19
Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Ancient Astronomy

Neolithic Astronomy

Stonehenge

~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Page 2: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

The Americas

Machu Picchu – the Intihuatana or “hitching post of the sun”

Several of the major cultures had complex structures that reveal astronomical alignments

Marked solstices, equinoxes, and positions of the Moon.

Page 3: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

The Caracol at Chitzen Itza, Yucatan ~ 800 AD

Venus was the ‘Great or Ancient Star”. Observations from slits in circular structure used to record times of its rising and setting. Measurements of Venus and moon used to establish a calendar and for timekeeping.

Page 4: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

N. America – Medicine Wheels in western plains

Stone alignments in a spoked wheel pattern some with large cairns that marked sight lines

All are on high places with a clear view of the horizon.

Medicine Wheel in Big Horn Mtns, Wyoming

Date from ~ 1400 - 1700

Page 5: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Geocentric or Ptolemaic modelProblem – apparent backward motions of planets -- retrograde

Page 6: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

The Heliocentric Model

Copernicus 1473 - 1543

Kept circular orbits and epicycles, explained retrograde motion

Page 7: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Galileo 1564 – 1642

Page 8: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Galileo’s famous observations with the telescope

Surface of the Moon – mountains, craters

Phases of Venus –

Saturn had “ears”

4 moons of Jupiter

Milky Way made of 1000’s of stars

Sun was blemished

Page 9: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Galileo’s 3 decisive discoveries for Heliocentric model

:

1. Surface features on the Moon

2. Jupiter’s moons and motions

3. “Full” phases of Venus

None of these made sense in geocentric model,

but they were all perfectly OK in Copernicus’

universe. The phases of Venus are especially

decisive.

Page 10: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Tycho Brahe 1546 – 1601

Page 11: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Brahe couldn’t measure stellar parallax and therefore couldn’t confirm Copernican model -- proposed his own

Page 12: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Thomas Digges – English mathematician, astronomer

1546 – 1595

Contemporary with Brahe and Galileo, but his model goes a step further

"This orb of stars fixed infinitely up extends itself in altitude spherically, and therefore immovable the palace of felicity garnished with perpetual shining glorious lights innumerable, far excelling over [the] sun both in quantity and quality the very court of celestial angels, devoid of grief and replenished with perfect endless joy, the habitacle for the elect."

Page 13: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Johannes Kepler 1571-- 1630

The Astronomical Unit ( 1 AU)

distance Earth to the Sun

93 x 106 mi , 150 x 106 km

Page 14: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Kepler’s 3 laws of planetary motion

1. The orbits of the planets are ellipses with the Sun at one focus

2. The line joining the planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal times.

3. Period of revolution proportional to distance from Sun

If a = average distance from the Sun and P = orbital period, then P 2 = (constant) x a 3

If P in years, a in astronomical units

then P 2 = a 3

Page 15: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Kepler’s third law -- the numbers

a (AU) P (yr) a 3 P 2

MERCURY 0.387 0.241 0.058

0.058

VENUS 0.723 0.615 0.378

0.378

EARTH 1.000 1.000 1.00

1.00

MARS 1.524 1.881 3.54 3.54

JUPITER 5.203 11.86 141 141

SATURN 9.54 29.46 868 868

Page 16: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Isaac Newton 1642 -- 1727

Astronomer, mathematician, physicist – father of physics, mechanics

Laws of Motion and Law of Gravity

Page 17: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

The 3 Laws of Motion and the Law of Gravity

Some basic concepts:

Speed – how fast an object is moving mi/hr, km/s

Velocity -- vector – speed + direction

Acceleration – rate of change in velocity

Inertia – property of an object resists change in state of rest or motion

1st Law -- An object remains at rest or in motion (in a straight line) unless

acted upon by an outside force

Page 18: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

2nd Law -- The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the force

acting on it.

F = ma Defines: Force

Mass (m) - total amount of material in an object

weight depends on the force of gravity on an object with mass m

3rd Law -- (Law of Reaction) Whenever a force is exerted on an object there

is an equal and opposite reaction

Page 19: Ancient Astronomy Neolithic Astronomy Stonehenge ~ 2800 – 1700 BCE

Law of Gravity -- the force of attraction between two objects is directly

proportional to their masses and inversely proportional to the

square of the distance between them

( attractive force between M and m )

FGrav = G x M x m / (distance) 2 .

Laws of Motion + Gravity explained Kepler’s Laws

Newton’s form of Kepler’s 3rd law:

P2 = 4 2/G x a3/ (M1 + M2)

Why the difference ?

Orbital Motion is due to inertia plus gravity – the force of acceleration towards

the center -- centripetal acceleration