The History of Astronomy

Similar documents
Astronomy Through The Ages

Astronomy- The Original Science

The History of Astronomy

Chapter 2. The Rise of Astronomy. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Review of previous concepts!! Earth s orbit: Year, seasons, observed constellations, Polaris (North star), day/night lengths, equinoxes

Announcements. Topics To Be Covered in this Lecture

Things to do today. Terminal, Astronomy is Fun. Lecture 24 The Science of Astronomy. Scientific Thinking. After this lecture, please pick up:

The History of Astronomy. Theories, People, and Discoveries of the Past

The History of Astronomy. Please pick up your assigned transmitter.

History of Astronomy. Historical People and Theories

Ancient Cosmology: A Flat Earth. Alexandria

Benefit of astronomy to ancient cultures

9/12/2010. The Four Fundamental Forces of Nature. 1. Gravity 2. Electromagnetism 3. The Strong Nuclear Force 4. The Weak Nuclear Force

Astronomy Notes Chapter 02.notebook April 11, 2014 Pythagoras Aristotle geocentric retrograde motion epicycles deferents Aristarchus, heliocentric

Ch. 22 Origin of Modern Astronomy Pretest

The Scientific Revolution

History of Astronomy

What is a Revolution? A Revolution is a complete change, or an overthrow of a government, a social system, etc.

Evidence that the Earth does not move: Greek Astronomy. Aristotelian Cosmology: Motions of the Planets. Ptolemy s Geocentric Model 2-1

Gravitation Part I. Ptolemy, Copernicus, Galileo, and Kepler

Practice Test DeAnza College Astronomy 04 Test 1 Spring Quarter 2009

A100 Exploring the Universe: The Invention of Science. Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy

Contents: -Information/Research Packet. - Jumbled Image packet. - Comic book cover page. -Comic book pages. -Example finished comic

D. A system of assumptions and principles applicable to a wide range of phenomena that has been repeatedly verified

Early Models of the Universe. How we explained those big shiny lights in the sky

2.4 The Birth of Modern Astronomy

Occam s Razor: William of Occam, 1340(!)

Chapter 2 The Copernican Revolution

Lecture 3: History of Astronomy. Astronomy 111 Monday September 4, 2017

1. The Moon appears larger when it rises than when it is high in the sky because

Chapter 4. The Origin Of Modern Astronomy. Is okay to change your phone? From ios to Android From Android to ios

In so many and such important. ways, then, do the planets bear witness to the earth's mobility. Nicholas Copernicus

Astronomy 1 Fall 2016

Chapter 02 The Rise of Astronomy

b. Remember, Sun is a second or third generation star the nebular cloud of dust and gases was created by a supernova of a preexisting

Earth Science, 13e Tarbuck & Lutgens

Module 3: Astronomy The Universe Topic 6 Content: The Age of Astronomy Presentation Notes

1 Astronomy: The Original Science

Astronomy A BEGINNER S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE EIGHTH EDITION

Models of the Solar System. The Development of Understanding from Ancient Greece to Isaac Newton

Chapter 4. The Origin of Modern Astronomy

,.~ Readlng ~ What,~,~~ is a geocentric system? Chapter3 J 73

Was Ptolemy Pstupid?

History of Astronomy - Part I. Ancient Astronomy. Ancient Greece. Astronomy is a science that has truly taken shape only in the last couple centuries

HISTORY OF ASTRONOMY, PART 1. How our understanding of the Universe has changed

Planets & The Origin of Science


Motions of the Planets ASTR 2110 Sarazin

Lecture #5: Plan. The Beginnings of Modern Astronomy Kepler s Laws Galileo

SCIENCE 9 CHAPTER 10 SECTION 1

First MIDTERM Exam: Mon, Sep. 22, covering chapters tutorials (review later today).

A100 Exploring the Universe: The Rise of Science. Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy

Today FIRST HOMEWORK DUE. Ancient Astronomy. Competing Cosmologies. Geocentric vs. Heliocentric. Ptolemy vs. copernicus.

PHYS 155 Introductory Astronomy

Physics Unit 7: Circular Motion, Universal Gravitation, and Satellite Orbits. Planetary Motion

How big is the Universe and where are we in it?

