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History of

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Title: History of


1
History of Astronomy
2
The First Astronomers
  • It is likely that the first astronomers were
    simply curious people who noticed patterns in the
    night sky.
  • More advanced observers even noticed seasonal
    trends to where and when these patterns appeared.

3
Modeling the Universe
  • Early Greeks made more advanced observations,
    noting that some of the objects in the sky moved
    in relation to the stars. These were called
    planets from the root Greek word for wanderer.

Mars motion plotted against the stars
4
Modeling the Universe
  • The Greeks made the first recorded attempt at a
    model of what the solar system looked like.
  • All our senses tell us that the Earth is not
    moving so the first model placed Earth at the
    center with planets and sun rotating around it
    the geocentric model (earth centered).

5
The Earth is a Sphere
  • A man named Eratosthenes ( 200B.C.) notices a
    strange phenomena with shadows in different
    cities and uses it to calculate the radius of the
    Earth.

Shadow behind post
No Shadow in well
6
Geocentric Model Challenged
  • Observations of the planets reveal irregular
    movement of some planets pointing to a problem in
    the earth-centered (geocentric) model of the
    solar system.
  • As long ago as 250 B.C. some began to think
    that the Sun may be at the center of the solar
    system.

?
7
Geocentric Model Fights
  • Mainly based on a lack of evidence for Earths
    movement, the idea that the Earth is the center
    of the universe remains accepted for about 1500
    years until the 1500s.

8
Evidence Wins the Fight
  • More and more problems develop when the
    earth-centered (geocentric) model is studied.
  • In the late 1400s, Nicholas Copernicus proposes
    the Sun-centered (heliocentric) model of the
    universe essentially the current model.
  • This model, though not quickly accepted by
    people, explained the erratic motions of the
    planets in a simple easy way.
  • If a new model is better supported by the
    evidence, the old must be thrown out.

9
Supporting the Model
  • In addition to his explanations for moving
    objects In the late 1500s Galileo builds (not
    invents) a telescope to look at the planets and
    stars.
  • His observations support the heliocentric model.

10
Heliocentric Model is Refined
  • In the early 1600s, A man named Johannes Kepler,
    studies the observations of another man (Tycho
    Brahe) and comes up with 3 laws of planetary
    motion.
  • The easiest to understand being that the planets
    orbit the sun (heliocentric) but they orbit in
    ellipses not perfect circles.

An ellipse can be drawn with this method
11
Explaining the Forces in the Heavens
  • In the late 1600s, Isaac Newton describes why
    planets move in elliptical paths around the Sun.
  • GRAVITY a force that causes all masses to
    attract other masses pulls the moving bodies
    inward.
  • Opposing gravity is the moving objects tendency
    to move in a straight line (inertia).
  • The two forces balance and the planets move in
    near circular (elliptical) paths around the most
    massive body the Sun.

12
Beyond that
  • Modern technology such as the Hubble space
    telescope, radio telescopes, and the work of
    scientists like Einstein, Hubble, etc have lead
    to a wealth of understanding.
  • Currently, the model of the solar system is
    essentially the heliocentric model already
    explained.
  • However, the universe consists of countless
    suns (stars) organized in a countless number of
    galaxies
  • Makes your head hurt to think about infinity or
    forever ouch.
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