Bit of Administration.

Similar documents
Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all. To teach superstitions as truth is a most m terrible

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

Lecture 5. Motions of the Planets

Planets in the Sky ASTR 101 2/16/2018

ASTR 2310: Chapter 2

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

Motions in the Sky. Stars Planets Sun Moon. Photos - APOD. Motions in the Sky - I. Intro to Solar System

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

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

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

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

Planetary Motion from an Earthly Perspective

Lecture 3 Angular Sizes, Moon Phases, and Ptolemy September 13, 2017

Observing the Universe for Yourself

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

Observing the Night Sky: Locating Objects

Foundations of Astronomy The scientific method-winning or losing?

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

Chapter 02 The Rise of Astronomy

PHSC 1053: Astronomy Time and Coordinates

PHYS 160 Astronomy Test #1 Fall 2017 Version B

Earth Science, 13e Tarbuck & Lutgens

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

The History and Philosophy of Astronomy

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

AST 301 Introduction to Astronomy

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

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

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

Brock University. Test 1, September 2014 Number of pages: 9 Course: ASTR 1P01 Number of Students: 500 Date of Examination: September 29, 2014

cosmogony geocentric heliocentric How the Greeks modeled the heavens

Benefit of astronomy to ancient cultures

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.

The Copernican Revolution

What is in outer space?

Science Assessment Year 5: Earth and Space. The Solar System. Movements, Shape and Size. Saturn. Mars. Mercury. Earth. Neptune.

STANDARD. S6E1 d. Explain the motion of objects in the day/night sky in terms of relative position.

Chapter 1: Discovering the Night Sky. The sky is divided into 88 unequal areas that we call constellations.

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.

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

The Solar System. PLATO 2011: Planets - Foreign Worlds 2

Chapter 3: Ancient Astronomy

Brock University. Test 1, October 2016 Number of pages: 9 Course: ASTR 1P01 Number of Students: 500 Date of Examination: October 3, 2016

Introduction to Science

The ecliptic and the sidereal motion of the sun Moon and the planets on it.

Wednesday, January 28

AUSTRALIAN HOMESCHOOLING SERIES SAMPLE. Earth and Space. Secondary Science 7C. Years 7 9. Written by Valerie Marett. CORONEOS PUBLICATIONS Item No 544

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

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

Dive into Saturn.

3. The diagram below shows the Moon at four positions in its orbit around Earth as viewed from above the North Pole.

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

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

Astronomy Studio Exercise Geocentric and Heliocentric World Views Guy Worthey

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

History of Astronomy. Historical People and Theories

Motions of the Planets ASTR 2110 Sarazin

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

Ch. 22 Origin of Modern Astronomy Pretest

Astronomy 131: The Solar System and Space Exploration Dr. Randy L. Phelps. Supplementary Problem The Sizes and Distances of the Moon and Sun

Chapter 2 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Discovering the Universe for Yourself

Astronomy 291. Professor Bradley M. Peterson

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

Solar Noon The point at which the Sun is highest in the sky (and when shadows are shortest).

Origin of Modern Astronomy Chapter 21

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

AST 301 Introduction to Astronomy

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

How the Greeks Used Geometry to Understand the Stars

Greek astronomy: Introduction

Astronomy 120 Winter 2005 Highlights of Astronomy. First Midterm Examination

Lecture 19 Copernicus on the Earth s Orbit around the Sun

Phases of the Moon. Two perspectives: On Earth, or outside the Moon s orbit. More Phases. What if we zoom out? Phases of the Moon Demo 2/3/17

The Puzzle of Planetary Motion versus

Copernican revolution Review

Astronomy Test Review. 3 rd Grade

Chapter 2 The Copernican Revolution

Ancient Cosmology: A Flat Earth. Alexandria

UNIT 6 CELESTIAL SPHERE AND EQUINOCTIAL SYSTEM OF COORDINATES

Introduction To Modern Astronomy II

Lecture 2: Motions of the Earth and Moon. Astronomy 111 Wednesday August 30, 2017

PHY1033C/HIS3931/IDH 3931 : Discovering Physics: The Universe and Humanity s Place in It Fall Prof. Peter Hirschfeld, Physics

Name: Exam 1, 9/30/05

Welcome back. Scale. Week 2 Updates. PHYS 1302 Astronomy of the Solar System

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

After you read this section, you should be able to answer these questions:

Exam 1 is Feb. 1 (next Tuesday) This will cover everything we have done so far Earth motions The celestial sphere and observations from Earth Seasons

AST 105. Introduction to Astronomy: The Solar System. Announcement: First Midterm this Thursday 02/25

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

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

astronomy A planet was viewed from Earth for several hours. The diagrams below represent the appearance of the planet at four different times.

Fundamentals of Satellite technology

a. exactly 360 b. less than 360 c. more than 360 On Figure 1, draw the Earth the next day and justify your answer above.

