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

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

Ancient Cosmology: A Flat Earth. Alexandria

Competing Models. The Ptolemaic system (Geocentric) The Copernican system (Heliocentric)

Earth Science, 13e Tarbuck & Lutgens

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

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

Announcements. Topics To Be Covered in this Lecture

Chapter 3 The Science of Astronomy

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

History of Astronomy. PHYS 1411 Introduction to Astronomy. Tycho Brahe and Exploding Stars. Tycho Brahe ( ) Chapter 4. Renaissance Period

PHYS 160 Astronomy Test #1 Fall 2017 Version B

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

History of Astronomy. Historical People and Theories

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

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

Was Ptolemy Pstupid?

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

Test 1 Review Chapter 1 Our place in the universe

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

Astronomy 1010 Planetary Astronomy Sample Questions for Exam 1

Benefit of astronomy to ancient cultures

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

Practice Test DeAnza College Astronomy 04 Test 1 Spring Quarter 2009

Astronomy 1143 Quiz 1 Review

Most of the time during full and new phases, the Moon lies above or below the Sun in the sky.

Lecture 2 : Early Cosmology

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

Chapter 02 The Rise of Astronomy

cosmogony geocentric heliocentric How the Greeks modeled the heavens

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

Chapter 3 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. The Science of Astronomy Pearson Education, Inc.

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

3) During retrograde motion a planet appears to be A) dimmer than usual. B) the same brightness as usual C) brighter than usual.

1) Kepler's third law allows us to find the average distance to a planet from observing its period of rotation on its axis.

Observing the Universe for Yourself

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

The great tragedy of science the slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact. -Thomas Huxley. Monday, October 3, 2011

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

January 19, notes.notebook. Claudius Ptolemaeus Second Century AD. Jan 5 7:37 AM

What did ancient civilizations achieve in astronomy?

lightyears observable universe astronomical unit po- laris perihelion Milky Way

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

Models of the Solar System, Gravitation and the motion of the Planets A.K.A DEAD WHITE GUYS WEEK! 1/28/14

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

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

Motions of the Planets ASTR 2110 Sarazin

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

9/8/17. An Assignment. Chapter 3: The Science of Astronomy. In what ways do all humans employ scientific thinking? 3.1 The Ancient Roots of Science

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

Today. Planetary Motion. Tycho Brahe s Observations. Kepler s Laws Laws of Motion. Laws of Motion

The History of Astronomy

PHYS 160 Astronomy Test #1 Name Answer Key Test Version A

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

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

Astr 1050 Mon. Feb. 6, 2017

Position 3. None - it is always above the horizon. Agree with student 2; star B never crosses horizon plane, so it can t rise or set.

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself. Copyright 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

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

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

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

ASTR-1010: Astronomy I Course Notes Section III

ASTR 2310: Chapter 2

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself. What does the universe look like from Earth? Constellations. 2.1 Patterns in the Night Sky

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

PHYS 155 Introductory Astronomy

Lecture #4: Plan. Early Ideas of the Heavens (cont d): Geocentric Universe Heliocentric Universe

AST 2010 Descriptive Astronomy Study Guide Exam I

Gravitation and the Motion of the Planets

Chapter 2 The Science of Life in the Universe

At Home Phases Demo. Astronomy 210. Section 1 MWF Astronomy Building. Geocentric vs. Heliocentric system. The Motion of the Planets

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

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

Test Bank for Life in the Universe, Third Edition Chapter 2: The Science of Life in the Universe

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

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

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

Dive into Saturn.

Astronomy- The Original Science

Lecture 4: Kepler and Galileo. Astronomy 111 Wednesday September 6, 2017

Last time we finished Ch. 2

Chapter 2 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Discovering the Universe for Yourself Pearson Education, Inc.

Introduction To Modern Astronomy II

Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets

Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets. Chapter Four

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

Peer Led Team Learning. Tycho Brahe in his observatory His careful observations and records are his most important legacy

1 Astronomy: The Original Science

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

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

2) The number one million can be expressed in scientific notation as: (c) a) b) 10 3 c) 10 6 d)

A Brief History of Astronomy

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

Ch. 22 Origin of Modern Astronomy Pretest

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

The Origin of Modern Astronomy. Nicolai Copernicus ( )

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

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

Science : Introduction to Astronomy. Lecture 2 : Visual Astronomy -- Stars and Planets. Robert Fisher

Chapter 3: Ancient Astronomy

Final key scientist in this story: Galileo Galilei

Transcription:

Announcements First MIDTERM Exam: Mon, Sep. 22, covering chapters 1 3 + tutorials (review later today). Interim grades online, coded by class ID. See course website Grades tab. Another great night for observing! Meet in the lobby outside class around 9pm. Bring your blue ticket! Friends/relatives welcome.

APOD/2008 09 17

Last Time SCIENCE: A human endeavor characterized by the hallmarks of 1) reliance on natural causes, 2) Occam s Razor, 3) Verifiability, and 4) Falsifiability. Planets move on the celestial sphere (as does the moon/sun). 5 visible eye planets: mercury/venus/ mars/jupiter/saturn. Planets normally slip W to E ( prograde : lazy planets!). Sometimes move E to W ( Retrograde ). A mystery to the ancients (who assumed earthcentered universe!). Important distinction: Diurnal motion: E to W (rise, transit, set), due to earth s rotation. Motion on the celestial sphere (much slower, W to E slipping ).

Last Time Greeks took the celestial sphere literally. One sphere needed for each wandering object (sun, moon, + 5 planets), in addition to the fixed stars. Problem: couldn t explain retrograde motion. Solution (Ptolemy): small circles upon large (offset) circles.

