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Chapter 1: The Scientific Method

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Title: Chapter 1: The Scientific Method


1
Chapter 1 The Scientific Method
  • Alyssa Jean-Mary
  • Source The Physical Universe by Konrad B.
    Krauskopf and Arthur Beiser

2
The Scientific Method
  • The scientific method is a general scheme for
    looking at the universe, whether a direct
    approach or an indirect approach is used
  • The scientific method is not a mathematical
    process, but a human one, that requires creative
    thinking in all four steps
  • Examining the natural world is at the heart of
    the scientific method observations and
    experiment of the natural world are the
    foundations on which ideas are built as well as
    what is used to test these ideas
  • Step 1 Formulating a problem either choose a
    field to work in or a specific idea to
    investigate in nature
  • Step 2 Observation and Experiment testing the
    problem proposed accurate and objective data is
    collected
  • Step 3 Interpretation the data collected is
    analyzed to form a law (a general rule) or a
    theory (a more ambitious attempt to explain the
    data) initially a scientific interpretation is
    called a hypothesis
  • Step 4 Testing the Interpretation make new
    observations and experiment to test whether the
    interpretation is correct and can predict results

3
The Scientific Method
4
The Laws of Nature
  • The laws of nature are different than the laws of
    a country the laws of a country can change and
    can vary from country to country, but the laws of
    nature are the same throughout the entire
    universe
  • A regularity is a law of nature only if it holds
    everywhere at all times
  • The laws of nature are important for 2 reasons
  • 1. They can be used to predict phenomena not yet
    discovered
  • For instance, the law of gravity was used to
    discover the planet Neptune
  • 2. They can give an idea of what goes on in
    places that cannot be examined directly
  • For instance, we cannot visit the center of the
    sun

5
Theory vs. Law
  • A law deals with what
  • A theory deals with why it explains why
    certain events take place, and it can explain how
    a law originates in broader considerations
  • For instance, Albert Einsteins general theory of
    relativity says that gravity is a distortion in
    the properties of space and time around a body of
    matter and it accounts for Newtons law of
    gravity, going one step further to say that the
    law of gravity also applies to light

6
A Model
  • A model is a simplified version of reality that
    can be used to understand some part of nature
  • For instance, when Newton was developing his law
    of gravity, he treated the earth to be a perfect
    sphere and the orbit of the earth around the sun
    to be an ellipse. In reality, the earth is
    somewhat squashed and its orbit around the sun
    has irregularities in it. After he made the law
    of gravity, he then used it to explain why the
    earth is somewhat squashed (due to the spinning
    of the earth) and why the earths orbit around
    the sun is not a perfect ellipse (due to
    attractions to other planets).

7
Why Science is Successful
  • Science is a powerful tool for investigating
    nature because its ideas are constantly tested
    and retested i.e. it is a living body of
    information, correcting itself when needed,
    searching for a better understanding of the
    natural world
  • The laws and theories of science are only valid
    until no contrary evidence is found
  • If contrary evidence to a law or theory is found,
    then the law or theory has to be modified or even
    discarded
  • What counts in science is definite measurements
    and clear reasoning a scientists experiments
    can be followed by another scientist in order to
    double check the law or theory behind the
    experiments
  • Science is also all around us in our daily lives
    in the cars we drive, the clothe we wear, the
    way we communicate, etc.
  • Curiosity and imagination are a key part of the
    scientific process
  • Nothing is taken for granted in science
    everything can be tested and changed if need be

8
Religion and Science
  • Many scientists have been punished for the
    interpretations they have made from the data they
    collected because it does not follow the
    universal beliefs
  • The essence of science is that its results are
    open to change if new information is discovered,
    which is different from the essence of
    creationism, which is a fixed doctrine with no
    basis for observation
  • Religious beliefs are not a part of science
    because they are based on faith, to be
    unquestioned. Science on the other hand has
    skepticism at its heart.
  • The great thing about the world is that it is a
    free marketplace of ideas, whether it be
    religious or scientific