Brock University. Test 1, May 2014 Number of pages: 9 Course: ASTR 1P01 Number of Students: 500 Date of Examination: May 21, 2014

Brock University. Test 1, October 2017 Number of pages: 9 Course: ASTR 1P01, Section 1 Number of Students: 470 Date of Examination: October 3, 2017

Physics 107 Ideas of Modern Physics. Goals of the course. How is this done? What will we cover? Where s the math?

Exercise 4.0 PLANETARY ORBITS AND CONFIGURATIONS

Griffith Observatory Field Trip Guide

Transcription:

Bit of Administration. Observing Lab 1 Due on Monday, February 9 ONLY if NO clear nights through next Sunday, can be turned in on Wednesday, February 11

Planetary Motions Inferior Planets Mercury and Venus In the sky, shuttle back and forth (eastward and westward) around d the Sun Maximum Elongation - furthest angular distance from the Sun Mercury 28 o Venus 46 o

ConcepTest! Venus can be observed at midnight from Madison. A) True B) False

Planetary Motions Inferior Planets Mercury and Venus In the sky, shuttle back and forth (eastward and westward) around d the Sun Roughly equal amounts of time in each direction Maximum Elongation - furthest angular distance from the Sun Mercury 28 o Venus 46 o Superior Planets Mars, Jupiter, Saturn Most of time, move from west to east relative to the stars - Every 1-21 2 years motion becomes east to west for 1-21 2 months - Retrograde Loop

Celestial Motions - Summary Daily Motion Player - All objects in the sky Direction - East to West Timescale 24 hours ( day ) Lunar Motion Player - Moon Direction - West to East Timescale 29 days ( month ) Solar Motion Player - Sun Direction - West to East Timescale 365 days ( year ) Planetary Motion Inferior Planets Mercury, Venus Direction - Roughly equal west to east and east to west Timescale - Months Superior Planets Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto and the asteroids Mostly west to east ( prograde prograde ) with brief (few months) east to west ( retrograde ) loops Timescale - from two years (Mars) to hundreds of years (Pluto and beyond)

ConcepTest! You have all seen Mars very nearly overhead in the past few nights. Where will Mars be in the sky in April? A) Nearer to the western horizon. B) Nearly overhead, in essentially the same place. C) Nearer to the eastern horizon. WARNING! This is a hard question!

Earliest Civilizations

Earliest Civilizations Direction Finding Polaris Gnomons Time Keeping Time of Day Fundamentally tied to the sky, typically the Sun Time of Year Fundamentally tied to the position of Sun relative to the stars or the horizon

Early Greek Astronomy Thales and the Ionian School 7th Century BC There exists an underlying order to the universe Removes the influence of the supernatural Liberating act of faith, no compelling evidence It is possible for ordinary mortals to understand the order with rational thought. First sense of objectivity and separation from the order Allows the question How is the Universe organized What is basic to understanding the structure and the processes?

Early Greek Astronomy Pythagorus 500 BC Mathematics is basic to reality Mathematics was reality, not just description of reality The universe was understandable as harmonious relations of numbers Developed abstract math and deductive reasoning Spherical heavenly bodies, including the Earth Purest geometrical form Never disappeared from Greek thought Cosmology based on ratios of integers Harmony of the spheres But 1 1 1.414213..

Early Greek Astronomy Plato 400 BC Geometric Ideals Underly Reality Uniform Circular Motion Circular Motion at Constant Speed No beginning, no end, no change Construct a geometric representation of celestial motions using only combinations of uniform circular motions about the central fixed earth Senses are Imperfect and Unreliable Observation is not important - reason reigns supreme Qualitative agreement is acceptable

Early Greek Astronomy Eudoxus 400 BC

Early Greek Astronomy Aristotle 350 BC Right Reasoning, Right Conclusion! Lunar Phases and Eclipses Argued that Sun was further than the moon Eclipses Slower motion in the sky Argued that Moon shines by reflected light Intellectual leap toward relationships that are independent of EarthE Spherical Earth Wrong Reasoning, Shadow is round during lunar eclipses Right Conclusion! Travel in latitude changes the positions of the stars Wrong Reasoning, Elephants were found both to the east in India and to the west in Morocco Wrong Conclusion! Only spherical shape would allow motion to the center to be straight down Motion of Earth Realized that daily motion could be either earth or celestial sphere spinning Considered heliocentric universe, but rejected because no parallax ax was seen Cosmology of the Spheres Right Reasoning, Wrong Conclusion!

Aristotle 350 BC Early Greek Astronomy Physics The universe as a machine All vertical motion driven by inclination to natural places The natural place of Earth was toward the center of the Universe/Earth First theory of gravity! Chemistry Earth, Air, Fire, Water - the stuff of the human world Quintessence - the stuff of the celestial bodies Encyclopedic Treatises on Nearly Every Field For 2000 years the Universe was Aristotelian (though primary impact was after 1200 AD)