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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution
The Birth of Modern Science
Outline
2.1 Ancient Astronomy
2.2 The Geocentric Universe
2.3 The Heliocentric Model of the Solar System
2.4 The Birth of Modern Astronomy
2.5 The Laws of Planetary Motion
2.6 The Dimensions of the Solar System
2.7 Newtonโs Laws
2.8 Newtonian Mechanics
Summary
Chapter 2 continues the view from Earth started in the previous chapter by discussing the apparent motions of the
planets, which leads to two very important concepts that are introduced in this chapter: the historical development
of astronomy and the laws of planetary motion and gravity. The historical context in which these concepts are
couched provides a framework for demonstrating the scientific process and for portraying that process as a human
endeavor. Although the chapter takes a mostly European view, as is traditional, it does speak to the larger issue of
contributions from cultures all over the world and throughout history. Modern astronomy is anything but limited
to western contributions; it is a truly international science, as will be seen in later chapters.
Chapter 2 is very important, not just for its historical context, but because it describes the ideas of gravity and
orbital motion that pervade the rest of the text. There is hardly a chapter that follows that does not make reference
to this material and build on it. It is therefore imperative that students understand this material; without this
understanding, very little of the following 26 chapters will make sense. The material is also highly relevant to
issues of technology and modern life. For example, students often take the many satellites that serve us in orbit for
granted, and may have a poor understanding (and some misconceptions) about what it takes to get them in orbit
and keep them there. Cartoons as well as some science fiction movies and television programs can promote these
misconceptions that have become the โlived realityโ of our students.
Major Concepts
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Ancient Astronomy
๏ท Early Uses of the Sky
๏ท Astronomy During the โDark Agesโ
Motions of the Planets
๏ท Wanderers Among the Stars
๏ท Retrograde Motion
Geocentric Models of the Universe
๏ท Aristotle
๏ท Ptolemy
Heliocentric Models and the Birth of Modern Astronomy
๏ท Copernicus
๏ท Brahe
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Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
๏ง
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๏ท Galileo
Keplerโs Laws of Planetary Motion
Isaac Newton
๏ท Laws of Motion
๏ท Gravity
๏ท Explaining Orbits and Keplerโs Laws
Teaching Suggestions and Demonstrations
Section 2.1
Point out to the students that in ancient times, astronomical observations were tightly intertwined with the
mythological/spiritual aspects of human life as well as agricultural practices that were important to the well-being
of ancient cultures. Food sources, whether animal or vegetable, were found to be dependent on the annual
seasonal cycles. Ask the students if they can come up with examples of things in their own lives that are
dependent on celestial phenomena, including the Earthโs rotation and the cyclical revolution period as we move
around the Sun. When modern farmers plan, they simply look at the modern calendar and consult with
technologically advanced meteorological tools such as โDoppler radarโ and weather satellites. Ancient cultures
lacked these tools and instead relied on other instruments such as Stonehenge or the Caracol Temple as described
in the text. It is worth noting that we have only deduced after the fact that these ancient monuments had
astronomical applications; itโs not as if they came with instruction manuals! There are also instances where an
ancient site was thought to have astronomical significance that later proved to be spurious, such as the Nazca
Lines in South America.
Students may be surprised that even today the spiritual components of society can still be intermingled with
astronomical phenomena. For example, the Christian holiday of Easter falls on the first Sunday following the first
full Moon after the Vernal Equinox.
Section 2.2
While a few students might be eager to move on to the black holes and string theory, my experience is that most
students enjoy hearing about the history of astronomy. Hearing the stories of some of the โbig namesโ in
astronomy, the things they got right, and even the things they got wrong, goes a long way toward โhumanizingโ
science for the students. Talking about wrong turns is especially important, because it demonstrates the power of
the scientific process. Be sure to emphasize that โbadโ theories are brought down by evidence, not just by โbetterโ
theories. People such as Aristotle and Ptolemy were not wrong because they lacked intelligence, they were wrong
because they lacked information.
A disturbing number of authors depict ancient astronomers in a patronizing manner; for example, some have said
that the ancients clung to an idea of an Earth-centered solar system because they wanted a โspecial place in the
universe.โ This is not only an arrogant 21st century perspective, it is utterly wrong. Ancient astronomers were
rational, mature people who relied on their experiences and information to shape their ideas, just as we do. They
could not โfeelโ the Earth spinning or orbiting, for example, and so believed that it was stationary beneath a
rotating sky. Aristotle himself said that if the Earth were moving, then we should feel the wind from its motion. In
addition, they could not see the phenomenon of stellar parallax, and thus concluded that our perspective on the
stars did not change because we were not moving. Be sure to give credit to ancient astronomers for being rational
people. When talking about the ancient practice of using models to describe the universe, discuss the idea of
โSaving the Appearance.โ Early astronomers were concerned with creating models of the universe that were
capable of providing accurate reproductions of what they were seeing in the sky without a deep regard for
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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
physical explanation or justification. The need for such justification was simply not part of their tradition, as it is
part of ours.