9
The Solar System Polaris
  • Polaris is the north star
  • It is used as a guide by travelers because
    Polaris seems to barely move at all
  • Stars near Polaris appear to move around Polaris
    in circles
  • Those stars above Polaris move from east to west
  • Those stars below Polaris move from west to east
  • As you get farther from Polaris, the circles the
    stars move in get bigger, until they eventually
    dip below the horizon

10
Why does Polaris seem to be at the center?
  • Polaris appears to be at the center because it
    lies almost directly above the north pole, where
    the earth circles about its axis
  • Everything else seems to be moving in a circle
    around Polaris, but their positions with respect
    to each other are fixed
  • For instance, the Big Dipper always has the shape
    of the Big Dipper, but it is not always in the
    same position in regards to Polaris

11
Constellations
  • Constellations are easily recognized groups of
    stars, like the Big Dipper
  • Polaris is located on the end of the handle of
    the constellation, the Little Dipper
  • Cepheus and Cassiopeia are constellations located
    opposite to the Big Dipper, around Polaris
  • These two constellations are named for an ancient
    kind and queen of Ethiopia
  • Draco is the constellation next to Cepheus
  • Draco means dragon
  • There are many constellations besides these, and
    most of them require a lot of imagination to see

12
The Solar System The Sun and The Moon
  • As they do their daily crossing of the sky from
    east to west, the sun and the moon move slightly
    eastward when compared to the constellations due
    to their slow movement
  • The moon takes four weeks to drift eastward
    enough to return to its starting position in the
    sky
  • The sun moves more slowly east than the moon
    does, so slowly that its day to day movement is
    barely noticeable the constellations appear to
    rise only 4 minutes early each night the sun
    takes one year to drift eastward enough to return
    to its starting position in the sky

13
The Solar System Planets
  • The are five planets (Greek for wanderer) that,
    like the sun and the moon, also shift their
    positions in the sky with respect to the stars
  • These five planets are Mercury, Venus, Mars,
    Jupiter, and Saturn
  • They shift so slowly that the day to day shift is
    hard to notice
  • The paths of the planets are quite complex,
    unlike the path of the sun or the moon the
    planets do slowly drift eastward, but they do so
    at different speeds and even sometimes they
    reverse direction and head westward, thus the
    path of a planet appears as a loop

14
The Ptolemaic System
  • In this model, the earth is the center of the
    universe
  • The earth is motionless, and everything else in
    the universe moves around the earth
  • The celestial objects that move around the earth
    do so in circles or combinations of circles
  • The sun moves around the earth exactly once a day
  • The moon is in an orbit that is closer to the
    earth, and it moves around the earth more slowly
    than the sun and in an orbit that is smaller than
    the suns orbit
  • The planets Venus and Mercury are located in
    orbits that are between the moons orbit and the
    suns orbit, with Venus orbit closer to the
    earth
  • The other planets are located in orbits that are
    larger than the sun, and are thus further away
    from the earth than the sun
  • The irregularities in the motions of the planets
    were dealt with by saying that the planets move
    in small circles around a point and then move
    around the earth in a large circle thus, the
    planets move in a series of loops

15
Testing the Ptolemaic System
  • The Ptolemaic System was tested using
    observations collected both by Ptolemy and by
    others
  • The observations were used to calculate the speed
    of each celestial object, which allowed him to
    figure out the location of each celestial object
    in the sky at any time (past and future)
  • The calculated positions of the celestial objects
    were close, but not exact, to the positions
    recorded centuries earlier and to the positions
    recorded in future years
  • Thus, the Ptolemaic System fulfilled all the
    requirements of a scientific theory
  • It was based on observations
  • It took into account all known data
  • It predicted data that could be tested in the
    future

16
Errors with the Ptolemaic System
  • In the sixteenth century, scientists began to
    notice that planets were not in the positions in
    the sky that the Ptolemaic System predicted they
    would be in
  • The errors with the model could be correct in two
    ways
  • 1. The Ptolemaic System could be made more
    complicated
  • 2. The Ptolemaic System could be replaced by a
    different model of the universe

