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The world as we know it

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Celestial sphere with stars fixed to it rotates East to West daily. ... He also studied mechanics, properties of motion in general. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The world as we know it


1
The world as we know it
  • Everything up to now leads to a beautiful
    consistent cosmogony model of the Universe.
  • Celestial sphere with stars fixed to it rotates
    East to West daily.
  • Sun (annually) and Moon (monthly) move West to
    East on ecliptic.

2
  • Ptolemys model included sizes and rotation
    speeds for all cycles, and predicted planetary
    positions accurately successful scientific
    model!
  • E.g. Venus always found near Sun, so its
    deferent turns annually (aligned with Sun) while
    epicycle accounts for deviations.

3
  • Copernicus (1500) revives heliocentric model of
    Aristarchus.
  • Planets (and Earth) orbit Sun. Apparent motion
    of planets in sky comes from relative motion.
  • Here inferior planets always near Sun because
    their orbits smaller than Earths.
  • Copernicus computes periods and (relative)
    distances from Sun for all planets.
  • Farther planets move slower.
  • Copernician model is much simpler (Occams razor)
    as explanation of observations.
  • Small deviations lead him to add epicycles.

No smoking gun yet rejected on cultural grounds
4
Calculating Periods
  • Planets motion in sky results from combination
    of true motion and Earths motion. Planet orbits
    Sun each sidereal period.
  • What we see recurs every synodic period (relative
    configuration of Earth, Sun, planet).
  • For an inferior planet, a synodic period has
    elapsed when the planet has lapped Earth.
  • For a superior planet when Earth has lapped it.
  • If sidereal period is P days, planet moves 360/P
    degrees a day. Earth moves 360/E degrees a day
    where E365 is sidereal period of Earth.
  • Planet laps Earth (completing a synodic period of
    S days) when S(360/P) S(360/E) 360. This is
    same as 1/P 1/E 1/S.
  • For a superior planet find similarly 1/P 1/E
    1/S.

5
Brahe and Kepler
  • First steps to deeper insight were careful
    observations by Brahe (1580) of planetary motion
    to great precision.
  • Using these, Kepler (1609) finds three laws of
    planetary motion.

6
Keplers Laws
  • 1. Orbit of a planet is an ellipse with Sun at
    one focus.
  • Ellipse is shape of all points such that sum of
    their distances from two points (foci) is
    constant.
  • Eccentricity (e) measures how far the foci are
    relative to size. e0 is a circle.
  • Other focus is nothing (not even same for all
    planets).
  • Typically e small, .017 for Earth, .2 for Mercury.

7
  • 2. Line connecting planet to Sun sweeps out
    equal areas in equal time intervals as planet
    orbits.
  • Planet moves faster at perihelion, slower at
    aphelion.
  • This causes slight change in rate of Suns motion
    discussed earlier.
  • This effect much more dramatic for comets which
    follow highly eccentric orbits.

8
  • 3. Square of sidereal period is proportional to
    cube of semimajor axis.
  • This relates the orbital motions of different
    planets orbiting same Sun.
  • Write this as P2 a3. This is valid if P is
    measured in years and a in AU.
  • Recall 1AU 1.496 108 km 93 million miles is
    average Earth-Sun distance.

9
  • Keplers laws are amazing progress. They give
    planetary motion with unprecedented accuracy.
    Whats more, they are universal they apply to
    any orbital system, from an atom through Saturns
    moons to Galaxy clusters.
  • In physics such universality means there are
    fundamental laws at work here.
  • These were found by Newton (1670) who at first
    was not thinking at all about Astronomy.

10
Galileos Smoking Scope
  • Smoking gun evidence for Copernician model
    required new technology.
  • Galileo (1610) turns new telescope up and finds
    phases of Mercury.
  • The correlation between phase and position in sky
    agrees with heliocentric model, not with
    Ptolemaic model.

11
Cultural Issues
  • Galileo also discovers that Jupiter is itself
    accompanied by moons that orbit the planet, much
    like our Moon orbits Earth. Nature repeats on
    different scales.
  • Motion of Jupiters moons studied closely, forms
    first Nautical clock for longitude measurement.
  • Despite all this, Galileo tried for heresy and
    sentenced to house arrest.