One of the ways that Aristotle tried to justify the geocentric view of the universe was with the five classical
elements. Four of these elements were found only in our world: earth, water, air, and fire. The fifth element
(sometimes called the Aether) was found only outside Earth. It was a perfect, glowing, and unchanging material,
unlike the chaotic elements of Earth. An objectโs natural motion (what it did when nothing was exerting a force
on it) depended on its composition. An object made mostly of earth or water fell downward, and an object made
of air or fire rose upward. The celestial objects did neither, but moved in perfect circles around Earth. These ideas
seemed reasonable for describing motions in the sky for centuries, until the work of Copernicus, Galileo, and
Kepler brought them down.
The text notes that not all Greeks subscribed to the geocentric model, and mentions Aristarchus of Samos as an
example. Students may be interested to know just how Aristarchus came to the conclusion that the Sun is at the
center. It began when Aristarchus undertook a project to measure the relative sizes of the Sun and Moon, and thus
add to the earlier work of measuring the size of the Earth done by Eratosthenes (see Chapter 1). He reasoned that
at certain times, the Sun, Moon, and Earth would form a right triangle with the right angle at the Moon, like so:
Sun
Moon
Earth
To determine exactly when the angle at the Moon was 90ยบ, he built a model of the EarthโMoonโSun system. He
found that when the Moon was half-lit as seen from Earth (first and third quarter) the angle was 90ยบ. He then
knew when to go out and measure the angle at the Earthโthe angle between the Sun and Moon as seen from
Earth. He measured that angle to be about 87ยบ; it is measured with modern instruments to be over 89ยบ. With so
little left over for the angle at the Sun, it became clear that the triangle was of the โlong and skinnyโ variety. The
Sun had to be much further away than previously thought. Aristarchus calculated that the Sun was about 19 times
farther from Earth than was the Moon. In modern terms we would use the sine function, and say that since sin 3ยบ โ
1/19, the hypotenuse (EarthโSun distance) is about 19 times the side opposite the 3ยบ angle (EarthโMoon distance).
This number is actually too small, due to the error in measuring the angle at the Earth, but the implications are
what matters here. Since the Sun is much farther than the Moon, it must be proportionately larger, since the two
objects have roughly the same angular size (see Section 1.5). The size of Earthโs shadow during a lunar eclipse
indicates that Earth is about 3 times larger than the Moon. If the Sun is then 19 times larger (or more!) than the
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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Moon, then the Sun has to be larger than Earth. An elementary school student knows this today, but 2000 years
ago, it was by no means obvious. Aristarchus reasoned that it was ludicrous to expect the Earth to command an
object so much larger than itself, and so he placed the Sun at the center of motion. The lack of evidence for the
Earthโs motion, however, proved to be more convincing for many people, including Ptolemy.
The evolution of our understanding of the structure of the Universe is a remarkable story of the scientific process,
in which each successive model took care of some problem of the previous model. In many ways, the history of
astronomy is the history of the scientific process itself. One common example of the scientific process at work is
Ptolemyโs geocentric model of the Universe; its epicycles and deferents were ultimately overthrown by the
conceptually simpler Copernican heliocentric model. Students are often surprised to learn that aesthetics
(simplicity, elegance, etc.) are one metric by which a scientific theory is measured. Although the early Copernican
heliocentric model made no significant improvements with regard to predictive power, the scientific community
at that time eventually accepted itโalbeit after some resistance and skepticism. However, since accuracy of
predictions is indeed a feature of scientific theories, even the Copernican model had to be modified, as
observations revealed more subtle details including the shapes of planetary orbits, which were discovered by
Kepler to be ellipses rather than perfect circles. The process of refinement continued when Isaac Newton revealed
that the Earth does not technically orbit the Sun, but the Sun and Earth both orbit around a common focus.
Section 2.3
Retrograde motion is never obvious to students, and can be hard for them to visualize. Go over Figure 2.9
carefully with students. Emphasize that the foreground of the figure is whatโs really happening, and the
background is what we see from Earth. Ask the students what the faster-moving Earth is doing to Mars at points
5, 6, and 7. Hopefully they will respond that Earth is โlappingโ Mars, just as the faster driver in an automobile
race does. Then ask the students what a slower car appears to be doing as they are passing it on the highway.
Hopefully they will see how the โbackwardโ motion of Mars is explained by Copernicusโs model.
DEMOโFirst, explain to students that the larger the orbit, the slower the planet moves. Draw some stars across
the entire board. Ask a student volunteer to play the role of an outer planet. Have the student walk slowly from
right to left (from the perspective of the class). You play the role of the observer on Earth. Without moving, note
that the outer planet appears to move from west (right) to east (left). However, if you now walk parallel to the
student (letting the student start first) and you move at a faster pace, you will appear to overtake and pass the
student. This will be obvious. Now, try it again, but stop both your motions before you pass the student and note
the position of the student relative to the background stars on the board several times while passing. If the student
walks slowly enough and you walk fast enough, you should get a good retrograde effect. (Try this out first before
going into the classroom to find an effective pace to use.)
Expand on this idea by showing the roughly circular orbits of the planets and explain how retrograde motion only
occurs while Earth is โpassingโ the outer planet. This will always occur when the outer planet is near opposition.
Ask students which planets would have retrograde motion if they were standing on Mercury or Venus. Would
other objects appear in retrograde motion or only outer planets? Emphasize that the effect is not unique to viewing
from Earth, nor does it only occur in planets.