17
The Copernican System
  • In this model, the sun is the center of the
    universe, and all planets, including the planet
    earth, rotate around the sun in a circle
  • The earth is a sphere that rotates around its
    axis once a day
  • The moon circles the earth, much like the earth
    circles the sun
  • The stars are very far away

18
Objections to The Copernican System
  • Protestant and Catholic religious leaders argued
    against the Copernican System because they did
    not want the earth be taken from its place as the
    center of the universe
  • For example, on the issue of the earth making a
    complete turn about its axis every day, each side
    said
  • Supporters of the Ptolemy System They stated
    that the speed needed for the earth to accomplish
    this would be so great that everything that was
    lose on the earth would be flung into space, and
    that a great wind would be created that would
    blow down buildings and trees.
  • Supporters of the Copernican System They stated
    that the speed at which the earth turns is
    balanced by another force that holds us and
    everything else lose on the earth to the ground.
    Also, they stated that, if the supporters of the
    Ptolemy System thought that the earth was moving
    at such tremendous speeds, then what of the
    speeds that the sun and the other planets were
    moving at to complete their rotations about their
    axis once a day.

19
Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler
  • Tycho Brahe built an observatory with quite
    precise instruments
  • He made thousands of measurements using these
    instruments and his exceptional eyesight
  • Even without a telescope (since they had not yet
    been invented), Tycho determined celestial angles
    to better than 1/100 of a degree
  • Johannes Kepler was Tychos assistant, and upon
    Tychos death in 1601, began to work on the data
    that Tycho collected
  • Kepler set out to prove that the Copernican
    System was correct, but ended up finding out that
    none of the proposed models of the universe (i.e.
    the Ptolemaic System or the Copernican System)
    fit the data that Tycho collected, and thus, had
    to discard all proposed models and create a new
    model that fit Tychos collected data
  • Kepler created three laws that explained the
    universe using the data that Tycho collected

20
Keplers First Law
  • Kepler formed the First Law after he determined,
    though calculations, that the proposed circular
    obits did not match the data
  • Since circles didnt match the data, he examined
    other geometrical figures to see if they match,
    until he found that if the orbits were
    elliptical, they would fit Tychos data
  • Keplers First Law states The paths of the
    planets around the sun are ellipses with the sun
    at one focus.

21
Keplers Second Law
  • Kepler formed the Second Law in order to relate
    the speeds of the planets to their positions in
    their orbits
  • Keplers Second Law A planet moves so that its
    radius vector sweeps out equal areas in equal
    times.
  • The radius vector of a planet is the imaginary
    line between it and the sun
  • A conclusion from Keplers Second Law is that a
    planet travels faster when it is near the sun and
    slower when it is away from the sun
  • For instance, the earth travels 30 km/s when it
    is near the sun, and 29 km/s when it is away from
    the sun, a 3 difference

22
Keplers Third Law
  • Kepler formed the Third Law by making further
    calculations in order to put more order in his
    model of the universe
  • Keplers Third Law The ratio between the square
    of the time needed by a planet to make a
    revolution around the sun and the cube of its
    average distance from the sun is the same for all
    the planets.
  • This law states the following (period of a
    planet)2/ (average orbit radius)3 is the same
    value for every planet
  • The period of a planet is the amount of time it
    needs to go once around the sun
  • The average orbit radius is the average
    distance the planet is away from the sun

23
Keplers Model of the Universe
  • Keplers model explains that the universe moves
    in simple motions
  • The positions his model predicts for celestial
    objects agrees with Tychos data as well as with
    data collected thousands of years earlier
  • His predictions for future positions of celestial
    objects is accurate
  • Keplers model also explains that the speed of a
    planet is different depending on where it is in
    its orbit and that the speed of a planet is
    related to the size of its orbit

24
Evidence The Copernican System vs. The Ptolemaic
System
  • The Copernican System is a much more simple model
    of the universe than the Ptolemaic System
  • Once the Copernican System was modified by
    Kepler, it became much more accurate than the
    Ptolemaic System
  • However the Ptolemaic System could have been
    modified by Kepler to be just as accurate as the
    Ptolemaic System the only way to prove this
    model wrong is by observations
  • The Copernican System is seen as correct today
    because there is direct evidence for many kinds
    of motions of the planets around the sun and for
    the rotation of the earth
  • For example, starts that are near to the earth
    shift slightly when compared to the positions of
    stars that are far away.