ASTR 1010 Spring 2016 Study Notes Dr. Magnani

PHYS 160 Astronomy Test #1 Fall 2017 Version B

cosmogony geocentric heliocentric How the Greeks modeled the heavens

Plato ( BC) All natural motion is circular Reason is more important than observation

History of Astronomy

Earth Science, 11e. Origin of Modern Astronomy Chapter 21. Early history of astronomy. Early history of astronomy. Early history of astronomy

2. See FIGURE B. This person in the FIGURE discovered that this planet had phases (name the planet)?

Early Theories. Early astronomers believed that the sun, planets and stars orbited Earth (geocentric model) Developed by Aristotle

18. Kepler as a young man became the assistant to A) Nicolaus Copernicus. B) Ptolemy. C) Tycho Brahe. D) Sir Isaac Newton.

Origins of Modern Astronomy

Directions: Read each slide

Understanding Planetary Motion

Chapter 2 The Science of Life in the Universe

Chapter 2. The Rise of Astronomy. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

The following notes roughly correspond to Section 2.4 and Chapter 3 of the text by Bennett. This note focuses on the details of the transition for a

Chapter. Origin of Modern Astronomy

Next Homework Due. Feb. 20

Learning Objectives. one night? Over the course of several nights? How do true motion and retrograde motion differ?

chapter 10 questions_pictures removed.notebook September 28, 2017 Chapter 10 What We Know About the Universe Has Taken Us Thousands of Years to Learn

Chapter 1 The Copernican Revolution

Space Notes Covers Objectives 1 & 2

This Week... Week 3: Chapter 3 The Science of Astronomy. 3.1 The Ancient Roots of Science. How do humans employ scientific thinking?

Chapter 3 The Solar System

Planets & The Origin of Science

PLANETARIUM SHOWS. More info here, next show is today at 4pm. This is a required, if ungraded, assignment

The Solar System. Chapter Test A. Multiple Choice. Write the letter of the correct answer on the line at the left.

Astronomy: Universe at a Glance, Ch. 1a

Copernican Revolution. Motions of the sky. Motions of the sky. Copernican Revolution: questions on reading assignment

The Birth of Astronomy. Lecture 3 1/24/2018

Scientific Method. Ancient Astronomy. Astronomy in Ancient Times

BROCK UNIVERSITY. 1. The observation that the intervals of time between two successive quarter phases of the Moon are very nearly equal implies that

The Scientific Revolution

Newton s Three Law of Motion

Early Ideas of the Universe

1. thought the earth was at the center of the solar system and the planets move on small circles that move on bigger circles

What was once so mysterious about planetary motion in our sky? We see apparent retrograde motion when we pass by a planet

Upon Whose Shoulders We Stand: A History of Astronomy Up to 200 A.D. Dick Mallot 3/17/2005

Chapter 3 The Science of Astronomy. Copyright 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

Origin of Modern Astronomy Chapter 21

Chapter 18: Studying Space Astronomy: The Original Science

d. Galileo Galilei i. Heard about lenses being used to magnify objects 1. created his own telescopes to 30 power not the inventor! 2. looked

BROCK UNIVERSITY. 1. The observation that the intervals of time between two successive quarter phases of the Moon are very nearly equal implies that

Claudius Ptolemaeus Second Century AD. Jan 5 7:37 AM

Astronomy 100 Section 2 MWF Greg Hall. Outline. Total Lunar Eclipse Time Lapse. Homework #1 is due Friday, 11:50 a.m.!!!!!

Transcription:

The History of Astronomy http://www.ichundmeinmitbewohner.de/wpcontent/uploads/2013/05/mauna-kea-2.jpg Mauna Kea Observatories, HI

Astronomy Through The Ages Astronomy is a very old science. Chemistry really didn t get going in earnest till at least the 1700s. Biology had its biggest early discoveries in the 1800s. Physics took off in the 1900s (Newton notwithstanding). But astronomy just look up and there it is. We ve been doing this for a long time.

Early Man Some of the earliest evidence of mankind s interest in the sky comes from drawings like the Pueblo Petroglyphs. Drawings of eclipses, comets, and supernovae have been uncovered. Generally speaking, however, early man had little to do with astronomy.

The Babylonians The Babylonians (~1600 BC) are among the first to actually record stuff. Positions of planets, times of eclipses stuff like that. http://www.sunflowercosmos.org/astronomy/history_astronomy/3_babylonian_tablet.jpg

The Greeks The Greeks (the Hellenistic Culture; ~500 BC) inherited the astronomical records of the Babylonians and started to move things forward. They began to construct a cosmological framework. The sky began to move from just a tool for navigation and other practical things to a source of experimentation and exploration. They even knew the Earth was spherical, since the shadow of the Earth on the Moon was always circular.