Section 2.4
Before discussing Galileoโs observations with the telescope, give a little background on the prevailing worldview
of the time, to help students understand just how dramatic Galileoโs discoveries were. The Aristotelian view
maintained that all astronomical objects were made of a perfect and unchanging substance unknown to Earth, and
that these celestial bodies orbited Earth in perfect circles. Earth was flawed and chaotic, but heavenly objects were
perfect, unblemished, and unchanging. Furthermore, Aristotleโs view had been inextricably linked with
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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Christianity through โmedieval scholasticism,โ so contradicting Aristotle was extremely serious since it was
equivalent to contradicting the Roman Catholic Church. Galileoโs discoveries gave evidence that objects not only
orbited something other than Earth (e.g., Jupiterโs moons, phases of Venus) but also that heavenly bodies were
blemished (e.g., sunspots, mountains on the Moon). Galileoโs experiments with falling bodies also directly
contradicted the Aristotelian view that heavier objects fall faster than do lighter ones.
You may want to mention that Galileo did not actually invent the telescope, nor was he actually the first to use it
to observe the heavens. A Dutch optician named Hans Lippershy first got the idea to look through two lenses at
once, allegedly from his children. An Englishman named Thomas Harriot mapped out the surface of the Moon
with a telescope a few months before Galileo built one in 1609. It is still amazing that Galileo was able to build
his own telescope purely from a physical description, and that he made such meticulous observations that literally
revolutionized the discipline of astronomy and helped make it a science.
If Jupiter is visible at night when you are teaching the course, encourage your students to view Jupiter through
binoculars from a reasonably dark site. The four Galilean moons are visible through binoculars, and students can
follow their motions over a week or so to recreate Galileoโs observations.
Anyone wishing to experience the sky as Galileo did may wish to purchase a โGalileoscopeโ (at
www.galileoscope.org) or similar small telescope kit. Even a moderately priced pair of binoculars have optics as
good as, or superior to, Galileoโs. However, the man himself had one huge advantage that we cannot match, sadly:
four centuries ago the world had incredibly dark skies, even in urban areas!
Section 2.5
It will probably surprise students that Galileo and Kepler were contemporaries. In terms of conceptual
development, it seems that Galileo built on and provided evidence for Copernicusโs heliocentric model, and then
Kepler refined the heliocentric theory with details about the orbits of the planets. In fact, Galileo and Kepler were
working at the same time, and exchanged some correspondence. Galileo was placed under house arrest for
promoting the heliocentric model and was forced to declare that it was useful as a mathematical tool only, not as a
description of reality. Meanwhile, Kepler was not only assuming that the planets orbit the Sun, but he was
describing their actual paths and speeds in those orbits. Why were the results of these two men so differently
received? Point out to students the differences in their societies and situations that resulted in these very different
climates for scientific research and discussion. Kepler was essentially an agent of the Holy Roman Empire at the
time he published his work, while Galileo was mostly supported by private patrons like the Medici family. In
addition, note that there was a radical difference in personalities: Galileo was an opinionated and even
antagonistic person who frequently alienated the people he was trying to educate; Kepler had humility that
bordered on low self-esteem. This difference in personality ultimately brought a lot of grief to Galileo, while
Keplerโs more deferential, โhere-are-the-factsโ approach may have led to quicker acceptance of his conclusions.
Throughout your discussion of the historical development and final acceptance of the Copernican system, sprinkle
in interesting details of the lives of the people involved.
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Copernicusโs theory was not even published until he lay on his deathbed because he feared
ridicule. It might never have been published without the efforts of his friend, Georg Rheticus.
Brahe wore prosthetic metal noses after he had his nose cut off in a duel, and represented himself
as an astrologer to get funding for his research.
Galileo was a flamboyant character who loved to engage in debate, sometimes too much.
Galileo published in Italian, as opposed to Latin, and often expressed his ideas in dialogue form
to make them accessible to both the scholar and the โcommon man.โ
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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
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Galileo was friends with Pope Urban VIII and the Pope offered to fund the publication of one of
Galileoโs books. But when Galileo wrote the book, he put some of the Popeโs words in the mouth
of a buffoonish character, and made his friend look very bad.
Kepler rose up from a life of abject poverty to become an accomplished musician and
mathematician.
Kepler tried for almost a decade to make the data that he inherited from Brahe fit traditional
ideas; it was when he decided to listen only to the data that he made progress. In some ways,
Kepler can be seen as the first person to fully employ the โScientific Method.โ
Begin your discussion of Keplerโs laws of planetary motion by drawing an ellipse on the board or overhead, using
the method shown in Figure 2.15 if possible. Define the various parameters of an ellipse: perihelion, aphelion,
semi-major axis, and eccentricity. Show how a circle is the special case of an ellipse with an eccentricity of 0.
