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Ancient to Modern Astronomy The Astronomers and what they did The Ancients Early Babylonians Egyptians and Chinese made important astronomical observations The five closest planets were observed and novas and comets were recorded Comets were blamed for disasters and were seen as portents of doom The Golden Age of Astronomy – Greece 600 BC to 150 AD The basics of geometry and trigonometry helped them explain the motions of planets, sun and moon However, they erroneously decided that everything in the “heavens” revolved around the earth That is what appears to happen, but this apparent motion is really due to the earth’s rotation They decided that the Earth couldn’t be rotating because we feel no motion Some of the famous Greeks Aristotle Aristarchus Aristotle knew that the earth was a sphere because during an eclipse the earth’s shadow was a circle. However Aristotle believed in an earth centered(Geocentric) solar system Aristarchus was the first to propose a sun-centered solar system(Heliocentric), but no one agreed with him. Aristotle’s influence was too strong and lasted over a thousand years. Aristarchus also tried to calculate sizes of the moon and sun and distances to them. The method was good, but his measurements were off, so his answers were wrong. Some more! Eratosthenes Eratosthenes calculated the circumference of the earth. (We will demonstrate his method.) Eratosthenes Link Hipparchus observed and recorded over 1,000 stars for his star catalog. These measurements were later recorded by Ptolemy Hipparchus Earth circumference math Two cities have incoming light at two different angles We can measure the distance between the two cties Using basic geometry (Can geometry students understand the method?) he found the angle difference between two cities Then Circumference/distance = 360/angle difference (Why 360? Because there are 360 degrees in a circle) Sample problem: The difference in latitude between city A and city B is 30 degrees. The distance between cities A and B is 2000 km. What is the circumference of the planet? Did you get 24,000 km? Solution: Circumference = 2000 * (360/30) WORKSHEET Ptolemy Ptolemy compiled a 13 volume book which explained the work of Greek Astronomers In the dark ages to follow, these works were preserved by Arab scholars The problem The Greeks believed that the planetary orbits were circles and that everything went around the earth, including the sun and planets, and the stars. The stars resided on a crystal sphere through which light shown. Unfortunately for the Greeks, the solar system was not that simple. They had trouble reconciling this model with the observed motion of the planets. So, they tried changing things slightly The problem with retrograde motion As planets revolve, they sometimes appear to go backwards in their orbit. This is called retrograde motion. How can this be explained? This geocentric model shows one model that was tried The Ptolemaic System Ptolemy had introduced the concept of epicycles As a planet orbited the earth, it moved in small circles These were called epicycles Link Did it work? This made it somewhat better, but it was not simple. Ptolemy had to devise many of these to explain the apparent motion of the planets. What is actually going on? Look at the picture here. What is actually happening is that Mars appears to go backwards as we pass it in our orbit, like an inside car passing an outside car on a racetrack. Watch this link. But the problem with this explanation is that you need to realize that the solar system is heliocentric, not geocentric. Problems with models This illustrates the danger of models. If you too firmly believe in your model, you tend to make your data fit that model. It has been said that scientists, like artists, fall in love with their models. You have to be willing to throw out your model if it doesn’t fit the data. And revise it as new data becomes available. What’s next For over a thousand years, there were very few changes The middle ages were a time of scientific stagnation, as well as hard times for society It is often true that changes in science and society feed off of each other Many of the most revolutionary times in science occur with revolutionary times in society and changing political systems Copernicus Nicholas Copernicus, a Polish astronomer, was the first great astronomer in a long time. He knew that a heliocentric system worked better than a geocentric model. Unfortunately, he insisted on using circular orbits, so he still had to add epicycles to make his system work. Copernican Model His revolutionary book was published as Copernicus was dying. He was afraid to publish it because the Catholic Church, very powerful at the time, firmly believed in the geocentric model, which put man in the center of the known universe. His theory was a threat to church teachings and you were in trouble with the church if you were accused of being a “Copernican.” Religion and Science Issues Giordano Bruno, who refused to deny the heliocentric theory of Copernicus, was burned at the stake in 1600 We will see what happens to Galileo