Sun will not align. Venus will rise earlier than the Sun, and by the time it rises Venus will be fairly high in the sky. In this phase we colloquially call Venus the “Morning Star”. At time 2 (after about two months) Venus will come up even earlier than the Sun than it did at time 1. The dashed green arrow shows how high it was above the horizon at sunrise at time 1, the solid arrow at time 2. At time 3 things change. Again, the dashed green arrow shows how high it was above the horizon at sunrise at time 2, the solid arrow at time 3. There is virtually no change in its elevation. In fact, it is ever so slightly lower. You should be able to infer that for roughly half the time (2 weeks) between times 2 and 3 its height gradually increased, then decreased to this point. The trend continues at time 4. Venus is now lower, not much but noticeably, when the sun rises than it has been. And at time 6 … The trend continues at time 5. Venus has become about as much lower at sunrise than between times 3 and 4. By time 7 the rate of Venus’s “approach” to the sun speeds up. The angle is now distinctly smaller. Remember that this means it rises nearer sunup than it did at previous times. And even more so at time 8. By time 9 Venus is barely above the horizon when the Sun rises, and has preceded the Sun by only a few minutes. It will be pretty close to “full Venus” – the entire face toward us will be lit by the Sun. By time 10 something very interesting happens. Venus is again at a very low angle to the Sun but notice that it is now on the other side of the Sun from where it has been – we see the sun first and Venus second as we rotate. Until now it has been the other way round. This means that at sunup Venus will still be below the horizon and will not rise for a few minutes more. We will only see it just after our rotation has taken the Sun out of our line of sight, in the early evening. Venus has become the “Evening Star” instead of the “Morning Star”! You can probably predict what happen from here. You can see where this goes. By time 11 Venus is pretty far above the horizon when the Sun rises, and lags the Sun by a proportional amount of time. And finally, after exactly one Earth year (time 11) The angle and lag time have both increased again. You should also be able to predict the future. The angle/lag time increase will slow and then reverse. Venus will again approach the Sun, eventually “cross” it and be the “Morning Star” once again. (OPTIONAL) The geometry of this is easy to visualize if you think about how Venus looks only from the perspective of Earth. That is, we’ll pretend that Earth is still and Venus’s movement is not its actual orbital movement but just how much it outruns us. Think first about the two tangents to Venus’s orbit as seen from Earth (A & B). At and near these places Venus will not seem to get either farther or nearer the Sun, but stay at about the same distance from it. It is moving mostly toward (A) or away from (B) us, not across our field of view Now think about when Venus is on the same side of the sun as we are (C and D). At C it will appear to approach the Sun fairly rapidly and at D to diverge from it at the same rate. It is moving mostly (or entirely) across our field of view, not toward or away from us. Something similar happens on the far side of the tangent points A and B. The approach phase (E) or divergence (F) phase toward or from the sun lasts much longer because it takes a greater amount of the arc of the Venutian orbit. However, the rates when it is crossing our line of sight (G and H) are the same as at C and D. H G F E A B C D Because our orbit has a larger diameter than is Venus’s any change in relative position of Venus and the stars behind is very subtle when Venus is on the far side of the Sun (where there is less parallax) but it is very pronounced on the near side (there is much more parallax when a moving objects is close to us). The following diagram illustrates the very obvious differences in apparent motion of Venus and the background stars when it is “lapping” us – catching up and passing us on the near side of the sun. Extending the model for Venus beyond what this picture shows is not very useful. For most of its course the rate of progression and retrogression are so small that it’s hard to illustrate at this scale. It takes weeks or months to notice that it has drifted against the background stars so the angular changes, even over months are pretty small. On the other hand, you can see the difference in position almost daily when Venus laps us. We’ll start this section similarly to how we started the last, but this time instead of comparing the direction to Venus and the Sun we will compare the directions to Venus and some distant star, immediately aligned with both the Sun and Venus. We want one that shows no parallax with other stars because then it will always be exactly the same direction to that star no matter where we are. At time 0 the star and Venus (and the Sun) are aligned. Venus has caught up to us and is about to pass us. In this position it rises at the same time as the Sun. It is a “new Venus”. To distant “marker” star Time 1 – Venus is “ahead of” the marker. It rises earlier and is above the horizon when the marker comes onto the horizon. Venus is progressing (or outrunning the stars). Time 2 – Venus is “behind” the marker. It rises later and is below the horizon when the marker comes onto the horizon. Venus is retrogressing (or lagging behind the stars). Like Venus, Mercury has an inferior orbit and so appears sometimes in the morning and sometimes in the evening. Because it is smaller, more distant, and inferior to Venus it is much harder to see, rising to a much lower maximum height above the horizon. Because it is closer to the Sun than Venus its orbital velocity is even faster. That, coupled with its shorter orbit, means that its cycle will be completely different from Venus’s. These two inferior planets are always close to the sun from our perspective and we only see them in the morning or evening, never near midnight. (Incidentally, if you know where to look it is fairly easy to find Venus on a very clear day during the daylight hours – late afternoon or early morning.) The other planets all have superior orbits, meaning that we can see them quite distant from the sun at any time of night, even directly opposite Earth from the Sun at midnight. Because they are farther from the Sun and their orbits longer they have different periods to their progression/regression cycles, and they are all different from each other. To explain the planetary orbits as orbiting Earth at their center is very cumbersome, and in the case of the inferior ones, impossible. Each planet would have to be attached to a separate “celestial sphere”, and all rotating at different rates. Furthermore, each one would have to be able to “back up” to explain how they sometimes approach and sometimes diverge from the Sun. This is called “retrograde motion”. In the case of the inferior planets, the situation is even worse for a geocentric model. Any object that orbits Earth would have to be visible at any point in the sky along its orbit and be visible at any time of the day or night. That is simply a consequence of the definition of “orbit”. We should be able to see Venus at midnight directly overhead if it were orbiting us, but we never do. It (and Mercury) is a “Morning Star” or an “Evening Star”, never a “Midnight Star”. The model of all the planets orbiting the Sun makes all these issues go away. Retrogression, Morning/Evening Stars are all simply consequences of simple solar orbits, not a series of special cases in Earth orbit.