Have students draw ellipses with the same eccentricities as the planets and point out that most of the planetary
orbits are nearly circular (see Table 2.1 for data). Extend Keplerโs second law to comets, and ask students to
describe the relative speeds of a comet with a very elliptical orbit when it is close to the Sun and when it is far
away. Finally, for Keplerโs third law, pick one or two planets and use the semi-major axes given in Table 2.1 to
calculate the periods. Compare to the periods given in the table. Review the mathematical meaning of โsquaringโ
and โcubing.โ Many students will confuse a3 with 3a. The students who are more mathematically aware are often
concerned that the units of the third law do not work out correctly. Reassure them that the equation is tailor-made
for specific units, and that there are constant terms with a value of 1 that can cancel the units.
Finally, point out that one of the weaknesses of Keplerโs laws is that they are empirical; that is, they have plenty
of โproofโ or evidence, but no physical explanation. The nature of the motion was clear to Kepler, but the cause
was mysterious. The explanations would have to wait for Isaac Newton.
Section 2.6
Students will find it helpful if you review something as basic as similar triangles here. Draw two triangles with
one perhaps two times larger than the other but with the same angles. Show that if you know the angles and the
length of one of the sides, then you can easily calculate the lengths of the remaining sides. The ratio of lengths for
the known side of the similar triangles will be the same as the ratios of the sides where the length is to be
determined.
Section 2.7
Newtonโs laws of motion are extremely important and not necessarily intuitive. Give plenty of examples of each.
For instance, ask students to imagine an airplane trip on a beautiful day with no turbulence. If you throw a peanut
up in the air, does it hit the person behind you or fall back in your lap? In addition, consider the motion of Earth.
If you jump up in the air, does the wall of the classroom slam into you? (Galileo already had a pretty good idea of
the notion of inertia when he argued against the geocentric view and used ships at sea as an example.) Emphasize
to students that as far as Newtonโs laws are concerned, an object moving at a constant velocity (i.e., in a straight
line and at a constant speed) is pretty much the same as an object at rest: both have no net force acting on them,
and thus neither is accelerating, or changing velocity.
Define acceleration carefully and calculate an acceleration that students can relate to, such as the acceleration of a
car merging on the highway. You can use more familiar units at first, such as miles per hour per second, and then
convert to the more standard meters per second squared to help students gain a feel for the acceleration due to
Earthโs gravity. Students often confuse acceleration and velocity, so be sure to distinguish carefully between the
two.
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Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
DEMOโYou can demonstrate Newtonโs second law and the role of mass by attaching a rope to a rolling chair
and asking a student to pull it across the floor. Then sit in the chair and repeat. Ask the student to compare
(qualitatively) the force used to accelerate the empty chair with the force applied to the chair with an occupant.
DEMOโUse an air track with carts or an air hockey table with pucks to demonstrate Newtonโs laws, if possible.
Seeing the behavior of objects in a nearly frictionless environment can help students overcome Aristotelian
misconceptions about motion.
Newtonโs law of gravitation is explained at the end of this section. Emphasize that gravity is always attractive and
(unlike forces such as the electromagnetic force) is felt by every object in the Universe. Also, note that it is proper
to speak of the gravitational force between two objects, not the gravitational force of an object. To examine the
significance of the various terms, ask students what would happen to the force of gravity between Earth and the
Sun if the mass of Earth doubled or if the distance between them doubled. Note that while we may understand the
dependence of gravity on massโmore โpullersโ means more pullโthe dependence on the square of the distance
remains mysterious.
To help drive home the factors that influence the gravitational force, I present the students with the following
fanciful thought experiment. Imagine that malevolent aliens come to Earth and demand that we capitulate, or else
they will turn their โshrink rayโ on the Sun and reduce its radius to 1 kilometer. That is enough to turn the Sun
into a black hole! Three things could then happen: the Earth could get sucked into the black hole Sun, Earth could
go flying off into the void of space, or the Earth could stay in its orbit. Have students briefly weigh the options
with a neighbor, then take a poll to see which outcome is most likely, according to the class. Students will
probably be surprised that the gravitational force will not change, since none of the important factorsโthe masses
of the Sun and Earth and the distance between their centersโhave changed. Black holes are not โcosmic vacuum
cleanersโ as popular fiction depicts them. You can recall this example later in the semester during your discussion
on black holes.
Section 2.8
This section serves a summative purpose by using Newtonโs laws to provide a theoretical foundation for
understanding the discoveries of Galileo and Kepler. For example, students often confuse the force of gravity with
acceleration due to gravity. Derive the expression for acceleration due to gravity and show that it is consistent
with Galileoโs experiments regarding the motion of falling bodies. In addition, emphasize that Earth alone does
not โhaveโ gravityโgravity is a force between two objects. For instance, the weight of an object is the force
between it and Earth. Use the gravitational formula to compare the weight of a 70-kg person on Earth and the
weight of that same person on the Moon.
Use Figure 2.23 to help explain to students how gravity is responsible for objects falling and orbiting. Ask your
students to picture the Moon as constantly falling towards the Earth, but missing because it has velocity!
Alternatively, students could picture the situation as the Moon wanting to head off into space in a straight line, but
being prevented from doing so by the โleashโ of gravity.
DEMOโTo demonstrate orbital motion, whirl a ball around on a string in a horizontal circle. In the
demonstration, the tension in the string provides the centripetal force. In the case of a planet, gravity is the
centripetal force. Ask students to predict what would happen if the force suddenly โturned off,โ and then
demonstrate by letting go of the string. This is also a good time to discuss the fact that an object in a circular orbit
is constantly accelerating. Although moving at a constant speed, the object is always changing its direction.
