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Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.)

Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

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Page 1: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Aristotle’s Solar System Model(~350 B.C.)

Page 2: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Ptolemy’s Solar System Model(~150 A.D.)

Perfect Circular OrbitsWith constant velocity

Epicycles

Page 3: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Copernicus’s Solar System Model(1543)

Sun Centered (Helio-Centric)Perfect Circular OrbitsWith constant velocity

Page 4: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Thycho Brahe(born 1546)

Carefully recorded planetary positions for 30 years.

Generated the BEST set of planetary position data ever.

Page 5: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Johannes Kepler (Tycho Brahe’s assistant) Inherited Brahe’s data set and came up with three laws of planetary motion:

Kepler’s 1st Law- Elliptical Orbits

Kepler’s 2nd Law – Equal areas in equal times

Kepler’s 3rd Law – R3 / T2 = Constant

Page 6: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Galileo Galilei (~1609) First person to use a telescope to view the planets. He saw:

-The moon had mountains and craters and blemishes.-The sun had black spots on it.-Venus went through phases like the moon and appeared larger and smaller.-Jupiter had “moons” that orbited it.-Saturn had “ears”.

Page 7: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Jupiter and its moonsSaturn’s Ears & Moon’s craters/mountains

Page 8: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Isaac Newton (~1687) Published Principia, which included his Theory of Universal Gravitation

-What if the same force that pulls me toward the ground, also pulls the moon toward the earth?

w = mg Weight IS the force of gravity and it is clearly linearly proportional to my mass. (Newton’s third law of motion suggests that the force of gravity should also be proportional to the earth’s mass.)So, Fg a m1 m2 And considering the acceleration of gravity at the surface of earth (9.8 m/s2 and the centripetal acceleration of the moon) Newton deduced that Fg a 1/R2

Fg a m1 m2 /R2 Fg = G m1 m2 /R2

Page 9: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Fg = G m1 m2 /R2 Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation

Henry Cavendish Measured G in 1797 using a torsion balance.He found that G = 6.67x10-11Nm2/kg2

This was called “weighing the earth”. I’ll explain why…

Now, we can use Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation to:Find g on the surface of different planets.Find the orbital speed of satellites.Find the mass of an object that is being orbited.

Page 10: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Let’s find:

The mass of the earth.

The mass of the sun.

The mass of Jupiter.

The acceleration of gravity on mars.

The orbital radius of a geosynchronous satellite.

Page 11: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles
Page 12: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

FgFg

m1

d

m2

Fg = G m1 m2

d2

Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation

G = 6.67x10-11 N kg2 / m2

1-D Superposition

Fg2-1

m1

Fg3-1

m2 m3FgNET = Fg2-1 + Fg3-1

Note: pay attention to the direction of the gravitational force caused by each mass. Assign + and – signs that are consistent with the direction of each Fg

Page 13: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

2-D Superposition

Fg2-1

m1

Fg3-1

m2

m3

FgNET = Fg2-1 + Fg3-1

Note: pay attention to the direction of the gravitational force caused by each mass. Assign + and – signs that are consistent with the direction of each Fg

Fg2-1FgNET

Fg3-1

Page 14: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

R

r

d

Superposition works when masses are “subtracted”/removed too! In a problem like this, imagine you start with a complete sphere, that exerts an Fg on the small mass m, then you remove the inner sphere and that removes the force of gravity that that sphere exerted on mass m. Symbolically: FgNET = Fg - Fg

Remember to pay attention to the directions of each of the forces!

Superpositionand Subtraction?

m

Page 15: Aristotle’s Solar System Model (~350 B.C.). Ptolemy’s Solar System Model (~150 A.D.) Perfect Circular Orbits With constant velocity Epicycles

Fg = G m1 m2 /R2 =

m1 g

m1 v2 / R

m1 4p2R / T2

G = 6.67x10-11 Nm2/kg2

G = 6.67x10-11 Nm2/kg2

Ug = - GMm/R

TEo = 0 (Escape condition)

T12/R1

3 = T22/R2

3 (Kepler’s 3rd Law)