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Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets

Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets. Chapter Four. Ancient astronomers invented geocentric models to explain planetary motions. Like the Sun and Moon, the planets move on the celestial sphere with respect to the background of stars

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Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets

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  1. Gravitation and the Waltz of the Planets Chapter Four

  2. Ancient astronomers invented geocentric modelsto explain planetary motions • Like the Sun and Moon, the planets move on the celestial sphere with respect to the background of stars • Most of the time a planet moves eastward in direct (prograde) motion, in the same direction as the Sun and the Moon, but from time to time it moves westward in retrograde motion

  3. Ancient astronomers believed the Earth to be at the center of the universe • They invented a complex system of epicycles and deferents to explain the direct and retrograde motions of the planets on the celestial sphere

  4. Nicolaus Copernicus devised the first comprehensive heliocentric model • Copernicus’s heliocentric (Sun-centered) theory simplified the general explanation of planetary motions • In a heliocentric system, the Earth is one of the planets orbiting the Sun • The sidereal period of a planet, its true orbital period, is measured with respect to the stars

  5. A planet undergoes retrograde motion as seen from Earth when the Earth and the planet pass each other

  6. A planet’s synodic period is measured with respect to the Earth and the Sun (for example, from one opposition to the next)

  7. Sidereal and Synodic Orbital periods • For Inferior Planets 1/P = 1/E + 1/S • For Superior Planets 1/P = 1/E – 1/S P = Sidereal Period of the planet S = Synodic Period of planet E = Earth’s Sidereal Period (1 year)

  8. Tycho Brahe’s astronomical observations disproved ancient ideas about the heavens

  9. Parallax Shift

  10. Johannes Kepler proposed elliptical pathsfor the planets about the Sun • Using data collected by Tycho Brahe, Kepler deduced three laws of planetary motion: • the orbits are ellipses • a planet’s speed varies as it moves around its elliptical orbit • the orbital period of a planet is related to the size of its orbit

  11. Kepler’s First Law

  12. Kepler’s Second Law

  13. Kepler’s Third Law P2 = a3 P = planet’s sidereal period, in years a = planet’s semimajor axis, in AU

  14. Ellipse Relations • An ellipse is a conic section whose eccentricity, e, is 0 ≤ e < 1. The circle is an ellipse with e = 0. • The relation between the semi-major (a) and semi-minor (b) axes is b2 = a2(1 - e2). • The point in the orbit where the planet is closest to the Sun is the perihelion and the associated perihelion distance, dp = a(1 - e) • The aphelion is the point in the orbit furthest from the Sun and the aphelion distance, da = a(1 + e).

  15. Galileo’s discoveries with a telescope stronglysupported a heliocentric model • The invention of the telescope led Galileo to new discoveries that supported a heliocentric model • These included his observations of the phases of Venus and of the motions of four moons around Jupiter

  16. One of Galileo’s most important discoveries with the telescope was that Venus exhibits phases like those of the Moon • Galileo also noticed that the apparent size of Venus as seen through his telescope was related to the planet’s phase • Venus appears small at gibbous phase and largest at crescent phase

  17. There is a correlation between the phases of Venus and the planet’s angular distance from the Sun

  18. Geocentric • To explain why Venus is never seen very far from the Sun, the Ptolemaic model had to assume that the deferents of Venus and of the Sun move together in lockstep, with the epicycle of Venus centered on a straight line between the Earth and the Sun • In this model, Venus was never on the opposite side of the Sun from the Earth, and so it could never have shown the gibbous phases that Galileo observed

  19. In 1610 Galileo discovered four moons, now called the Galilean satellites, orbiting Jupiter

  20. Isaac Newton formulated three laws that describefundamental properties of physical reality • Isaac Newton developed three principles, called the laws of motion, that apply to the motions of objects on Earth as well as in space • These are • the law of inertia: a body remains at rest, or moves in a straight line at a constant speed, unless acted upon by a net outside force • F = m x a (the force on an object is directly proportional to its mass and acceleration) • the principle of action and reaction: whenever one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body exerts an equal and opposite force on the first body

  21. Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation F = gravitational force between two objects m1 = mass of first object m2 = mass of second object r = distance between objects G = universal constant of gravitation • If the masses are measured in kilograms and the distance between them in meters, then the force is measured in newtons • Laboratory experiments have yielded a value for G of G = 6.67 × 10–11 newton • m2/kg2

  22. Newton’s description of gravity accounts for Kepler’slaws and explains the motions of the planets and other orbiting bodies

  23. Mass vs Weight • Mass is an intrinsic quantity and for a given object is invariant of position. It is measured in kg. • Weight by contrast is the ‘response’ of mass to the local gravitational field. It is a force and measured in Newtons • Thus while you would have the same mass on the earth and its Moon, your weight is different. • W(eight) = m(ass) x g(ravitational acceleration)

  24. Orbits • The law of universal gravitation accounts for planets not falling into the Sun nor the Moon crashing into the Earth • Paths A, B, and C do not have enough horizontal velocity to escape Earth’s surface whereas Paths D, E, and F do. • Path E is where the horizontal velocity is exactly what is needed so its orbit matches the circular curve of the Earth

  25. Orbits may be any of a family of curves called conic sections

  26. Kinetic energy refers to the energy a body of mass m1 has due to its speed v: Ek = ½ m1 v2 (where energy is measured in Joules, J). Potential energy is energy due to the position of m1 a distance r away from another body of mass m2, Ep = -G m1m2 / r. The total energy, E, is a sum of the kinetic plus potential energies; E = Ek + Ep. A body whose total energy is < 0, orbits a more massive body in a bound, elliptical orbit (e < 1). A body whose total energy is > 0, is in an unbound, hyperbolic orbit (e > 1) and escapes to infinity. A body whose total energy is exactly 0 just escapes to infinity in a parabolic orbit (e = 1) with zero velocity. Energy

  27. Escape velocity • The velocity that must be acquired by a body to just escape, i.e., to have zero total energy, is called the escape velocity. By setting Ek + Ep = 0, we find: v2escape = 2 G m2 / r

  28. Velocity • A body of mass m1 in a circular orbit about a (much) more massive body of mass m2 orbits at a constant speed or the circular velocity, vc where v2c = G m2 / r (This is derived by equating the gravitational force with the centripetal force, m1v2 / r ). • Note that v2escapeis 2 v2c .

  29. Kepler’s Third Law a la Newton • P2 = (4 x π2 x a3)/(G x (m1 + m2)) P = Sidereal orbital period (seconds) A = Semi-major axis planet orbit (kilometers) m = mass of objects (planets, etc. kilograms) G = Gravitational constant 6.673 x 10-11 N-m2/kg2

  30. Gravitational forces between two objectsproduce tides

  31. The Origin of Tidal Forces

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