Reiterate that the speed may remain constant, but the direction change means a change in velocity nonetheless.
Any change in velocity means that the acceleration is not zero.
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Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
DEMOโPoint out to the students that Newtonโs third law states that you are pulling on the Earth just as
strongly as it is pulling on you. Then, tell students to brace themselves as you jump in the air, perhaps off a step or
low platform. Ask the students why they did not jerk upwards to meet you, while you certainly fell down to meet
the Earth. This can lead to deeper understanding of Newtonโs second law, and the distinction between cause
(force) and effect (acceleration). Follow this up with a discussion of the orbits in Figure 2.25. To better
understand the orbits of objects with different masses, ask the students to imagine a parent whirling a child
around. The child makes a big circle, while the parent moves in a much smaller circle. This will be important
when discussing the discovery of new โexoplanetsโ later on.
DEMOโAsk your students whether it is possible to throw an object into orbit around the Earth. If they have
read the text before coming to lecture they will probably answer โno.โ (Orbital velocity is about 18,000 mph
around the Earth.) Next, bet them that you can actually throw an object into orbit and will even demonstrate it in
class (brag a little about your fast pitch!). After they express their doubts, throw an object up and across the room
so they can easily see the curve of the projectile path. Tell them that the object was in orbit but ran into the Earth!
Objects orbit around the center of mass; for all practical purposes, this is the center of the Earth in this case. Draw
on the chalkboard what the orbit would have been if the object had not run into the Earth, or use Figure 2.26. By
throwing the object harder, it goes further. If thrown fast enough (orbital velocity) it will curve (fall) around the
Earth at the same rate the Earthโs surface curves.
Relevant Lecture-Tutorials
Keplerโs Second Law, p. 21
Keplerโs Third Law, p. 25
Newtonโs Laws and Gravity, p.29
Observing Retrograde Motion, p. 99
Student Writing Questions
1. Look up one of the historical figures mentioned in this chapter. Find out as much as you can about his or
her life and the period of time in which he or she lived. Describe what the scientistโs daily life must have
been like. In what ways was astronomy a part of the personโs life?
2. Describe what it would be like to live without any gravity. What would be easier? Harder? Impossible?
Fun? Annoying? Do you think you would like to live like this for an extended period?
3. Kepler had to fight a legal battle to get access to Tycho Braheโs observations. What if Kepler had been
prevented from gaining that access? Speculate how this might have affected Newtonโs work on gravity.
Would he still have been successful in formulating his law of gravity? Would he even have worked on
this problem? Do you think someone else would have worked on it if Newton had not? Would such a
small change in historical events that occurred 400 years ago affect science today?
Chapter Review Answers
REVIEW AND DISCUSSION
1.
Astronomers in the Islamic world preserved the writings and discoveries of the ancient Greeks through the
Dark Ages in Europe. They translated the works of ancient astronomers such as Ptolemy and expanded on
them; many of the proper names of bright stars are Arabic or Persian in origin. They developed many
methods in mathematics, including algebra and trigonometry. Chinese astronomers kept careful records of
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Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
eclipses, comets, and โnewโ stars, extending back many centuries. They also were likely the first to see
sunspots, many years before Galileo.
2.
The geocentric model of Aristotle had the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars orbiting a stationary Earth. A
modification by Ptolemy had most of the planets moving in small circles called epicycles. The center of
these epicycles moved around the Earth in larger circles called deferents. Over the centuries, however, other
astronomers further altered the model, and dozens of circles were needed to fully describe the motions of
the 7 visible โplanets,โ which included the Moon and the Sun. Scholars clung to this model for reasons that
had nothing to do with religion or needing a โspecial place in the Universe.โ They had two very rational
reasons for thinking the Earth was stationary at the center. First, there was no sensation of motion, no
โwindโ as the Earth moved through space. Second, there was no observed change in position of the stars
(parallax) as the Earth moved around the Sun. This change in position occurs, but it was not measurable
until the mid-1800s.
3.
The most obvious flaw in the Ptolemaic model is in its basic premise, since the Earth is not at the center of
the solar system, let alone the entire universe. The unquestioned acceptance of perfectly circular orbits is
another problem. However, a deeper flaw is that the Ptolemaic model did not attempt to explain why the
motions are the way the model depicts them. The model may describe the motions, but it does not explain
them. Today we would require any such explanation to be based on fundamental physical laws.
4.
Copernicus revived the idea that a Sun-centered (heliocentric) model could explain the complex motions of
the bodies of the solar system in a simpler way than a geocentric model. However, it was still flawed in that
Copernicus clung uncritically to the idea that the orbits of the planets around the Sun had to be โperfect
circles.โ
5.
A theory is a framework of ideas and assumptions that represents our best possible explanation for things
that happen in the real world, backed up by hard data. A good theory can be used to make predictions about
future events, in addition to explaining things we already know. Theories are always subject to challenge,
and thus can never be proven to be true. They can, however, be proven to be false, meaning they no longer
explain the phenomenon adequately. It is notable that theories are refuted by data, not by other theories. As
long as a theory survives any attempts at disproving it, it will likely continue to be accepted.