25
Gravity
  • Since you need a force to keep an object on a
    curve path, Newton theorized that there must be a
    force holding the planets in orbit around the sun
  • Newton thought that what was holding the planets
    in their orbits was a gravitational force between
    the planets and the sun, a force much like the
    force that holds us to the earth
  • He also thought that the moon was held in an
    orbit around the earth by the same type of
    attraction
  • If there was no gravitational attraction between
    the earth and the moon, the moon would just fly
    off into space
  • Newtons discovery of the Law of Gravity depended
    on using the Copernican System for the model of
    the universe
  • Gravity is a fundamental force i.e. it is a
    force that cannot be explained in terms of any
    other force
  • There are four types of fundamental forces
  • 1. gravitational forces these are forces that
    act between all bodies everywhere i.e. they
    hold bodies together
  • 2. electromagnetic forces these are forces that
    act between electrically charged particles and
    are forces that have an unlimited range
  • 3. strong forces these are forces that act
    inside atomic nuclei and are forces that have
    very short ranges
  • 4. weak forces these are forces that have the
    same properties as strong forces in terms of that
    they act inside atomic nuclei and that they are
    forces that have very short ranges

26
Evidence for the Law of Gravity outside our Solar
System
  • There is evidence for the Law of Gravitys
    accuracy outside our solar system
  • For instance, there is something known as double
    stars. Double stars are two stars that are
    rotating around each other. Since they are
    rotating around each other, there must be some
    force (i.e. gravity) that is holding them
    together.
  • The reason for applying the Law of Gravity to the
    rest of the universe is that there is evidence
    that shows that the universe is made up of the
    same matter that makes up the earth
  • In order to believe that the Law of Gravity is
    not the same throughout the universe, there has
    to be evidence to support this, which there isnt

27
Why the Earth is Round
  • The earth is round because gravity squeezes the
    earth into this shape
  • For instance, if a part of the earth is sticking
    out, the gravitational attraction of the rest of
    the earth would pull on it until it is level or
    nearly level with the rest of the earth
  • The same holds true for the reverse if a part of
    the earth is quite deep, the gravitational
    attraction of the rest of the earth would push on
    it until it is level or nearly level with the
    rest of the earth
  • Irregularities on the earths surface (i.e.
    mountains and ocean basins) are very small
    compared to the size of the earth the distance
    between the lowest point (in the depths of the
    Pacific Ocean) and the highest point (the summit
    of Mount Everest) of the earth is less than 20
    km, compared to the earths RADIUS, which is 6400
    km

28
The Shape of the Earth
  • The earth is not a perfect sphere it bulges
    slightly at the equator and is slightly flattened
    at the north and south poles
  • The distortion of the earth is not that much
    the width of the earth is only 43 km more than
    the height of the earth
  • The distortion of other planets from a perfect
    sphere
  • Venus has almost no distortion because it moves
    so slowly around its axis
  • Saturn is almost 10 not as round because it
    moves so rapidly around its axis

29
The Tides
  • The level of the ocean rises and falls twice a
    day
  • Usually the daily change of height in the ocean
    is not more than a few meters, but in some
    places, the height of the ocean can change daily
    by more than 20 meters
  • This difference in the daily change of the height
    in the ocean is due to the fact that the
    gravitational attraction of the moon is more in
    some places than in others
  • The moon attracts places on the earth that are
    closer to it more strongly that places that are
    far from it
  • The sun also affects the height of the ocean
    since it too has a gravitational attraction to
    the earth
  • Even though the sun has a greater gravitational
    attraction to the earth than the moon does, the
    affect the sun has on the height of the ocean is
    much less than the moon since the sun is farther
    away from the earth than the moon. This is
    because the tides depend on the difference
    between attractions on the side of the earth near
    the object (i.e. the moon or the sun) and on the
    side of the earth far from the object (i.e. the
    moon or the sun).
  • When the sun, moon, and earth line up in a
    straight line, solar tides increase the lunar
    tides, and thus creates especially high and low
    tides. These especially high and low tides are
    called spring tides and happen about twice a
    month
  • There are also neap tides, which are tides that
    are smaller than average high and low tides.
    These tides occur when the line between the moon
    and earth is perpendicular to the line between
    the sun and the earth

