astronomy 294z: thursday, january 3 professor barbara ryden the history of the universe

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Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

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Page 1: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Astronomy 294z:

Thursday, January 3

Professor Barbara Ryden

The History of the Universe

Page 2: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Before History: The Science of Origins

Astronomy 294z: The History of the Universe Geological Sciences 110: History of Life on Earth Anthropology 200: Intro to Physical Anthropology

Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?

Page 3: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Barbara Ryden

Office: 4035 McPherson

Office hours: Mon Wed, or by appointment [292-4562]

The Professor:

Page 4: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

The Textbook:

On the Shores of the Unknown, by Joe Silk

Page 5: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

The Website:

Contains: Lecture PowerPoint, syllabus, problem sets, & useful links.

www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~ryden/ast294z/

Page 6: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

The science that studies the history (& future) of the universe

is called “cosmologycosmology”.

“kosmos” = order, harmony

“logos” = word, law

Page 7: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

What is Science?

Systematic study of the universe, using

the scientific method.

Page 8: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Scientific MethodGather facts

Guess an explanation (guess = “hypothesis”)

Test hypothesis

Modify hypothesis

A well-tested hypothesis = “theory”

Page 9: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Looking south, 3 pm today

Earth (opaque)

Sky (blue)

Sun ↑

horizon

Page 10: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Cosmology version 1.0: Domed sky over flat earth.

Page 11: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

And God said, “Let there be a vault in the midst of the waters,

and let it divide water from water.” And God made the vault and it divided the water beneath the vault from the water above the

vault, and so it was. – Genesis 1:6

[Robert Alter translation]

Page 12: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe
Page 13: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Aristotle (4th century BC): First to give reasons why the Earth is spherical.

Page 14: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Aristotle’s 1st reason:

Gravity pulls matter to center of Earth, compressing the Earth into as compact a shape as possible.

…a sphere!

Page 15: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

2nd reason:

You see different stars from the

south than from the north.

Big Dipper

Southern Cross

Page 16: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

During a lunar eclipse, Earth’s shadow is alwaysalways circular.

Only object whose shadow is always circular is a spheresphere.

3rd reason:The shape of the Earth’s shadow.

Page 17: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe
Page 18: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Morocco

India

Morocco and India are close together on the far side of the round Earth!!

4th reason: Elephants

Page 19: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

How large is the Earth?

Question answered by EratosthenesEratosthenes (ca. 200 BC).

Alexandria •

• Syene

Page 20: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

What Eratosthenes readread: At noon on June 21, Sun is at zenith seen from Syene.

What he sawsaw: At noon on June 21, Sun is 7.2° south of zenith seen from Alexandria.

What he assumedassumed: Earth is spherical. Sun is very far away.

Page 21: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Distance D = 1/50 of circumference.

Angle α = angle β = 7.2° = 1/50 of circle.

Page 22: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Circumference of Earth = 50 × distance from Alexandria to Syene.

Distance from Alexandria to Syene = 5000 stades

Circumference of Earth = 50 × 5000 stades = 250,000 stades.

(about 46,000 kilometers – true value is 40,000 kilometers)

Page 23: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe
Page 24: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Looking north, 7 pm tonight.

horizon

Earth (opaque)

Sky (black)

stars

Page 25: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Constellations

Page 26: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe
Page 27: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Stars in a constellation are not all at the same distance from us.

Constellations are arbitrary (but useful).

Page 28: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

7 pm

Page 29: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

9 pm

Page 30: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

11 pm

Page 31: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Constellations appear to travel in counterclockwise circles around Polaris

(the North Star).

Page 32: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Strong visual illusion: stars are attached to a celestial spherecelestial sphere,

rotating around the Earth.

Page 33: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Cosmology version 2.0: Celestial sphere

surrounding spherical Earth.

Earth stationary at center.

Stars attached to celestial sphere, which rotates.

Page 34: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

This geocentricgeocentric (Earth-centered) model was generally accepted from

ancient times until 16th cent. AD.

Page 35: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Dante

Divine Comedy

AD 1300

← spherical Earth

Page 36: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Q: Why did astronomers believe all the stars were at the same distance from

Earth, glued to a celestial sphere?

A: It’s impossible to get a sense of depth looking up at the sky with

your naked eyes.

Page 37: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Andromeda Galaxy

Comet Hale-Bopp

Page 38: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Q: Why did astronomers believe that the Earth is not moving?

A: Well, do you feel any motion?

Speed of rotation at Earth’s equator = circumference / rotation period =

40,000 kilometers / 24 hours = 1667 kilometers/hour

Page 39: Astronomy 294z: Thursday, January 3 Professor Barbara Ryden The History of the Universe

Tuesday’s Lecture:

From an Earth-centered to a Sun-centered universe

Reading:

Prologue