6.
Galileo discovered that the planet Venus exhibits phases that would be impossible in Ptolemyโs geocentric
model. In addition, the phases of Venus also changed size, indicating that Venus was closer to Earth when a
โcrescent,โ and farther away when close to โfull.โ This could be most simply explained by saying that Earth
and Venus were both orbiting the Sun, with Venusโ orbit entirely inside the Earthโs. In addition, the moons
of Jupiter demonstrated that objects could move around a body other than the Earth, that there was more
than one โcenterโ of motion.
7.
Through years of meticulous observations of the motions of the planets among the stars, Tycho Brahe
provided the huge amount of data that was later analyzed by Kepler to produce the laws of planetary
motion.
8.
First law: The orbits of the planets, including the Earth, are in the shape of an ellipse with the Sun at one
focus.
Second law: A line connecting the Sun and a planet sweeps out equal areas in equal intervals of time; thus,
a planetโs orbital speed is greatest when it is closest to the Sun.
Third law: The square of a planetโs orbital period (in years) is proportional to the cube of the semi-major
axis of its orbit (in astronomical units).
9
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
9.
The astronomical unit, defined as the average distance between the Earth and the Sun, was used to provide
an estimate of the distances between the planets long before its actual numerical value was known. By
reflecting radar waves off the planet Venus and timing how long it takes them to return, we can determine
the distance from Venus to Earth in kilometers. Comparing this to the distance from Venus to Earth in AU,
the size of the AU in kilometers could be determined, and with it, the distance between the Earth and the
Sun.
10.
While Keplerโs laws do an excellent job of describing how the solar system is structured, they do not
explain why the planets move as they do. They are justified purely by observational data with no
explanation of basic causes. Explanations would have to wait for Newtonโs laws.
11.
First law of motion: Every object continues in a state of rest or in a state of uniform motion (constant
motion in a straight line) unless it is compelled to change that state of motion by an unbalanced force acting
on it.
Second law of motion: When an unbalanced force (F) acts on a body of mass (m), the body experiences an
acceleration (a) equal to the force divided by the mass. Thus, a = F/m, or F = ma.
Third law of motion: To every action there is reaction equal in size and opposite in direction to the original
action.
Law of gravity: Every particle of matter in the Universe attracts every other particle with a force that is
directly proportional to the product of the masses of the particles and inversely proportional to the square of
the distance between their centers.
12.
Newton explained Keplerโs First Law by saying that a planet and the Sun have an attraction for each other.
They do not crash into each other because they have been moving from the beginning. You can say that the
Earth is indeed โfallingโ toward the Sun, but keeps missing the Sun due to its motion. Alternatively, you
can say that the Earth wants to go flying off in a straight line (Newtonโs First Law) but its motion is
changed by the unbalanced force of the Sunโs gravity (Newtonโs Second Law). Keplerโs Second Law can be
explained as follows: as a planet approaches the Sun from aphelion to perihelion, it is moving in the
direction of the force of gravity (toward the Sun) and thus it speeds up. From perihelion to aphelion, the
planet is moving away from the Sun, in the opposite direction of the gravitational force, and the planet
slows down. Keplerโs Third Law is a relationship between the average distance of a planet from the Sun,
and the amount of time for the planet to orbit the Sun. Distance from the Sun is an important factor
determining the strength of the gravitational force between a planet and the Sun, which in turn controls
orbital speed.
13.
Earth does move in response to the baseball, but its motion is too small to be noticed, or even measured.
The Earth and the baseball pull on each other with equal gravitational force, but because of its greater mass,
Earth is harder to accelerate. Thus, by Newtonโs second law, the acceleration of the baseball toward Earth is
much greater than the acceleration of Earth toward the baseball.
14.
The Moon is โfallingโ toward Earth because of the attractive force of gravity between the two bodies.
However, because the Moon has a sufficiently large velocity tangential to that gravitational pull, the two
bodies will never collide. The Moon keeps โmissingโ Earth. By measuring the speed the Moon is traveling
to maintain its orbit, we can calculate the strength of the gravitational pull between the Moon and Earth, and
then find the Earthโs mass.
15.
The escape speed is the speed you must be traveling to get far away enough from a planet or other large
object so that its gravitational influence on you becomes too small to matter. As you rise higher above the
10
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
surface of the body, its gravitational pull gets weaker. If you are traveling at the escape speed when you
leave the surface, gravity cannot reduce the speed quickly enough to stop you. Therefore, you will not fall
back down to the object.
CONCEPTUAL SELF-TEST
1. A
2. D
3. B
4. C
5. C
6. A
7. C
8. B
9. C
10. A
PROBLEMS
1.
We use the equation for angular size here, with the angular size set to 1/60 of a degree.
actual diameter
distance
distance
actual diameter ๏ฝ 0.0167๏ฐ๏ด
57.3๏ฐ
0.0167๏ฐ ๏ฝ 57.3๏ฐ๏ด
(a) For the Moon, distance = 384,000 km, so diameter = 110 km.
(b) For the Sun, distance = 150,000,000 km, so diameter = 44,000 km.