30
The Tides
31
The Discovery of Neptune
  • Neptune was discovered from calculations done on
    Uranus
  • Uranus, the seventh planet, was discovered in
    1781
  • Calculations were done on Uranus to predict its
    orbit and its future positions in the sky
  • These calculations were done using the
    attractions of the sun and the nearby planets on
    Uranus
  • These predictions were correct for 40 years,
    which is about half the time Uranus needs to make
    one complete revolution around the sun, and then
    Uranus began to move differently than the
    predictions
  • Two possibilities could account for this
  • 1. The law of gravity was incorrect since the
    calculations were based on this
  • 2. There was another unknown body acting on
    Uranus, pulling it away from the predicted path,
    that was not taken into account in the
    calculations
  • Two scientists, Urbain Leverrier and John Couch
    Adams, set out to prove the second possibility
    since the law of gravity was firmly established
  • Both scientists finished their calculations, and
    then sent them to an astronomer to find the
    object that their calculations predicted existed.
    Although Adams finished first, Leverriers
    calculations were verified by an astronomer
    first.
  • The verification of their calculations reinforced
    the law of gravity, thus continuing the
    scientific method

32
Measurement The SI System
  • Units are standard quantities that are used to
    compare a given value to
  • For example, if a distance is said to be 456
    miles, what is really being said is that the
    value is 456 when compared to the standard
    quantity, a mile
  • The SI System (International System) is the most
    widely used system of units today
  • In the SI System, the common units are
  • meter (m) for length
  • second (s) for time
  • kilogram (kg) for mass
  • Joule (J) for energy
  • Watt (W) for power
  • The SI System is used in most countries
    throughout the world, while the British System of
    units (i.e. foot (ft) for length and pound (lb)
    for mass) is used in only a few countries
  • The SI System has the advantage that the units
    are broken into subdivisions that are multiples
    of 10
  • For instance, 1 meter (m) 100 centimeters (cm)
  • The British System doesnt have this same
    advantage its units arent broken into equal
    subdivisions
  • For instance, 1 foot (ft) 12 inches (in)

33
The Subdivisions of the SI System and Conversions
between the SI System and the British System
  • Table 1.1 represents the subdivisions of the SI
    System
  • Each subdivision is a factor of 10
  • Table 1.2 represents the conversion of lengths
    between the SI System and the British System

34
Example Calculations of Conversions between the
SI System and the British System
  • Example 1 How many feet are in 45 meters?
  • Answer 45.0 meters x (3.28 feet/1 meter) 148
    feet
  • Example 2 How many centimeters are in 2.6
    inches?
  • Answer 2.6 inches x (2.54 centimeters/1 inch)
    6.6 centimeters

35
Significant Figures
  • Significant Figures show how accurate a
    measurement is i.e. how sure we are of the
    measurement
  • If a measurement is 65 meters, it is accurate to
    2 significant figures
  • A measurement can never be more accurate than it
    originally was i.e. if it has 2 significant
    figures, it cant have any more or less than two
    significant figures
  • When you multiply or divide two figures together,
    the answer has the amount of significant figures
    in the figure that has the least amount of
    significant figures
  • For example, if you multiply 65.2 by 3.285, the
    answer is 214, with three significant figures
    because 65.2 has the least amount of significant
    figures (3 instead of the 4 in 3.285)
  • When you are performing a series of calculations,
    keep an extra digit in intermediate steps only
    round to the correct significant figures for the
    final answer
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