astronomy 100 tuesday, thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm tom burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

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Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine [email protected]

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Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine [email protected]. Class. I was very impressed by the zodiac assignments people turned in. Test Next Tuesday. What you should do: Read the book Go over the lecture notes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Astronomy 100Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm

Tom [email protected]

Page 2: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Class

• I was very impressed by the zodiac assignments people turned in

Page 3: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Test Next Tuesday

• What you should do:• Read the book• Go over the lecture notes• I will talk about it a lot more on Thursday since I

am making it up tonight• If you try to take the test without studying and if

you haven’t been to class, I am pretty sure you will flunk it

Page 4: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Hint

If I have talked about it in class, I consider it important

Page 5: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Homework #4• Its on OWL.• The first homework assignment has 10 questions. For

each question, you will get two attempts to answer it correctly.

• After your last attempt, the correct answer will be shown.• If you get all 10 questions correct, you will get one

homework point. • If you get less than 10 questions correct, I will divide the

number of questions you get correct by 10 to determine the fraction of a homework point that you will receive.

• This is due by Thursday evening (2/10) at 11:59 pm

Page 6: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

PRS question #1

• What class is this?– A) Psychology 100– B) Astronomy 100– C) Geology 100– D) Physics 100

Page 7: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Models

• When you have a model of how something works, you should be able to predict what will happen

• If observations do not fit the model, either the observations or the model is wrong

• The ancient astronomers wanted to predict the positions of planets in the sky

Page 8: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 9: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

What did the ancients think

• That the Earth was the center of the universe• That the celestial sphere was rotating around the

Earth• However, there was two observations that caused

problems with this idea– apparent retrograde motion– Inability to detect stellar parallax

Page 10: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Greek model

Page 11: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Apparent Retrograde Motion = “backward” motion

Page 12: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Retrograde Motion

Page 13: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Stellar Parallax

• Stellar Parallax – The apparent shift in the position of a nearby star (relative to distant objects) that occurs as we view the star from different positions in the Earth’s orbit of the Sun each year

Page 14: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

The distance the star moves is greatly exaggerated in this figure.Stellar parallax can only be seen by a telescope.

Page 15: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Ancient astronomers could not detect stellar parallax

• If Earth orbited the Sun, ancient astronomers believed that they would see differences in angular separation of stars as the Earth rotated around the Sun

• Since they saw no changes in angular separation of the stars, they assumed the Earth was the center of the universe

• They could not fathom that stars are so far away that stellar parallax is undetectable by the human eye

Page 16: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Ptolemy’s (100-170 AD) Model of the Universe

Page 17: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543)

• Copernicus came up with a model that the Earth revolves around the Sun

• Similar to what Aristarchus (310 – 230 BC) thought 2000 years before

• However, Copernicus’ models did not match observations since he wanted everything to arouind in perfect circles

Page 18: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Tycho Brahe (1546-1601)

• Tycho Brahe was the greatest naked eye observer of all time

• He lived before the invention of the telescope• His observations of the alignment of Jupiter and

Saturn occurred two days later than when predicted by Copernicus

• Tycho came up with a model where the planets orbit the Sun but the Sun orbits Earth

Page 19: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)

• Tried to match circular orbits to Tycho’s data• Couldn’t do it• Because Tycho’s observations were so good,

Kepler had to come up with a new model

Page 20: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Kepler was trying to match an orbit to Tycho’s observations of Mars

• “If I believed that we could ignore these eight minutes of arc, I would have patched up my hypothesis accordingly. But, since it was not permissible to ignore, those 8 minutes pointed to the road to a complete reformation in astronomy.”

• Kepler came up with his 3 laws of planetary motion

Page 21: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Kepler’s 1st Law

• The orbit of each planet about the Sun is an ellipse with the Sun at one focus (there is nothing at the other focus)

Page 22: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Differences between ellipses and circles

Page 23: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Show Video

Page 24: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 25: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Definitions

• Perihelion – planet closest to the Sun• Aphelion – planet farthest from the sun• Semimajor axis – the average of a planet’s

perihelion and aphelion distances

Page 26: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Kepler’s 2nd law

• As a planet moves around its orbit, it sweeps out equal areas in equal times.

• This means that the planet travels faster when it is nearer the Sun and slower when it is farther from the Sun

Page 27: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 28: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Show Video

Page 29: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Show Video

Page 30: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Kepler’s 3rd Law

• More distant planets orbit the Sun at slower average speeds, obeying the precise mathematical relationship

p2 = a3

where p is a planet’s orbital period in years and a is the average distance from the Sun in

astronomical units.

Page 31: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Calculations

• The period for the Earth to go around the Sun is 1 year

• The distance of the Earth to the Sun is 1 Astronomical Unit

Page 32: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

How long does it take Jupiter to go around the Sun

• If Jupiter is 5.2 Astronomical Units from the Sun, how long does it take Jupiter to go orbit the Sun once

• p2 = a3 = 5.23 = 140.6• p = √140.6 = 11.9 years

Page 33: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

PRS question #2

• Mercury is 0.4 Astronomical Units from the Sun. • How long does it take Mercury to orbit the sun

once?– A) 1 year– B) 3 months– C) 9 months– D) 5 years

Page 34: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

The calculation

• p2 = a3 = 0.43 = 0.064 • p = √0.064 = 0.25 years

Page 35: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 36: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

You can calculate a planet’s orbital speed

• Since you know a planet’s orbital distance• And you know its orbital time• You can calculate a planet’s average orbital speed

Page 37: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 38: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Arguments against the Sun being the center of the solar system

• 1) If the Earth was moving, objects such as birds and clouds would be left behind as the Earth moved

• 2) The heavens must be perfect and unchanging. Noncircular orbits do not fit this model

• 3) Stellar parallax would be observable

Page 39: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

• He was able to figure out answers to these arguments

• 1) Things in motion tend to remain in motion.• 2) He used a telescope to see sunspots on the Sun

and features on the Moon.• 3) Galileo found that stars were more numerous

and more distant than imagined

Page 40: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

He also

• He discovered the moons of Jupiter and saw that they were orbiting Jupiter

• Proving that bodies could orbit other bodies besides the Earth

Page 41: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke
Page 42: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Galileo also found that Venus orbited the Sun

Page 43: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

However

• Galileo was brought to a church inquisition in Rome and made to recant his views

• He did it to save his life• Supposedly said Epper si muove “And yet it

moves” under his breath while getting up from his knees.

Page 44: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

So why did observations that the Earth was not the center of the

universe fall out of favor

Page 45: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

So why did observations that the Earth was not the center of the universe fall out

of favor

• Because models based on this did not accurately predict observations

Page 46: Astronomy 100 Tuesday, Thursday 2:30 - 3:45 pm Tom Burbine tburbine@mtholyoke

Questions?