(c) Saturn is 9.5 AU from the Sun, and so is 8.5 AU at its closest distance to Earth. This gives a diameter of
370,000 km. Since that is bigger than Saturn itself is, Saturn just looks like a point to the unaided eye.
2.
We can use Keplerโs third law to calculate the semi-major axis from the period. 762 = a3, so a = 17.9 AU.
We double this to get the length of the major axis (35.9 AU) and then subtract the perihelion distance to get
the aphelion distance of 35.3 AU, beyond the orbits of all the major planets.
3.
The satelliteโs perihelion distance will be 0.72 AU and the aphelion distance will be 1 AU. The semi-major
axis will be the average of these two values, or 0.86 AU. Using Keplerโs third law, P2 = a3 = (0.86)3, we get
an orbital period for this satellite of 0.798 years, or 291 days. The satellite will travel from aphelion (Earth)
to perihelion (Venus) in half this time, or 146 days.
4.
Since 1 AU is about 150 million kilometers, 0.7 AU is 105 million kilometers. The round trip of the radar
signal would be 1.4 AU = 210,000,000 km, traveling at the speed of light. Therefore, the travel time is:
time ๏ฝ
210, 000, 000km
๏ฝ 700 seconds = 11.7 minutes
300, 000 km/s
11
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
5.
During a transit, Mercury is between Earth and the Sun. The aphelion distance of Mercury from the Sun is
0.47 AU, and the perihelion distance of Earth is 0.98 AU. Thus, during transit, the closest Mercury can be
to Earth is 0.51 AU, or 76,500,000 km. Using the equation for parallax in Chapter 1 yields:
parallax = 57.3๏ฐ๏ด
baseline
3000 km
๏ฝ 57.3๏ฐ๏ด
๏ฝ 0.0022๏ฐ
distance
76,500,000 km
This is about 8.1 arc seconds
6.
The formula for the acceleration due to gravity is a ๏ฝ
GM
. The mass of Earth is 5.97 ร 1024 kg, so the
2
r
only thing that varies is r, the distance of the object from the Earthโs center.
(a) r = 6,500,000 m, so a = 9.43 m/s2.
(b) r = 7,400,000 m, so a = 7.28 m/s2.
(c) r = 16,400,000 m, so a = 1.48 m/s2
7.
The speed of the spacecraft in a circular orbit is given by
v๏ฝ
GM
= 1700 m/s, or 1.7 km/s for the Moon
r
As stated in the text, the escape velocity is the square root of two (1.41) times this, or 2.4 km/s.
8.
Assuming a mass of 55 kg for the person, a mass for Earth of 5.97 ร 1024 kg, and a radius for Earth of
6,400,000 m, the law of gravity gives F = 535 N, or 120 pounds. This force is simply your weight.
Suggested Readings
Web Resources
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/video/index.cfm?id=888 NASA video on the discovery of Jupiterโs moons. The site also
offers current information about making observations of Jupiterโs moons.
https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/basics/index.php. A series of videos from NASA that can help students better
understand the force of gravity and orbits.
http://www.wam.umd.edu/~tlaloc/archastro . The Center for Archaeoastronomy.
The โCrash Courseโ channel on YouTube has a series about astronomy:
Video # 7 is especially relevant to this chapter
You can purchase a modern replica of Galileoโs telescope at http://galileoscope.org/.
Books
A number of excellent books are available about the history of astronomy. Here is a sampling:
12
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Aveni, A., Sky Watchers of Ancient Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1980. A discussion of astronomy
in ancient Mesoamerica.
Aveni, A. Between the Lines. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2000. Although the Andean Nazca Lines are
generally regarded as having no astronomical significance, they are still an interesting study in modern
interpretations of ancient monuments.
Gribbin, J. The Scientists. New York: Random House, 2002. A 500-year-plus tour of the history of science,
featuring many prominent astronomers, to whet the appetite for deeper study.
Hadingham, E. Early Man and the Cosmos. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1985. An interesting treatise
about ancient astronomy in Britain, Mexico, and southwest America.
Hawking, S., ed. On the Shoulders of Giants: The Great Works of Physics and Astronomy. Philadelphia: Running
Press, 2002. This immense omnibus features the seminal works of Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Newton, and
Einstein, with commentary by Dr. Hawking.
Johnson, A. Solving Stonehenge. London: Thames and Hudson, Ltd., 2008. A recent attempt to reconstruct the
various stages of the construction of Stonehenge, and gain insight as to the siteโs intended purpose.
Koestler, A. The Sleepwalkers: A History of Manโs Changing Vision of the Universe. New York: Penguin Books,
1990. More information than you will ever need about Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, Galileo, and Newton. An
exhaustive work.
Kolb, R. Blind Watchers of the Sky. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 1999. A lively historical narrative. The first
chapter deals with Renaissance astronomy. The title comes from a remark Tycho Brahe made about his detractors.
North, J. Stonehenge: A New Interpretation of Prehistoric Man and the Cosmos. New York: The Free Press,
1996. Further investigation of the ancient megalithic site and its environs.
Panek, R. Seeing and Believing: How the Telescope Opened Our Eyes and Minds to the Heavens. New York:
Penguin Books, 1999. A brief book, but packed with information about a number of astronomers, including
Galileo and Kepler.