The Greeks What s more, the Greeks took note that seven celestial objects moved, unlike the background stars. They called them planetes ( wanderers ) and we have since named our days of the week after them you may need to think of their Romance language words: The Sun (Sunday) The Moon (Monday) Mars (Tuesday Day of Mars) Mercury (Wednesday Day of Mercury) Jupiter (Thursday Day of Jupiter) Venus (Friday Day of Venus) Saturn (Saturday Day of Saturn)

Planets of the Week http://joedubs.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/seven-planets-of-the-week.jpg

Aristarchus (310-230 BC) Aristarchus of Samos was an ancient Greek astronomer. He figured out the relative sizes of the Earth, Moon, and Sun. Given that the Earth was found to be much smaller than the Sun, the Earth must revolve around the Sun. Aristarchus of Samos (ahead of his time) http://www.hudsonvalleyalmanacweekly.com/wpcontent/uploads/2012/07/aristarchus-@.jpg

The Greeks Thales (~480 BC) became the first to predict eclipses using information dating to the Babylonians. Eratosthenes (~220 BC) became the first to measure the circumference of the Earth, and the way he did it is truly awesome: TED: Adam Savage How Simple Ideas Lead to Scientific Discoveries

Aside: Geometry Geo- is the stem word for Earth stuff, right? Geography is the study of locations on Earth. Geology is the study of the abiotic Earth. Geometry is math with shapes wait, what? Turns out, geometry literally means Earth measure and comes from Eratosthenes observations. http://archive.wired.com/images/article/full/2008/06/circumference_eratosthenes_500px.jpg

Ptolemy (AD 90-168) No one knows much about this Ptolemy dude. What s best-known about Ptolemy is that he first popularized the idea of a geocentric solar system. Geocentric = Earth-centered. He put this forth in his work Almagest and it took until the 1500s for Nicolaus Copernicus to set the record straight. The catch? The Catholic Church kinda got attached to the whole geocentric thing. Ptolemy http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0b/ PSM_V78_D326_Ptolemy.png

The History of Astronomy In what today is England, early astronomers built Stonehenge around 2,500b.c. Stonehenge appears to be a rather primitive computer for determining the position of the planets and the Sun. Which in turn provided the native people with the ability to plan their seasonal pagan shindigs. On the summer solstice, the Sun lines up with some of the stones perfectly.

The History of Astronomy Islamic astronomers contributed to astronomy many names for bright stars, words like zenith, and, notably, algebra.

The Mayans El Caracol ( the snail named for a spiral inner staircase) is an observatory in Mexico built by the Mayans. Its windows line up perfectly to view Venus, in which the Mayans took great interest. Notably, the Mayans (and Chinese) were very good at predicting eclipses despite having different calendars than we use today. http://www.astro.virginia.edu/class/oconnell/astr121/im/el-caracol.jpg

Native Americans Bighorn Medicine Wheel, in the Bighorn Range of Wyoming, lies at elevation 9642. It s a wheel, 80 in diameter, constructed out of stones 300-800 years ago. At end of each of the spokes are large stones, and each stone denotes a location where an important constellation rises or where the Sun rises during the summer solstice. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/91/medicinewheel.jpg http://solar-center.stanford.edu/ao/bighorn.html

The Invention of the Telescope Hans (Johan) Lippershey is generally regarded as the inventor of the first telescope. His patent application (which was denied by the government of Belgium) was submitted in 1608. Hans Lippershey http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/optics/timeline/people/lippershey.html

Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) Copernicus set forth the idea of the heliocentric solar system in De Revolutionibus. Heliocentric = Sun-centered. This was the beginning of the Copernican Revolution. Copernicus dedicated the book to Pope Paul III and knew he was going to cause some trouble. His weakness? He insisted orbits were circular. Nicolaus Copernicus

Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) Galileo made his own telescope He saw Venus going through various phases, along with moons orbiting Jupiter (not Earth) so why should Earth be the center of it all? In addition, he observed sunspots directly, which led to complete blindness late in life. So Galileo supports the Copernican System, which by this point had been labeled as heresy by the Church. Cue the Inquisition Galileo Galilei

Galileo s statements erupted into a big mess in 1633 after he published a book championing the Copernican System. As a result, Galileo was under house arrest for eight years, dying in captivity at age 77, completely blind. It took until 1992 for the Pope/Vatican to formally excuse Galileo for being correct. The Galileo Mess

Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) Tycho Brahe (pronounced Tieco Bra-hey ) made his observations from Hveen Island in Denmark. He s credited for having some of the most accurate observations of the position of the stars and planets. Tycho Brahe

Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) Pretty cool, except despite knowing of Copernicus s discoveries, he believed the Sun revolved around the Earth, and the rest of the planets revolved around the Sun. He still couldn t see parallax in the stars. That was detected in the 1800s. Brahe s model still explained the phases of Venus as confirmed by Galileo. Brahe s Naked-Eye Observatory

The Tychonic Solar System http://www.polaris.iastate.edu/eveningstar/unit2/unit2_sub3.htm

Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) Upon Tycho s death, his data were inherited by his student, Johannes Kepler. Kepler is perhaps best known for Kepler s Laws of Planetary Motion in which he stated the planets have an elliptical orbit (not circular). He also subscribed to the correct heliocentric model of the solar system. Johannes Kepler http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d4/johannes_kepler_1610.jpg/745px-johannes_kepler_1610.jpg

Isaac Newton (1642-1727) Known perhaps best for his laws of motion, Newton helped kickstart the field of astrophysics. For now, Newton s other accomplishments include the invention of the reflecting telescope and the publication of Principia, which forever changed the scientific landscape. Isaac Newton http://www.space.com/images/i/000/017/900/original/isaac-newton.jpg?1338316257

Christiaan Huygens (1629-1695) Christiaan Huygens ( Hi-youghens ) confirmed that Saturn was a ringed planet and also spotted its moon Titan. Christiaan Huygens http://www.mikroskopie.de/pfad/grundlagen/animationen/huygens.jpg

Giovanni Cassini (1625-1712) Cassini used the parallax method to estimate the distance to Mars. Others had made somewhat similar measurements, but mostly with the Moon and Sun, so Cassini is starting to give dimension to the solar system. Other discoveries included a more accurate latitude/longitude method that gave a better estimation of the size of France. Cassini also discovered four moons of Saturn, a slight gap in the rings of Saturn, and the Great Red Spot on Jupiter. Giovanni Cassini http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d6/giovanni_cassini.jpg

Cassini-Huygens Spacecraft Today, a spacecraft currently exploring Saturn (launched in 1997, has been there since 2004) is named after, well, Cassini and Huygens. Among its many notable discoveries is that Enceladus, a moon of Saturn, has an underground ocean of liquid water. Moons of Saturn as seen by Cassini-Huygens: Rhea (front), Titan (rear)

A Photo From the Huygens Probe The surface of Saturn s moon Titan: http://www.astronomy.org/starwatch/january/1-05-titan-huygens.jpg

William Herschel (1738-1822) Herschel (and his sister Caroline) discovered Uranus. In fact, Caroline Herschel was the first woman to discover a comet and ultimately found eight of them. William Herschel http://www.space.com/17432-william-herschel.html http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/36/william_herschel01.jpg

William Herschel (1738-1822) Herschel has another thing to his credit: Not only was he the discoverer of Uranus, he was also the first to discover a planet. Huh? Every other planet, up to and including Saturn, can be seen with the naked eye and has been known since ancient times. However, you need a telescope to see Uranus. (giggle) Why did Herschel name his planet Uranus? article How to Pronounce Uranus video William Herschel (wrong camera, buddy) http://www.space.com/17432-william-herschel.html http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/36/william_herschel01.jpg

Aside: Discovery of Neptune With Kepler s and Newton s laws firmly established, in 1781 Anders Johan Lexell computed Uranus s orbit and found that it didn t match what it should be, according to Newton s laws unless there was a massive planet behind it. In 1845 Urbain Le Verrier calculated the likely location of that massive, more distant planet. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/89/urbain_le_verrier.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fa/lexell.png

Heinrich Louis d Arrest Johan Gottfried Galle Aside: Discovery of Neptune Johan Gottfried Galle and his student Heinrich Louis d Arrest discovered Neptune in under an hour of searching, using Le Verrier s calculations. It was the night of September 24, 1846, and Neptune was less than 1 from its predicted location. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/da/ JohannGalle.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/27/heinrich_louis_d%27arrest.jpg

Edwin Hubble (1889-1953) Hubble is credited with having discovered that the universe is expanding. He worked with the largest telescopes in the world at the time and used them to discover much about extra-galactic objects (AKA deep space stuff). Edwin Hubble http://www.stsci.edu/~levay/presres/ehubble/jpeg/10_12-19.jpg

http://alexpetrov.com/memes/astro/deepfield.jpeg

The Pillars of Creation (Eagle Nebula) http://alexpetrov.com/memes/astro/deepfield.jpeg

http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/pia08362.jpg Saturn from the Cassini spacecraft

http://www.sun.org/uploads/images/saturn-cassini-march-27-2004.jpg Saturn from the Cassini spacecraft