Last Time Greeks knew the earth is round as early as 500BC, and estimated the circumference using angles of the sun from different cities separated by hundreds of km. Rejected earth moving around the sun, since stars suffered no parallax (angular shift of foreground compared to background objects).

The Foundations Ancient structure in many cultures marking progression of sun, moon, and planets.

Astronomy Beginnings Aristotle (~400BC): Earth is spherical (simple/perfect objects), and at center of the universe. Shape of earth s shadow during lunar eclipse. Ships sailing over horizon.

Refinements Ptolemy (100-170 AD): Greek astronomer in Alexandria, Egypt Circular paths (some offset), add epicycles circles upon circles to produce retrograde motion. Good within a few degrees, but very complex! Model used for 1500 years!

Parallax (Again) Earth moves around sun nearby stars shift compared to background stars due to parallax. The lack of apparent parallax convinced greeks that earth must not move. In reality, stars distances are so great, their parallax is too small to see with the eye.

Testing the key to science Greeks Rational thought was sufficient Inconsistencies blamed on faulty perception Modern Science Models make predictions Verification provides support for model A Theory is a generally accepted model that explains many different observations and has withstood extensive testing of its predictions

The Troubled Ages Most astronomical records destroyed with loss of library of Alexandria. Greek/Roman empires fall. Islamic scientists kept record and further developed models during the dark ages. Renaissance: Christian Church adopts geocentric cosmology.

Revolution Copernicus (1473-1543): Polish scientist. Studied inaccuracies in ptolemaic model. Better model, sun-centered, but kept perfect circles. A true revolution, but not widely adopted.

Investigation Tycho Brahe (1546-1601): Understood that better data were needed. Three decades of naked eye observations (good to 1 arcmin): built an excellent data set. Still could not see parallax. Model of sun orbiting earth, other planets orbiting sun (not adopted).

Eureka Johannes Kepler (1571 1630): Hired by Tycho to make sense of the data. Found a new ptolemaic model with circles, but 8 arcmin discrepancies remained. Trusted the data... (but still clung to ideals of perfection ).

Keplerian Model Kepler s First Law: The orbit of each planet around the Sun is an ellipse, with the sun at one focus.

Keplerian Model Kepler s First Law: The orbit of each planet around the Sun is an ellipse, with the sun at one focus.

Finite Galileo Galelei (1564 1642): Italian scientist, overturned final objections to Kepler s models. 1. Earth moves, birds fall off. 2. Non-circular orbits not perfect. 3. No stellar parallax, so earth can t move.

Galileo s Impact Experiments with rolling balls: Objects in motion stay in motion unless otherwise acted. Universe is imperfect. Using one of the first telescopes, he observed spots on the sun, and crates and valleys on the moon.

Galileo s Sunspots

Galileo s Impact Using one of the first telescopes, observed Moons clearly orbiting jupiter (not the earth!)

Galileo s Impact Saw phases of Venus. Geocentric: only crescent phases. Heliocentric: All phases.

Galileo s Impact Showed that stars could be at great distances. Milky way resolves into many stars in a telescope.

Galileo s Price Catholic church brought galileo before the roman inquisition. Forced to recant his claim that earth orbit s the sun. Church formally apologized in 1992.

Mid-Term Exam #1 Review Chapters 1 3 (skip Kepler s 2nd and 3rd laws). Workbook Exercises. General Physical concepts stressed. Applied understanding of motions of earth/ moon/sun/stars. Historical context, not date of birth/ favorite breakfast cereal/etc.

Suggestions Review Big Picture, Key Concepts and Review Questions & Problems at end of each chapter. Better way: use the Study Area on mastering astronomy (nothing here is graded!). Know how to apply concepts.

Concepts Covered Relative scales of the Universe. Things in the universe: planet, moons, comet, asteroid, star, solar system, galaxy, clusters. Age of the universe.

Concepts Covered Constellations The celestial sphere. Diurnal motions of the stars (rise/set/ transit). What stars we see based on our latitude on earth. Circumpolar stars. Our system of Time, based on the sun s position!

Concepts Covered Angular Sizes: sun, moon, angles vs. distance. Motions on the celestial sphere (why?). Sun s motion on the celestial sphere (as a consequence of earth s orbit around the sun). Sidereal vs. solar day. Ecliptic: circular path of sun through

Concepts Covered Special locations on the ecliptic = special times of year: solstices, equinox. Tilt of the earth s axis compared to plane of orbit, and the reason for seasons. Precession of the earth s axis. Explain the movement of the sun from S to N and back again through the year.

The Moon Motion of the moon on the sky. Orbit of the moon around earth. Phases of the moon (and when you see them!).

Eclipses Lunar vs. solar eclipses. Different types of eclipses. Why aren t eclipses more common? Near coincidence of moon s and sun s angular sizes

Planetary motion Where planets are found on the sky ( the zodiac ). The 7 wandering objects on the sky. Retrograde motion: what causes? Normal slippage motion of planets on the celestial sphere.

History Greek explanation of planetary motions. Geocentric vs. heliocentric models of the solar system. How retrograde planetary motions were explained. The hallmarks of modern science.

History Earth is round. Size estimate size from sun s position. Parallax, and its importance in greek theories of the solar system. Ptolemaic model, Copernican model, Tycho Brahe, Kepler, Galileo.

Reminders First MIDTERM Exam: Mon, Sep. 22 Grades online now. Observing open through Thursday: looking good all week! Still need tickets? Come see me.