planetary motions and lessons in science. can one prove that the earth is round? shadow of the earth...

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Planetary Motions Planetary Motions and and Lessons in Science Lessons in Science

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Page 1: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Planetary Motions Planetary Motions andand

Lessons in Science Lessons in Science

Page 2: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Can One Prove that the Earth is Round?• Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse

• Height of Polaris above the horizon

Page 3: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

• Eratosthenes experiment

Can One Prove that the Earth is Round?• Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse

• Height of Polaris above the horizon

Inferred size of Earth: 250,000 stadia

This is either 20% off, or good to about 1%, depending on the definition of stadia.

Page 4: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Can One Prove that the Earth goes Around the Sun?Proof of motion is through parallax

An object’s position will appear to shift due to change in the observer’s position.

This MUST occur!!! Since parallax was not seen, the

Earth must not be moving!

Page 5: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Geocentric Properties of the Original Planets(Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn)

• The word “planet” means “wanderer”.• The planets always stay close to the ecliptic plane, i.e.,

they move through the zodiac constellations.• Mercury and Venus are inferior planets – they are never

seen very far from the Sun (Mercury never more 23°, Venus never more than 46°).

• Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn are superior planets, and can be found anywhere in the zodiac.

• Planets usually move west-to-east against the fixed stars. But sometimes the planets move backwards (east-to-west). This is called retrograde motion.

Page 6: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Retrograde Motion

Path of a planet with respect to the background stars

Page 7: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Retrograde Motion

Path of a planet with respect to the background stars

Page 8: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Retrograde Motion

Page 9: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

The Science of Aristotle

• Aristotle’s ideas: Heavy objects fall faster than light objects Objects have inertia – all objects prefer to be at rest The heavens are perfect and immutable All heavenly objects travel about the Earth at a constant

speed in a perfect circle

So how did Aristotle explain retrograde motion?

Page 10: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:Aristotle’s Model (350 B.C.)

• Earth at the center (since it is not moving).

• Sun and Moon orbit the Earth (west to east).

• Planets move at a constant speed around small circles called epicycles.

• Epicycles orbit around Earth (west-to-east) at a constant speed in a circle called a deferent.

Combination of orbital and epicyclic motion creates retrograde motion.

Page 11: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:Aristotle’s Model (350 B.C.)

• Earth at the center (since it is not moving).

• Sun and Moon orbit the Earth (west to east).

• Planets move at a constant speed around small circles called epicycles.

• Epicycles orbit around Earth (west-to-east) at a constant speed in a circle called a deferent.

Combination of orbital and epicyclic motion creates retrograde motion.

Trouble is, it doesn’t do a very good job of predicting exact positions.

Page 12: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:Ptolemy’s Refinement (140 A.D.)

• Put the Earth slightly off center at a point called the eccentric

• State that epicycles only move at a constant speed about the deferent when viewed from a special place called the equant

Model is more complicated, and, though it does better, it still doesn’t predict the exact positions of the planets.

Page 13: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:The Copernican Model (1530 A.D.)

Since the planets are in the heavens, they must move in perfect circles at a constant speed. But …

The heavenly bodies do not all move around the same center. The Earth is not at the center of the planetary system (i.e., the

universe). Only the Moon goes around the Earth. The Sun is at the center of the planetary system. Compared to the distance of the fixed stars, the distance from the

Earth to the Sun is negligible. The daily revolution of the sky is due to the Earth’s rotation. The Sun’s annual motion is due to the Earth’s orbit around the Sun. Retrograde motion is due to the Earth’s orbit around the Sun.

Page 14: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:The Copernican Model (1530 A.D.)

Retrograde motion is explained by the Earth “passing” (or being passed by) another planet in its orbit.

Page 15: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Explaining Retrograde Motion:The Copernican Model (1530 A.D.)

Retrograde motion is explained by the Earth “passing” (or being passed by) another planet in its orbit.

Page 16: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

The Heliocentric Model

But the model is no better at predicting the positions of the planets than Aristotle’s model. (And are the stars really so far away that we can’t see parallax???)

The Heliocentric model also naturally explains the difference between inferior and superior planets.

Page 17: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Galileo’s Experiments

Galileo tried something new – doing experiments!

• Dropping balls to measure gravity

• Rolling balls to examine inertia

• Observing the sky through a telescope!

Page 18: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

Page 19: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

• A Moon with mountains and craters

Page 20: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

• A Moon with mountains and craters

• The “ears” of Saturn

Page 21: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

• A Moon with mountains and craters

• The “ears” of Saturn

• Four moons orbiting Jupiter

Page 22: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

• A Moon with mountains and craters

• The “ears” of Saturn

• Four moons orbiting Jupiter

• The Milky Way’s stars

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 23: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

What Galileo Saw• An imperfect Sun (sunspots)

• A Moon with mountains and craters

• The “ears” of Saturn

• Four moons orbiting Jupiter

• The Milky Way’s stars

• The Phases of Venus

Page 24: Planetary Motions and Lessons in Science. Can One Prove that the Earth is Round? Shadow of the Earth during a lunar eclipse Height of Polaris above the

Next time -- Gravity