Top Banner
Great ideas have their limitations….
44

Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Diana Morrison
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Great ideas have their limitations….

Page 2: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics)

• Ancient Greeks• Celestial Models• Assumptions– Earth stationary – All motions around the Earth– All motions are uniform, circular motions

• Is that such a big problem?• Evidence for above assumptions?• Time for some more animation…

Page 3: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Laws, Theories, Hypothesis

What is the difference?

What about

Natural Law

Scientific Law

Empirical Law

Are theories the end of the discussion?

Page 4: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Claudius Ptolemy (90-168)

• Years of previous models, data• Tweaked the models to fit data better• Still not perfect, but the best so far• So that’s all she wrote on that, right?

Page 5: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Earth

Deferent

Epicycle

Mars

Equant

Page 6: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543)

• New view – Heliocentric• Not better!!!

Page 7: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)

• Finally got it right• Kepler’s 3 Laws of Planetary Motion• What do they tell us?• What don’t they tell us?

Page 8: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #1 – The orbits of the planets are ellipses with the sun at one focus.

Focus

Perihelion Aphelion

Average distance = (distance from perihelion to aphelion)/2 =?Average distance = 1 Astronomical Unit

Page 9: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #2 – A line from a planet to the sun sweeps over equal areas in equal intervals of time.

Huh?

Let’s try this – planets move faster when they are at perihelion than when they are at aphelion.

Velocity changes depending upon their distance from the sun.

Why?

Page 10: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #3 – A planet’s orbital period squared is proportional to its average distance from the sun cubed.

Mathematically:

P2 a3

P2 = k a3 (k = constant)

Special formula –

If orbiting the sun

P in years, a in AU

P2 = a3

Page 11: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Kepler’s laws – not just for breakfast anymore!

Actually not just for planets.

Kepler’s laws apply to anything orbiting

Moons orbiting planets

Comets orbiting the sun

Stars orbiting other stars

Stars orbiting around a galaxy

Galaxies orbiting other galaxies

Groups of galaxies orbiting other groups of galaxies

Page 12: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

• Invented the telescope• Used the telescope and wrote about it!• Observations favored Kepler, not Ptolemy

Page 13: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.
Page 14: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.
Page 15: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Isaac Newton (1642-1727)

• The ultimate nerd• Did NOT “invent” gravity• Did derive the 3 Laws of Motion

Page 16: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #1 – A body continues at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by some force.

Huh?

Let’s try this -

1. Moving Things: straight line, steady pace

2. Non-moving things: well, nothing.

3. The above (1 & 2) remain that way unless something messes around with the things.

4. Change in motion is caused by a force.

(Change in motion = change in speed, direction)

Page 17: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #2 – A body’s change in motion is proportional to the force acting on it and is in the direction of the force.

Change in motion = acceleration (which can also be a deceleration)

Force acceleration

Force = mass x acceleration

F = m a

Mass weight

Mass = stuff, material, matter

Page 18: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Law #3 – When one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body exerts an equal and opposite

force back on the first body.Huh?

Cosmic Karma

“Little brother/sister rule”

Forces are a two way street – you get as good as you give…

Page 19: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Newton’s Law of Gravity

2r

GMmF

F = force of gravitynegative = towardsG = constantM= one mass, usually the largerm = the other, usually the smallerr = distance between centers of masses (usually centers)

Page 20: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Ramifications of gravity

• Limits?• Composition?• Changes in motion– Objects change direction (acceleration)– Objects change speed (acceleration)

• Distance is squared!• Feel the effects of gravity?• Feel the same/different amounts of gravity?

Page 21: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Orbits

• Objects orbit due to gravity• Change from straight motion to curved path• Can it explain Kepler’s Laws?

Page 22: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

What isn’t explained by Newton?

• How does gravity work?• What is actually causing the change in

motion?• Is there “anti-gravity”?• Do Newton’s Laws explain all motions?• Did he invent the fig newton?

• Time to shoot off Newton’s cannon!

Page 23: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Light

• Almost all astronomical data is in this form!• More than just visible• Acts like a wave– Effected by velocity (Doppler effect)–Measureable wavelength, frequency, velocity

• Acts like a particle– Photon=particle of energy– Amount of energy depends on wavelength/frequency

Page 24: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Types of light

• Radio• Microwave• Infrared• Visible (ROYGBIV)• Ultraviolent• X-ray• Gramma-ray

Ultraviolet

Gamma-ray

How are they different?WavelengthEnergyDANGER!!!!How are they the same?VELOCITY!

Page 25: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Spectra

• Interaction of light and matter• Why?• Light=Energy• Matter made up of atoms• Atoms made up of protons, neutrons, electrons• Electrons influenced by energy

Page 26: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

p

e

Page 27: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

p

e

Page 28: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Atoms and Light

• Atoms can absorb light depending upon density– Individual atoms discretely absorb some light–More atoms (denser) absorb more types of light– Solid objects absorb most types of light

• Atoms can emit light depending upon density– Individual atoms discretely emit some light–More atoms (denser) emit more types of light– Solid objects emit most types of light

Page 29: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Spectrum

• “Rainbow” but so much more• Light viewed in detail– Seen over a range of wavelengths– Seen over a range of frequencies– Seen over a range of photon energies

• Type of spectra depends upon conditions

Page 30: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Kirchhoff’s Laws

• Absorption Spectrum• Emission Spectrum• Continuous Spectrum

• Type of spectrum reveals information on– Composition (possibly)– Temperature– Density

Page 31: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Do both of these illustrate the same thing?

Page 32: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.
Page 33: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Stellar Spectra

What type of spectrum is this?

Page 34: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

How do you make sense of all of this?

Page 35: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Use basic rules for spectra

• If the spectra shows features for an element, the element is present.

• If the spectra doesn’t show the feature for the element, then the element isn’t present.

• Spectra sorted according to elements presence/absence/unique features.

Page 36: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

But…

“Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence” – Carl Sagan

Are elements present/absent for another reason?

Yes – temperature!

Re-arrange those spectra!

Page 37: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Hottest

Coolest

Page 38: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Hottest

Coolest

But they have already been named/labeled!Just rearrange the order of the labels

Page 39: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Spectral Classification System

• Classifies stars according to TEMPERATURE• Ordered from Hottest to Coolest• Originally included only those visible to eye• Extends to IR types now

OBAFGKMLT• More detail with B0, B1, B2, etc• Sun = G2

Page 40: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Fusion Confusion

• Not fission• Energy released by fusing atoms– Only useful for low mass atoms (<Fe)– Creates more complex atoms– Difficult to do• High Density• High Temperature

Page 41: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

n

+

Deuterium

Page 42: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Helium 3

g

Page 43: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

Helium 4

Proton

Proton

Page 44: Great ideas have their limitations….. Foundations of Modern Astronomy (and physics) Ancient Greeks Celestial Models Assumptions – Earth stationary – All.

What does it all mean?

• Mass Energy• Hydrogen Helium• Evidence?