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2
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- Models were generally wrong because they were based on wrong “first
principles”, believed to be “obvious” and not questioned:
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- Aristotle
- (384 – 322 B.C.), major authority of philosophy until the late middle
ages: Universe can be divided in 2 parts:
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- Aristotle knew the Earth was round:
- Shadow of Earth during lunar eclipse
- Changing height of Polaris and celestial pole as you moved south
- Eratosthenes measured size of Earth
to better than 20%
- ~200 BC, Greek living in
Alexandria Egypt
- Observed that
- Sun was overhead at Syene on summer solstice
- Sun was 7o to the south of zenith at Alexandria
- Circumference of Earth must be 360/7 times
distance from Syene to
Alexandria
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6
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7
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9
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11
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13
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14
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15
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16
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17
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- 1619 Publishes third law, showing
that there is a relationship orbital period and semi-major axis:
- Exact relationship is P2 µ a3 .
- Outer planets orbit more slowly than inner ones
- Example: Earth P = 365 days, a = 1.00 AU.
Mars p = 687 days, a =
1.524 AU
- Orbital Period of some asteroid with a =
9 AU ?
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- Moons of Jupiter
- (4 Galilean moons)
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21
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22
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- Written as a debate between 3 people
- Salviati Copernican advocate – (really Galileo)
- Sagredo Intelligent but uninformed
- Simplicio Aristotelian philosopher – not very bright
- Hoped to avoid earlier ruling by not directly advocating Copernican
model
- Actually made things worse by convincing accusers they were “Simplicio”
- 1633 Inquisition condemns him for violating 1616 order
- Something like modern “contempt of court” ruling
- Proceeding not a re-argument of Copernican vs. Aristotelian debate
- But forced to recant, admitting “errors”
- Sentenced to life imprisonment –actually “house arrest”
- Dies in 1642
- Pope John Paul II finally makes some amends 350 years later.
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24
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- Building on the results of Galileo and Kepler
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- Any two bodies are attracting each other through gravitation, with a
force proportional to the product of their masses and inversely
proportional to the square of their distance:
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- The universal law of gravity allows us to understand orbital motion of
planets and moons:
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- Centripetal acceleration (v2/r) caused by Gravity
- Period found by
- Kepler’s 3rd Law just comes from this
- Given P and a (and G) we can find the mass of a planet or star
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32
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- Nicolaus Copernicus 1473 - 1543 Heliocentric model
Explanation of retrograde motion
- Tycho Brahe 1546 - 1601 Observations of changes in sky
Accurate planet positions
- Johannes Kepler 1571 – 1630 Mathematical description of
planetary orbits
- Galileo Galilei 1564 – 1642 Observations using telescope
supporting Copernican model
- Isaac Newton 1642 – 1727 Physics to explain Kepler’s orbits
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