Planets! Reminder: HW2 due next Tuesday Essay Topic Due: Next Thursday Question: When should we hold the final?

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Planets! Reminder: HW2 due next Tuesday Essay Topic Due: Next Thursday
Homework #1 will be posted on the class website by tomorrow afternoon
Topic 1 Space Exploration
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Planets! Reminder: HW2 due next Tuesday Essay Topic Due: Next Thursday Question: When should we hold the final?

A total lunar eclipse will be visible over Arizona skies on February 20, It will take place just before sunset in North America and much of the western hemisphere. The full moon will pass into the shadow of the earth and be visible over Tucson skies at 6:48 p.m. Sky gazers should look to the eastern horizon. Alert!

l = Distance from Alexandria to Syene D = Circumference of the Earth l = (7.2/360)*D l = 5000 stades D=(360/7.2)*l D=250,000 stades 1 stade = 157 meters (a Greek stadium at, for example, Olympia) D=157* meters D=39,250,000 meters D = 39,250 kilometers Modern Value = 40,070 kilometers SIZE OF THE EARTH

Planets known to the Ancients Mercury (Hermes), dim and close to the horizon, Mercury is difficult to see. He moves quickly across the sky. Messenger of the gods. Venus (Aphrodite), the morning and evening star, very bright but variable, goddess of love. Mars (Ares), the red planet, god of war. Jupiter (Zeus), very bright, king of the gods. Saturn (Kronos), bright and pale yellow, first of the Titan’s, father of Zeus.

Motion of the Planets The most difficult challenge facing ancient astronomers was explaining the motion of the planets. The word “planet” derives from the Greek “planetes,” which means wanderer. Planets move in the sky relative to stars. They also vary in brightness and, on occasion, even change direction. This is known as retrograde motion.

Image of the Sky

Planets, Sun, Moon are close to a Great Circle - the Ecliptic Saturn Venus Jupiter Mercury Sun (just set)

The Celestial Sphere Figure from Astronomy: from the Earth to the Universe by Pasachoff

Apparent motion of the Sun

The seasons are caused by the tilt of the Earth. Earth is tilted 23.5º from the plane of the solar system From Astronomy: from the Earth to the Universe by Pasachoff

Retrograde Motion The Movie

How do we explain all this?

Ptolemy ( AD) lived in Alexandria, Egypt, where he wrote The Almagest, which recorded a sophisticated system for describing the motion of celestial bodies. Learning in the Greek/Roman world declined in the centuries after Ptolemy, but was kept alive in the Muslim world. Almagest means “greatest” in Arabic.

Ptolemy’s Geocentric System, codified in the Almagest This is getting complicated. Figures from Astronomy Today by Chaisson and McMillan

Arguments for a Geocentric Universe If the Earth were moving, we would have a sense of motion. There is no sensation of motion; therefore, the Earth is not moving. We don’t fall off as the Earth speeds ahead. The apparent positions of the stars do not change, i.e. we see no parallax. The Earth is an important place and it is natural that it is at the center of the Universe.

Ptolemy’s Own Defense Ptolemy’s model can be criticized on the grounds that it is cumbersome and lacking in beauty and symmetry. “Let no one, seeing the difficulty of our devices, find troublesome such hypotheses. For it is not proper to apply human things to divine things from such dissimilar examples.” Translation: What seems complicated to humans may seem simple to the gods.

Summary and a Look Ahead The concept of Celestial Spheres allows us to predict the motion of the stars. If we add epicycles and several other “fixes” it is possible to predict the motion of the planets. Ptolemy’s geocentric model provided the most accurate predictions of celestial motion. It allowed people to navigate to distant parts. The geocentric model is cumbersome and inelegant. The symmetry that so drove the ancient Greeks has been lost. Is there an alternate, simpler model, that can explain the observations?

Layout of the Solar System From Astronomy: from the Earth to the Universe by Pasachoff