shortly Tycho Brahe The Danish astronomer Brahe was a meticulous observer who made many accurate measurements of the motions of heavenly objects. Telescopes were not yet invented and he used devices called pointers to accurately line up stars to measure them Tycho had some interesting personal history Also, he did not believe in the heliocentric model due to what he saw as a lack of stellar parallax. Parallax The concept of parallax shows that as you view an object from two different positions it will appear to shift against the background. This is actually what gives us 3D vision and why we must view things straight on to measure them accurately. Brahe stated, accurately, that if the earth were traveling around the sun, we should be able to see this parallax shift of closer stars against the stellar background, at different positions in the earth’s orbit. Since we don’t, we can’t be revolving around the sun. Stellar Parallax This was very smart of Brahe. But there was one problem with his thinking. Let’s try the parallax demo to see why. See the small change with a farther star. And, as we now know, the stars are VERY far away, so we can only see stellar parallax with modern technology. Johannes Kepler Kepler, an Austrian by birth, became Brahe’s assistant about a year before Brahe’s death Kepler, a brilliant mathematician, analyzed Brahe’s 20 years of astronomy data and discovered some interesting relationships in the data Kepler’s laws of Planetary Motion So, Kepler’s 2nd law shows that the triangles above are all equal in area. Closer to the sun the planet goes faster, covering a larger section of its orbit, but the sun-planet distance is shorter. The 1st law states that planets travel in elliptical orbits, rather than circular orbits. This eliminates the need for those pesky epicycles The 2nd law states that a planet travels faster closer to the sun, so that it covers equal triangle shaped orbit sections during the same amounts of time. The 3rd law of planetary motion Let’s look for a minute at a solar system model running – hyperlink You probably noticed that the planets travel at different speeds. The inner planets travel more quickly than the outer planets Kepler’s 3rd law give a mathematical relationship for this. This relationship is: period(of revolution)^2 = distance (from the sun to the planet)^3 Simply put: p2=r3 (p is in years and r is in AU’s – what’s an AU? Watch the Link.) Kepler Interestingly enough, Kepler figured out how this all worked However, he had no idea why it was so. That explanation would have to wait a little while for the concept of Gravity as proposed by Isaac Newton Galileo Galilei Galileo was one of the first scientists to use experimentation to figure things out in science. He came up with the concepts behind inertia, among other things Kepler and Galileo were contemporaries and actually corresponded. Galileo’s astronomical observations Galileo may have been the 1st scientist to use the newly developed telescope to make astronomical observations. These included: – The discovery of the four largest moons of Jupiter – The discovery that planets are not just “points of light.” – The discovery that the moon is not a smooth ball, as proposed by others. – The discovery of sunspots (which probably caused him blindness later) and observations of them to estimate the rotational period of the sun Galileo’s observations And the discovery of the phases of Venus, which showed that Venus must orbit the sun, not the earth This was evidence supporting the heliocentric model of the solar system (study the sketch here.) Galileo vs the Church Many of his observations went against the accepted geocentric model. The heliocentric model had been banned by the church Galileo was told to drop the heliocentric theory from his writing When he didn’t, he was tried by the Inquisition and was sentenced to house arrest until he died. He continued to work until his death The church exonerated Galileo in 1992, more than 350 years after his death. Link Sir Isaac Newton His law of Universal Gravitation explained how the force decreases with distance. This is similar to how light spreads out from a source. This is somewhat complicated. See if you can understand the link here. (It’s hard.) One of the greatest scientists who ever lived, although not a “nice man.” Newton’s 3 laws of motion (CP Newton’s Laws video), (Other 3rd law demo video) Orbits controlled by gravity and inertia (sketch here) Law of Gravitation Gravity activity Newton continued Newton also revised Kepler’s 3rd law to include the force of gravity. This allows us to find the mass of an object from the orbits of its satellites. For example, we can find the mass of Jupiter by calculating how long it takes one of its moons to go around it. (possible lab) We can even use a more complicated version of this law to find the masses of galaxies Newton also made other great contributions to science in the areas of optics. He also invented Calculus, and the reflecting telescope. Link He would not have been surprised by space travel. He understood how we could actually leave the earth with his “cannon model”. Link The End