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Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System
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Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Dec 28, 2015

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Geraldine Hunt
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Page 1: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System

Page 2: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Page 3: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Early astronomers believed that the Earth was the center of our Universe, and that the Earth was

surrounded by a ball, called a Celestial Sphere, on which were fixed most of the objects of the heavens.

Page 4: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

This interpretation of our solar system is called a Geocentric Model, meaning Earth-centered.

Page 5: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Early astronomers noticed groups of stars that were visible at the same time every year. These were named

constellations, and were used as a basis for calendars.

The Orion Constellation

Page 6: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Astronomers noticed that some celestial bodies did change position relative to the constellations.

They called these “wandering stars” planets.

Notice the planet Mars moving across the constellations Gemini and Leo over the course of 11 months.

Page 7: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Astronomers also noted that, periodically, these planets which normally moved eastward, moved backward for a few weeks, then resumed their path eastward. This is referred to as retrograde motion.

Page 8: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.
Page 9: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

In 200 A.D., the Greek astronomer Ptolemy explained this “retrograde’ motion by stating that the planets

orbited the Earth in a circle, but also orbited another point in a circle, what he called an epicycle.

Page 10: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.
Page 11: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

In the late 1400’s, the astronomer Copernicus proposed what was to become known as the

Heliocentric Model.

Page 12: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Copernicus stated that the Sun was the center of the Solar System, the Earth was a planet, and

that it orbited the Sun.

Page 13: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

And, here is how he explained retrograde motion.

Page 14: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Mars retrograde motion Venus retrograde motion

Page 15: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

In the 16th –century, the astronomer Johannes Kepler developed three laws to describe the way in

which planets move through Space.

Page 16: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Kepler’s 1st Law: Planets move through Space in an elliptical orbit, not a circular one. This causes the

distance from a planet to the Sun to vary.

Page 17: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Kepler’s 2nd Law: When a planet is closer to the Sun, it moves faster. (centrifugal

force and gravity at work!)

Page 18: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Kepler’s 3rd Law states that the further a planet is from the Sun the longer its period

of revolution (its year) will be.

Page 19: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

In the 1600’s, Isaac Newton stated that a force called gravity was causing the planets to behave

as Kepler had observed.

Page 20: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

He stated that all objects with mass exerted a force of attraction on other objects with mass, and that the

strength of that force is proportional to the mass of the objects and their distances from one another.

Page 21: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Astronomers

Early Astronomers

Page 22: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Ptolemy•devised the geocentric model for our solar system believed until 1500's

•said planets are on small circular orbits, called epicycles

•developed 1st model to predict the positions of planets

•had support of Catholic church, despite inaccuracyAD 90-168

Page 23: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Copernicus

1473-1543

•challenged Ptolemy's geocentric model and proposed the heliocentric model for our solar system

•suggested the Earth was a planet, it rotated, and that Earth & other planets revolved around the sun

•tried to explain retrograde motion (i.e. when 2 bodies move the same direction & one moves faster than the other

Page 24: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Johannes Kepler

•discovered that planets orbit in ellipses, not circles•developed 3 laws of planetary motion

1."planets travel in elliptical orbits with the sun at one focus & the planet's distance from the sun varying"2.equal area law= "the speed at which the planet travels around the sun is not constant; planets closer to the sun orbit faster than those further away"3.harmonic law= "the period of a planet squared is equal to the mean distance cubed“ P squared= D cubed

1571-1630

Page 25: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Galileo Galilei1564-

1642

•explained why we don't feel the Earth moving

•first to use a telescope; invented refracting telescope

•discovered Jupiter's 4 largest moons and proved that they revolved around Jupiter disproving geocentric model

Page 26: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Isaac Newton

1642-1727

•incorporated a mirror into Galileo's telescope(refracating telescope), doubling its power (reflecting telescope)

•said that gravity keeps the planets in orbit- supported by his 3 laws of motion

•Newton's 3 laws of motion:1.an object at rest stays at rest until another force acts on it2.the greater the mass of an object being accelerated, the more force needed to accelerate the object3.for every action, there is an equal but opposite reaction

Page 27: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Joseph Von Fraunhofen •invented the spectroscope

•invented many telescopes and optical instruments to describe stellar parallax

•Analyzed light (spectroscopy) to determine chemical composition of stars

1787-1826

Page 28: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

Albert Einstein1879-1955

•Theory of Relativity:adds the effect of gravity of large masses to light and time (predicts black holes)

•corrected Newton's theory of gravity by saying that not all objects attract all other objects

•E= mc2

Page 29: Chapter 26.2: Observing the Solar System. Early views of the organization of Space were much different than ours.

•Hubble's Law: all objects in deep space possess Dopplar shift and this shift is proportional to their distance from Earth.

•demonstrated the existence of other galaxies than our own

•with Dopplar shift, he proved that our universe is expanding and continuously moving away from us

•disccovered and analyzed "cosmic background radiation" which supports Big Bang Theory

Hubble TelescopeIn orbit since April 24, 1990

Edwin Hubble1889-

1953