Walker, C., ed. Astronomy before the Telescope. New York: St. Martinโs Press, 1997. A series of essays on
astronomy from ancient times to the early Renaissance.
Magazine Articles
Berman, B. โThe Outsider.โ Astronomy (October 2003). p. 48. Illuminating article about a modern astronomer.
Helpful when discussing the scientific method with students and a good reminder that science is a human
endeavor/activity. Relevant to this chapter and to Chapter 1.
Falk, D. โThe rise and fall of Tycho Brahe.โ Astronomy (December 2003). p. 52. A nice overview of Tycho
Brahe, his observatories, and details of his eccentric life.
Falk, D. โDid ancient astronomers build Stonehenge?โ Astronomy (July 2009). Proposes that the astronomical
uses of Stonehenge were not its primary function.
13
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Falk, D. โWho was Thomas Harriot?โ Astronomy (April 2010). The career of one of the early users of the
telescope.
Gettrust, E. โAn extraordinary demonstration of Newtonโs Third Law.โ The Physics Teacher (October 2001). p.
392. A description of an apparatus using magnets and force probes to demonstrate that the action and reaction
forces are equal in magnitude.
Gingerich, O. โThe great Martian catastrophe and how Kepler fixed it.โ Physics Today 64:9 (2011). p. 50. How
Kepler dealt with the problems resulting from Marsโ eccentric orbit.
Harwit, M. โThe growth of astrophysical understanding.โ Physics Today (November 2003). p. 38. A historical
review of almost 3000 years of inquiry about the universe.
Hudon, D. โHow Johannes Kepler revolutionized astronomy.โ Astronomy (January 2009). A summary of the
German astronomerโs outstanding body of work.
Kemp, Martin. โKeplerโs cosmos.โ Nature (May 14, 1998). p. 123. Describes ancient culturesโ image of the
cosmos.
Kemp, M. โMaculate moons: Galileo and the lunar mountains.โ Nature (Sept. 9, 1999). p. 116. Discusses
Galileoโs observations of features on the Moon.
Krupp, E. C. โDesignated authority.โ Sky & Telescope (May 1997). p. 66. Discusses the role of the โofficialโ
astronomer in ancient cultures.
Krupp, E. C. โFrom here to eternity: Egyptian astronomy and monuments.โ Sky & Telescope (February 2000). p.
87. Discusses the depiction of the stars and sky in ancient Egyptian monuments.
Krupp, E. C. โStairway to the stars: The Jantar Mantar, or โHouse of Instruments,โ in Jaipur, India.โ Sky &
Telescope (September 1995). p. 56. Describes an 18th century Indian monument that was used to track the
motions of the Sun.
Nadis, S. โBig science.โ Astronomy (May 2003). p. 46. Explores the trend toward fewer, but larger research
projects and the hope for a trend reversal. This is a good contrast when discussing the projects that occupied
Brahe/Kepler and Galileo.
Panek, R. โVenusian testimony.โ Natural History (June 1999). p. 68. Discusses Galileoโs observations of the
phases of Venus.
Quinn, J. โStargazing with Galileo.โ Night Sky (May/June 2006). p. 44. A guide to reproducing Galileoโs
observations with a backyard telescope.
Ruiz, M. โKeplerโs Third Law without a calculator.โ The Physics Teacher (December 2004). p. 530. Describes a
simple activity for introducing students to Keplerโs third law.
Schilling, G. โGravitational waves hit prime time.โ Sky & Telescope (December 2015). p. 26. Recent potential
detections of gravitational waves may change the way we view gravity.
Sherwood, S. โScience controversies past and present.โ Physics Today 64:10 (2011). p. 39. A comparison
between the heliocentric controversy and the modern controversy of global warming.
14
Copyright ยฉ 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.
Astronomy Today, 9th Edition Instructor Guide
Chapter 2: The Copernican Revolution The Birth of Modern Science
Shubinski, R. โHow the telescope remade the Universe.โ Astronomy (May 2009). The invention of the telescope
and the transformation it caused in science.
Stephenson, F. โEarly Chinese observations and modern astronomy.โ Sky & Telescope (February 1999). p. 48.
Discusses ancient Chinese astronomical observations and how they can be connected to modern science.
Sullivant, R. โAn unlikely revolutionary: Nicolas Copernicus.โ Astronomy (October 1999). p. 52. Discusses the
life and scientific works of Copernicus.
Sullivant, R. โWhen the apple falls: Sir Isaac Newton.โ Astronomy (April 1998). p. 54. Discusses Newton, his life,
and his scientific works.
Trefil, J. โRounding the Earth.โ Astronomy (August 2000). p. 40. Describes some of the astronomical knowledge
of ancient Egyptian, Greek, and Near Eastern cultures.
Vogt, E. โElementary derivation of Keplerโs laws.โ American Journal of Physics (April 1996). p. 392. For your
more advanced students, here is a proof of Keplerโs laws that follows from conservation of energy and angular
momentum, with further discussion.
Williams, K. โInexpensive demonstrator of Newtonโs First Law.โ The Physics Teacher (February 2000). p. 80.
Uses a Downyยฎ Ball fabric-softener dispenser!
15
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