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History of Astronomy

History of Astronomy. Arny, 3 rd Edition, Chapter 1. Which Theory is Correct?. Which Theory is Correct?. Classical theories (500 B.C. to 150 A.D.) Some ideas very complicated and wrong Others ideas simple and correct People just like you and me. Lesson overview.

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History of Astronomy

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  1. History of Astronomy Arny, 3rd Edition, Chapter 1

  2. Which Theory is Correct? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  3. Which Theory is Correct? • Classical theories (500 B.C. to 150 A.D.) • Some ideas very complicated and wrong • Others ideas simple and correct • People just like you and me Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  4. Lesson overview • What is the Earth’s shape? • How big are the Moon and Earth? • How far is it to the Sun and Moon? • What is the structure of the universe? • How does Occam’s razor question geocentric models of the universe? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  5. Introduction • Astronomers of ancient Greece and Egypt first to explain the heavens • Some ancient Greeks are famous in astronomy: • Pythagoras • Aristotle • Aristarchus • Eratosthenes • Ptolemy Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  6. Introduction (cont’d) • Determined important things using naked eye and simple math • Also got some things wrong • Made models to explain motions of Sun, Moon, and planets Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  7. What is the Earth’s shape? • Earth is nearly round • Ancient astronomer’s beliefs about the Earth’s shape not really science Pythagoras 500 B.C. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  8. What is the Earth’sshape? (cont’d) • Pythagoras said Earth was round: • Sphere a perfect shape • Gods made Earth • Was Pythagoras right? • He never could prove it. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  9. VOCABULARY • ob·late • – a spheroid flattened at the poles

  10. What is the Earth’sshape? (cont’d) • Aristotle—two things “prove” Earth’s spherical shape: • Earth’s shadow on the Moon • What a traveler moving south sees in the sky 300 B.C. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  11. How big is the Moon? • Aristarchus estimated • Relative size of Earth and Moon • Moon’s diameter related to Earth’s 250 B.C. (he guessed 1/3; actually, 1/4th Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  12. How big is the Earth? 250 B.C. (estimated circumference of Earth to be 25,000 miles; actual: 24,901 At Equator) • Eratosthenes first measured Earth’s size • Used simple math and measurements of shadows • Accurately estimated Earth’s circumference Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  13. Time Zones How many time zones? About how wide is each, in miles? So, how fast does the Earth rotate? Is it possible to fly in an airplane fast enough to stay in daylight for an entire 24-hour flight? Which direction would you have to fly to do that?

  14. How far is it to the Sun and Moon? • Aristarchus estimated • Sun about 20 times farther away from the Earth than the Moon (ACTUAL: 238,857 miles compared to 93 million miles = 389 times!) • Sun to have seven times Earth’s diameter (ACTUAL: 2,713,406 divided by 24,901 = ~ 109 times!) How could he be so accurate about Earth’s size, and so wrong on these other points? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  15. How far is it to the Sun and Moon? (cont’d) • Angle B had to be 90 degrees for the Moon to appear to be perfectly half-lit. • Knowing angle A, Aristarchus set the scale of the triangle to estimate the distance of the Sun from Earth. He measured angle A—the angle between the Sun and Moon— when the Moon was exactly half-lit. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  16. What is the center of the universe? • Aristarchus recognized the Sun was larger than Earth • Said it was the center of our solar system AND the center of the universe Was he right? Was he popular for that belief? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  17. Eudoxus believed Earth is the center of the universe • Geocentric theory • Objects in the sky generally move east to west ge·o·cen·tric    – representing the earth as a center: a geocentric theory of the universe. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  18. How could our ancestors believe Earth is the center? • Each celestial body mounted on its own revolving transparent sphere • Bodies moving fastest across the sky were closest to Earth • Right or wrong? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  19. Ptolemy’s geocentric theory • What Ptolemy of Alexandria assumed about planetary movement • Theory included epicycles    – a small circle the center of which moves around in the circumference of a larger circle: attempts to account for observed periodic irregularities in planetary motions. (Spirograph) • 80 of these needed to explain motions of Sun, Earth, Moon and the 5 planets known at the time • How well did his model predict motion? 150 A.D. Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  20. Problems with Ptolemy’s geocentric theory STARS! • Ptolemy’s first model couldn’t cover: • Ptolemaic models became overly complex • Belief in his theory declined – though they were in vogue until mid-1500s 1,400+ years! Why could these “epicycles” never explain celestial motion perfectly? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  21. Geocentric theory fails thetest of “Occam’s razor” • Occam’s razor: a rule in science created by William of Ockham • Occam’s razor says: “If you can choose between a very complicated theory and simple theory, the simple one is probably better and is more likely to be correct.” Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  22. OCCAM’S RAZOR ACTIVITY

  23. Lesson review • What is the Earth’s shape? • What we know and what Pythagoras believed • What Aristotle showed and how • How big is the Earth? • What we know and how ancients guessed • What Eratosthenes estimated the Earth’s circumference to be and how Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  24. Lesson review (cont’d) • How far is it to the Sun and Moon? • Aristarchus estimated distances from the Earth to the Moon and Sun—right or wrong? • He estimated the Sun’s and Earth’s relative sizes—right or wrong? • How does Occam’s razor question geocentric models of the universe? • What Ptolemy proposed • What Occam’s razor says about complicated theories Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  25. Activity—Questions for review • Who is Pythagoras and how did he help our understanding of astronomy? • Who is Aristotle and how did he help our understanding of astronomy? • Who is Eratosthenes and how did he help our understanding of astronomy? • Who is Aristarchus and how did he help our understanding of astronomy? • Who is Ptolemy and how did he help our understanding of astronomy? • How does Occam’s razor help us figure out which scientific theories may be right and which are likely to be wrong? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  26. Activity—Test yourself Name an ancient Greek astronomer and tell his contribution to astronomy. What are two observations the ancient Greek astronomers used to make their calculations? Why was Ptolemy’s theory of the universe finally abandoned? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  27. Summary • What is the Earth’s shape? • How big is the Moon and the Earth? • How far is it to the Sun and Moon? • What is the structure of the universe? • How does Occam’s razor question geocentric models of the universe? Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

  28. Next Done — Key thinkers and classical theories Next — Four great Renaissance astronomers Lesson 4: Early Ideas of the Heavens: Classical Astronomy

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