12
More on Galileo
  • Galileo made many other discoveries of
    importance. With his telescope, he discovered
    mountains on the moon, size and shape of planets,
    nature of Milky Way, moving spots on Sun, among
    others.
  • He also studied mechanics, properties of motion
    in general. Formulated principle of inertia
    object tends to remain in its state of motion
    unless disturbed externally. We know we need to
    work to move things. Galileos insight reminds us
    we also work to stop or turn them.
  • Galileo almost got mechanics right. What stopped
    him was the fact that the mathematics needed to
    formulate the theory was not known. To make
    progress, Newton had to invent Calculus.

13
Newtons Laws of Motion
  • 1. An object upon which no forces act will move
    in a straight line with constant velocity.
    (inertia)
  • Familiar when velocity is zero object at rest
    will stay there.
  • Need to remember in our world two forces (at
    least) always get in the way gravity pulls us
    down friction slows all motion. To see Newton 1
    need to minimize these or imagine them removed.
  • Velocity is a vector has direction as well as
    magnitude. So constant velocity means no change
    in direction or speed.

14
  • 2. When a force acts on an object, it will
    change its velocity. The acceleration will be
    proportional to the force (and pointed in the
    same direction). The proportionality constant is
    called mass.
  • F ma
  • Acceleration a is rate of change of velocity v.
    So measured in (m/sec)/sec or m/sec2.
  • Like v it is a vector and has direction. Note
    that changing direction of v requires
    acceleration, just as does changing magnitude of
    v.
  • m is mass. Measured in kg total amount of
    stuff.
  • F is force. Measured in kg (m/sec2) N(ewton)
  • Acceleration of gravity here is g 9.8 m/sec2,
    so force of gravity on 1kg. is 9.8 N.

15
Uniform Circular Motion
  • Planet moves at uniform speed v around circle of
    radius R. Period is P2pR/v
  • Is velocity constant?
  • NO. Direction changes.
  • Guess acceleration
  • Points inwards
  • Grows with larger v (m/sec).
  • Smaller with larger R (m).
  • Measured in m/sec2.
  • a v2/R.
  • So F ma m v2/R

16
Numbers for Earth
  • As Earth spins, we move at
  • Vspin (2pR)/P 4107 m/24 hr
  • 463 m/sec 1036 mph
  • As Earth orbits, we move at
  • Vorbit (2pR)/P
  • 6.28 1.5 1011 m/36586400 sec.
  • 29871 m/sec 100,595 mph
  • a v2/R
  • 4632/6.38106
  • 0.034 m/sec2
  • F ma
  • 100kg. 0.034m/sec2
  • 3.4 N
  • a v2/R
  • 298712/1.51011
  • 0.0059 m/sec2
  • F ma
  • 100kg. 0.0059m/sec2
  • 0.59 N
  • When rocks in space hit Earth the relative
    velocities are about 100,000 mph. That is why
    they burn in atmosphere as meteors!
  • Lets compute the forces required to keep in
    these circular motions a person of mass m100 kg.
    He weighs 9.8 m/sec2 100 kg 980 N

17
  • 3. When one object applies a force to another,
    the latter applies a force to the former, equal
    in magnitude and opposite in direction. (action
    and reaction).
  • This explains how we walk. I push Earth back, it
    pushes me forward!
  • As Moon orbits Earth, Earth orbits Moon both in
    fact orbit common center of mass

18
Inertial Forces
  • When a car stops, you are hurled at the
    windshield. What force acted to make you move?
  • None really. Absent any force, your body would
    continue to move at its former velocity.
  • To keep you stationary in a car with
    acceleration a requires a force Fma
  • From the point of view of someone in the car,
    there is an inertial force F -ma that must be
    balanced.
  • Inertial forces are not truly forces, they are
    the result of measuring motion with respect to
    accelerating frames of reference. Like gravity,
    the inertial force is proportional to mass.
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