Transcript Day-4
Astronomy 3040
Astrobiology
Spring_2016
Day-4
Homework -1
Due Monday, Feb. 8
Chapter 2:
1, 3, 16
23, 24, 26
29, 30, 33
44
53, 54, 56
The appendices will be useful
Life Beyond Earth - History
If you go out to a dark location at night and look up (for a
few years), what do you see?
Sun rises and sets every day; moves across the sky
Stars rise and set every day; move at a slightly different rate
than Sun ==> Different stars visible at different times.
Moon goes through monthly phases
Planets meander in a “mysterious manner”
No wind
Conclusions?
The Earth is flat and motionless.
But we know the Sun controls life (day/night)
The Moon influences tides
Stars are useful for timing agriculture
Lots of ties to daily life and ritual
Greeks
By ~500 B.C.E. the Greek society was well established and
philosophy was began.
Thayles (~624-546 BCE) origin of Greek science
What is the Universe made of?
Plato & Aristotle - 3 tenets of modern science.
1. Try to understand nature w/o supernatural expl.
2. Mathematics, geometry.
3. Power of reasoning from observations.
==> Models
The Greek Universe
Geocentric
Celestial Sphere
Ptolemaic model (100-170 A.D.)
Epicycles
Aristarchus (310-230 B.C.E.)
Heliocentric – had it right!
But disagreed with Aristotle
Could not measure parallax!
Heliocentric Universe
Anti-intellectual fervor of 5th Century
Libraries destroyed, The Church came to power
Islamic scholars saved and translated much of Greek
Contact with Hindu scholars, interaction with Chinese
Nicholas Copernicus (1473-1543)
Aware of Aristarchus's work
Advocated the heliocentric view
Tycho Brahe (1546-1601)
Observational data
All done with naked eye
Heliocentric Universe
Johannes Kepler (1571-1630)
3 Laws of Planetary Motion
1. Elliptical orbits, Sun at one focus
2. Equal area in equal time
3. P2 = ka3 (P in years, A in Astronomical Units)
Heliocentric Universe
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Laid foundations of modern physics
Inertia (later explained by Newton's 1st law)
Gravity
First to use a telescope for astronomical purposes
1. Sunspots – Sun was not a perfect surface.
2. Craters on Moon – Moon was not a perfect surface.
3. Observations of thousands of stars not visible by eye.
So stars more numerous than Tycho thought.
4. Geocentric Universe death
Four moons orbiting Jupiter
Phases of Venus
Modern Science
Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
1687 – Principia – precise math descriptions
3 Laws of Motion
Universal Law of Gravitation
Invented Calculus (to prove Kepler's Laws)
Developed new type of telescope
The Life Debate - Greeks
Thayles - What is the Universe made of?
2 schools of thought
Life must be everywhere, abundant
No way, Jose!
Anaximander – other Earths at other times.
Greeks
Atomists (many worlds)
Aristotelians (Earth is unique, center of everything)
The Life Debate –
Copernican Revolution
Copernicus proved the Earth was not the center
Aristotle was wrong.
Galileo – lunar features could be land & water.
Kepler – moon had an atmosphere, and inhabited by
intelligent beings.
W. Herschel – assumed all planets inhabited.
Lowell – canals on Mars.
Based on hope & beliefs, not real evidence.
Modern Science
The Scientific Method.
Observations
Question
Hypothesis
Prediction
Test
Revise/More
Predictions
Modern Science
OR The Eureka Moment.
Look at Nature in a “general way”
not looking for anything in specific
Galileo
Voyager 1, 2 - Europa
Must overcome “personal experience”
Gravity doesn't “work” because of drag.
Hallmarks of Modern Science
1. Modern science seeks explanations for observed
phenomena that rely solely on natural causes.
2. Science progresses through the creation and testing
of models of nature that explain the observations as
simply as possible.
3. A scientific model must make testable predictions
about natural phenomena that would force us to
revise or abandon the model if the predictions do not
agree with observations.
Modern Science
Occam's Razor
William of Occam (1285 - 1349)
K.I.S.S.
Verifiable Observations
UFOs vs. Einstein Theory of Relativity
Science, Nonscience, Pseudoscience
Objectivity
Scientific Theory
Newton, Darwin, Einstein
Gravity
1666 – Newton
Apple & tree ==> Moon & Earth
Universal Law of Gravitation
Every mass attracts every other mass through a
force called gravity.
Directly proportional to product of masses.
Inversely proportional to square of distance
between them.
G = 6.67 X 10-11 m3/kgs2
Force is in Newtons
F = ma (kgm/s2)
Gravity
Einstein ... space-time
But, do we REALLY understand gravity?