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1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and...

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1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening. No class next Thursday - but there will be homework related to our lunar observations. 2.Homework 2 is due now. Homework 3 will be posted today, due Feb 21 (Thursday). 2.Astrobiology Lecture Tonight Announcements
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Page 1: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening. No class next Thursday - but there will be homework related to our lunar observations.

2.Homework 2 is due now. Homework 3 will be posted today, due Feb 21 (Thursday).

2.Astrobiology Lecture Tonight

3. Essay Topics due Today.

Announcements

Page 2: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Date:    Tuesday February 12, 2008

Time:    Lecture (7pm) followed by book signing (8pm)

Place:   Center for Creative Photography (UA Main Campus).

Gregory Benford, Author and Astrophysicist at UC Irvine

"Seeking Ozymandias: Building and Searching for Beacons”

What would transmitters be like if built by civilizations with a variety of motivations, but who cared about cost? We have considered the physical limitations a beacon builder would face in constructing extremely high power radiators. Beacons built by distant advanced, wealthy societies may have very different characteristics from what SETI researchers now seek.Very high power systems have driving factors set by fundamental properties of materials, such as cooling of such high powers. The Principle of Parsimony suggests that beacon will compete with other social goods, for altruistic reasons. Such Beacons will have narrow beam widths, be pulsed and broadband, to minimize costs. Therefore, the transmission strategy for a distant beacon may be a rapid scan of the galactic plane, to cover the angular space. Searches for such intermittent, broadband signals could find signals we have neglected, because we believed earlier that the Beacon builders will be spendthrifts. Yet stable societies do not sacrifice their societies for distant others. Perhaps we should consider long-term stability from a moral point of view.

Page 3: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

“Finally we shall place the Sun himself at the center of the Universe. All this is suggested by the systematic procession of events and the harmony of the whole Universe, if only we face the facts, as they say, ‘with both eyes open’ ”

- Nicolaus Copernicus De Revolutionibus orbium

coelestium

“There was music in the cafes at night and revolution in the air. ” - Bob Dylan

Page 4: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Copernicus (1473-1543) was the sun of a successful merchant in central Poland. Copernicus studied to be a physician, which, at the time included the study of astronomy, because doctors used astrology to decide on treatments. Copernicus worked as a deacon in the Church and spent his time studying Astronomy. He wrote the first draft of De Revoluitonibus in 1513, but, because of worries about how it would be received, he delayed publication until 1543, when he was on his death bed.

Page 5: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

What else was going on at the Beginning of the 16th Century?

• Europe was coming out of the dark ages, rediscovering Greek and Roman learning and exploring the world.

• Explorers were sailing to Africa and Asia. Columbus discovered America while Copernicus was studying at the University. Malgalhães (Magellan) circumnavigated the globe. All this relied heavily on Astronomy.

• Printing was becoming common. A man of modest means, like Copernicus, could own books. He had 2 copies of the Almagest.

• There was an explosion in artistic activity.

Page 6: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Michelangelo’s “David”1501-1504

da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” 1503-1506

Page 7: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Copernicus’ Solar SystemCopernicus’ Solar System

From De Revolutionibus

•The Sun is in the center

•Simpler than Ptolemy’s Model (No need for epicycles)

• Circular Orbits are assumed. This will be proved wrong.

• More accurate? No, it had about the same accuracy.

• Why would we prefer this model to Ptolemy’s?

Page 8: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Ptolemy’s Geocentric System, codified in the Almagest

This is getting complicated.Figures from Astronomy Today by Chaisson and McMillan

Link to movie

Page 9: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Occam’s Razor

“One should not increase, beyond what is necessary, the number of entities required to explain anything.”

If you have two theories that are equally successful in explaining a phenomenon, the simpler one is better.

William of Ockham (1285-1349) was a Franciscan monk and philosopher who espoused the virtues of simplicity and poverty in science and in life. Suggesting that the Pope conform to the latter got him excommunicated.

The conviction of simplicity persists.

Page 10: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Tycho Brahe (1546 – 1601)

The discovery of a new star

Page 11: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Stellar Parallax

• Tycho argued that the new star must be in the celestial sphere because it exhibited no parallax.

• This discovery showed that the heavens were not perfect and unchanging.

Page 12: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

25 Years of Planetary Observations

Tycho caught the attention of King Frederick II of Denmark

With royal funds, he built the ultimate observatory.

He designed, & tested instruments, compiling the most comprehensive planetary observations ever, with accuracy of 1°, about 5x better than before.

Uraniborg, Hven

complete with wine cellar and prison

Page 13: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Johannes Kepler(1571-1630)

Kepler joined Tycho a year before Tycho’s death (1600).

Assuming Tycho’s position, Kepler inherited the records of Tycho’s observations.

From this Kepler knew that planets did not travel on circles and devised a new way to describe planetary motion.

Kepler searched for a single physical explanation to planetary motion – a force between planets and the Sun.

Page 14: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

*Influenced by William Gilbert’s De Magnete

Kepler aimed to explain Tycho’s observations which showed that planets do not move in circles

He noted that planets closer to the Sun in Copernicus’ model moved faster than those further out.

A force must therefore act. Kepler thought it was magnetic*

Thus he believed that a simple set of laws existed by which all planets move.

Page 15: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Kepler’s Three Laws

1. Planets move about the Sun in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus.

2. The line joining a planet to the Sun sweeps over equal areas in equal intervals of time.

3. The square of the time of one revolution of a planet about the Sun is proportional to the cube of the orbit’s semimajor axis.

Page 16: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

1. Planets move in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus.

Page 17: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

2. The line joining the Sun to the planet sweeps equal areas in equal intervals of

time.

Link to movie

Page 18: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

3. The square of a planet’s period equals the cube of its semi-major axis

P is the period, a is the semi-major axis, k is a constant which depends on the units of P & a. (For P in years and a in Astronomical Units, k=1.)

The farther a planet is from the Sun, the longer it’s year

P2 = k · a3

Page 19: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Simple Example of P2=a3

• Consider a hypothetical planet orbiting the sun with a semi-major axis of 4 A.U.

• Let a = 4 A.U. (Astronomical Units)

• Then a3 = 43 A.U.3 = 64 A.U.3

• P2 = 64 years2

• P = SQRT(P2)=SQRT(64) years = 8 years

• The period of the planet is 8 years.

Page 20: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

0

20000

40000

60000

80000

0 20000 40000 60000 80000

P^2

a^3

P a P2 a3

Mercury 0.24 0.39 0.058 0.058

Venus 0.61 0.72 0.378 0.378

Earth 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00

Mars 1.88 1.52 3.53 3.53

Jupiter 11.86 5.20 140.6 140.8

Saturn 29.42 9.54 865.8 867.4

Uranus 83.75 19.19 7014. 7067.

Neptune 163.7 30.07 26804. 27186.

Pluto 248.0 39.48 61514. 61540.

Kepler’s Third Law

Page 21: 1.Lunar Eclipse Feb 20 (Next Wednesday)!!!! Next Tuesday’s class will be devoted to the moon and the eclipse. We’ll watch from the mall on Wednesday evening.

Summary

In the 16th century Europeans began exploring the planet, navigating by the stars, and renewed their interest in science and the arts. In Astronomy this led to the first new theory describing celestial motions in 1400 years. The Copernican revolution was a tentative, first step towards the establishment of the modern scientific method.


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