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Motion

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The constellations that lie along the ecliptic are collectively called the zodiac. The constellations you can see depend on the time of year. Planetary Motion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motion


1
Motion
  • Dr Bryce

2
Class Notices
  • This weeks observing at Clear Sky Patrol for
    students with ID numbers ending in a 2 or a 3

3
The Suns annual motion
4
In summary
  • The Sun appears to move Eastwards along the
    Ecliptic.
  • At midnight the stars on a North to South
    imaginary line are opposite the Sun.
  • The constellations that lie along the ecliptic
    are collectively called the zodiac.
  • The constellations you can see depend on the time
    of year.

5
Planetary Motion
  • We see Venus (and it we are very fortunate
    Mercury) just after Sunset/Sunrise.
  • Morning/Evening Star
  • Mars, Jupiter, Saturn etc move Eastwards from
    night to night.
  • Planets move along the Ecliptic

6
Westwards motion
7
The explanation
8
In ancient times
  • It was believed that the Earth was at the centre
    of the Universe.
  • The Sun, Moon and Planets moved on perfect
    circles
  • Made it difficult to explain retrograde motion.

9
How distant are the stars?
  • Possibly one of mans first questions about
    astronomy.
  • We have developed many different techniques for
    measuring the distances to celestial objects.
  • The technique for measuring the distances to our
    nearest stellar neighbours is called parallax

10
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11
Difficult to observe
  • The angles that even the closest stars move by
    are very small.
  • As parallax was not observed by ancient
    astronomers they had great difficulty believing
    that the Earth was orbiting the Sun.
  • They did not believe that the stars were so far
    away as to not observably move!

12
Remember
13
Parallax
  • Gives us depth perception
  • Hold a finger up at arms length, look at the
    finger with just your right eye and then just
    your left.
  • You will observe that your fingers position
    relative to the background has moved.

14
Parsec
  • Stars dont move by large amounts relative to the
    background.
  • Typically close by stars move by fractions of arc
    seconds.
  • The further away a star is the smaller the angle.
  • A star subtending one second of arc when observed
    at positions differing by 1 AU is 1 parsec
    distant.

15
Modern Science and the Greeks
  • Greeks were the first people known to make
    models of nature.
  • They tried to explain patterns in nature without
    resorting to myth or the supernatural.

Greek geocentric model (c. 400 B.C.)
16
Eratosthenes measures the Earth (c. 240 BC)
Measurements Syene to Alexandria distance
5000 stadia angle 7
Calculate circumference of Earth 7/360 ?
(circum. Earth) 5000 stadia ? circum. Earth
5000 ? 360/7 stadia 250,000 stadia
Compare to modern value ( 40,100 km) Greek
stadium 1/6 km ? 250,000 stadia 42,000 km
17
  • The most sophisticated geocentric model was that
    of Ptolemy (A.D. 100-170) the Ptolemaic model
  • Sufficiently accurate to remain in use for 1,500
    years.
  • Arabic translation of Ptolemys work named
    Almagest (the greatest compilation)

Ptolemy
18
The Ptolemaic model explanation of retrograde
motion. Planets really do go backward in this
model
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