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Physics

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Physics... How Copernicus, Tycho, Kepler, and Newton ... Almagest (c. 150 AD) Epicycles upon epicycles in a geocentric universe. Nicholas Copernicus ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Physics


1
Physics
  • How Copernicus, Tycho, Kepler, and Newton
    revolutionized astronomy

2
Aristotle and the Greek Philosophers
  • Thales (c. 624 546 BC)
  • Anaximander (c. 612 546 BC)
  • Pythagoras (c. 560 480 BC)
  • Eudoxus (c. 400 347 BC)
  • Aristotle (384 322 BC)

3
Claudius Ptolemy
  • c. 90 168 AD
  • Almagest (c. 150 AD)
  • Epicycles upon epicycles in a geocentric universe

4
Nicholas Copernicus
  • 1473 1543 AD
  • De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (1543)

5
Tycho Brahe
  • 1546 1601 AD
  • 20 years of observations at observatories he
    designed himself with instruments he designed
    himself

6
Johannes Kepler
  • From
  • to three Laws of Planetary Motion in 10 years
    and thousands of pages of calculations
  • Conclusion
  • COPERNICUS WAS CORRECT.

http//www.pafko.com/tycho/observe.html
  • 1571 1630 AD

7
Keplers First Law
  • Orbits are
  • Orbits are ellipses with the Sun at one focus.

http//www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/E/ellips
e.html
http//www.math.rutgers.edu/courses/251/maple_new/
maple3.html
Eccentricity Simulator
8
Earths elliptical orbit
  • The Earths orbit is slightly elliptical at its
    perihelion it is approximately 147 million km
    from the Sun, and at aphelion it is approximately
    152 million km from the Sun. Which of the
    following is a result of the Earths elliptical
    orbit?
  • a. It is summertime at perihelion and
  • wintertime at aphelion.
  • b. The Earth moves faster in its orbit at
  • perihelion and slower at aphelion.
  • c. Days are longer at aphelion and shorter
  • at perihelion.
  • d. The Earth spins faster at perihelion and
  • slower at aphelion.

9
Keplers Second Law
  • Equal areas in equal times An imaginary
    straight line between a planet and the Sun sweeps
    out equal areas in equal times as the planet
    moves around the Sun.

http//observe.arc.nasa.gov/nasa/education/referen
ce/orbits/orbit2.html
Simulation of Keplers 2nd Law
http//astro.unl.edu/naap/pos/pos_background1.html
10
A different solar system
  • Consider two planets, Starsky and Hutch, orbiting
    a distant star. Starsky orbits twice as far from
    the star as Hutch does. How does Starskys
    orbital period compare to Hutchs?
  • a. half as long
  • b. the same
  • c. twice as long
  • d. more than twice as long

11
Keplers Third Law
  • The square of a planets orbital period is
    proportional to the cube of its semimajor axis.

http//jersey.uoregon.edu/kepler/Kepler.html
Simulation of Keplers 3rd Law
Additional Keplers 3rd Law Simulation
12
Isaac Newton
  • 1642 1727 AD

13
Traveling out into space
  • Suppose that you are in a spaceship traveling
    past two different planets. You pass a blue
    planet that has twice the mass of the Earth at a
    distance of 1 AU, then you pass a red planet that
    has the same mass as the Earth, also at a
    distance of 1 AU. From which planet will you
    feel the greater gravitational pull?
  • a. the blue planet
  • b. the red planet
  • c. neither the gravitational pull from
  • each planet will be equal

14
Still traveling
  • Suppose that you are in a spaceship traveling
    past two different planets. You pass a blue
    planet that has the same mass as the Earth at a
    distance of 1 AU, then you pass a red planet that
    also has the same mass as the Earth, but at a
    distance of 2 AU. From which planet will you
    feel the greater gravitational pull?
  • a. the blue planet
  • b. the red planet
  • c. neither the gravitational pull from
  • each planet will be equal

15
Almost home
  • Compared to your mass here on Earth, your mass
    out in space between the stars would be
  • a. zero.
  • b. negligibly small.
  • c. the same.
  • d. unknown.

16
GRAVITY
G M1 M2
F
R2
17
Make a distinction
  • Gravitational pull of an object
  • Surface gravity of an object
  • For example

18
The Earth, modified
The original Earth
The new Earth twice the radius four times
the mass
19
Guiding Questions
  • How did astronomers/astrologers/philosophers view
    the universe before Copernicus?
  • What did Copernicus propose, and why was it
    heretical?
  • How did Kepler show that Copernicus was correct?
  • Describe what Keplers Laws tell us about the
    motions of planets in our solar system.
  • What makes an ellipse different from a random
    oval?
  • Explain how Keplers 2nd and 3rd Laws are
    different.
  • What quantities determine the force of gravity
    between two objects?
  • Using Newtons Law of Gravity, describe how the
    force of gravity varies based on objects masses
    and distance from one another.
  • How does gravity explain Keplers 2nd and 3rd
    Laws?
  • What is surface gravity?

20
Sample questions
  • 1. a. Draw an ellipse with an eccentricity of 0.
  • b. Draw an ellipse with high eccentricity.
    Assuming this ellipse is the orbit of a comet
    around the Sun, show where within the orbit the
    Sun is located.
  • c. Show where the comet would move the fastest,
    and where it would move the slowest.
  • d. Halley's Comet has an elliptical orbit with
    a period of 76 years. Why does this comet only
    spend a small fraction of that 76-year period
    close enough to Earth and the Sun for us to see
    it? (Note there are two reasons)
  • 2. If you were able to stand on Saturn (you
    couldn't really, because it is made mostly of
    gas), you would weigh about the same as you weigh
    on Earth (this means the force of gravity on you
    from the Earth is roughly the same as the force
    of gravity on you from Saturn). How is this
    possible Saturn's mass is 95 times the mass of
    the Earth! (You do not need to do any
    calculations, just explain how the correct
    equation works)
  • 3. Despite the fact that Saturns SURFACE GRAVITY
    is similar to the Earths, its gravitational pull
    on its moons is much larger than the Earths pull
    on our Moon. Consider Saturns moon Dione,
    located approximately the same distance from
    Saturns center as the Moon is from the Earths
    center. For this question, assume the distances
    are equal.
  • a. WHY does Dione feel more gravitational pull
    than the Moon?
  • b. What would you expect Diones orbital period
    to be the same as the Moons, larger, or
    smaller? Explain why.
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