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Famous Astronomers

Published on Nov 21, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

FAMOUS ASTRONOMERS

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Aristotle
384-322 BCE
Ancient Greece

ARISTOTLE

  • He believed everything rotated around Earth, his models showed so
  • He also though the stars position would change if the earth moved.
  • This apparent shift, is called a parallax
  • He believed earth, was the only planet that wasn't perfect. That had death
  • He also though the solar system was round

Aristarchus
310-230 BCE
He was a Greek astronomer and mathematician

ARISTARCHUS

  • He was reported to have a heliocentric model if the solar system
  • Attempted to measure the distances between the moon & sun
  • This was his main contribution to science
  • Heliocentric means that sun was the centric.
  • Though his distances were too small, they were very helpful

PTOLEMY
HE WAS AN GEOGRAPHER, AND MATHEMATICIAN IN ALEXANDRIA EGYPT, WHICH WAS PART OF ANCIENT ROME
100-170 BCE

PTOLEMY

  • He believed retro grade motion, the first to observe it
  • He developed geocentric models used for 1400 yrs
  • He believed a celestial body traveled a t a constant speed
  • His models showed planets moved in smaller circles on larger circles
  • This "wheels on wheels" system fit differently due to retro grade motion

Copernicus
A polish astronomer, Nicolaus Copernicus lived in 1473-1543

COPERNICUS

  • He adopted Ptolemy's idea of wheels on wheels
  • But added the heliocentric idea of Aristarchus
  • He believed Ptolemy's idea was too complicated
  • And perfected it
  • It is seen as the first step in the development of models

Kepler
Johannes Kepler was a German mathematician and astronomer
1571-1630

KEPLEr

  • He noticed what was wrong about the pervious models
  • He did a lot of analyzing until he found which fit best.
  • Kepler formulated 3 principles. One, planetary orbits are ellipses...
  • ...with the sun at one focus. 2, planets move faster in their orbits when they are closer to the sun
  • The third law related to the distance of a planet from the sun to the time it takes to orbit

GALILEO GALIEI
Was a scientist who used the scientific method. In Pisa, Italy
1564-1642

GAILIEO

  • He made significant improvements to the telescope
  • He observed the moons of Jupiter, Io, Europa, Callisto and Ganymede
  • His observations showed that earth wasn't the only planet with moons
  • This gave more support to the heliocentric model
  • He also observed how Venus goes through phases like the moon

Isaac Newton
1642-1721
A British physicist and mathematician.

Photo by C. Strife

ISAAC NEWTON

  • He learned about gravity, deriving it from Kepler's laws of motion
  • 1: when viewed in a inertial reference frame, an object either remains at rest or...
  • ..continues to move at the same velocity.
  • 2: F=ma forces are equal to the mass times acceleration to the object
  • 3: when one body exerts force on a 2nd body, the 2nd body continues to force

Edwin Hubble
An american astronomer
1889-1953

EDWIN HUBBLE

  • He played a crucial role in establishing the field of extragalactic astronomy
  • Is known as one of the most important observational cosmetologist of the 20th century
  • He created "Hubble's law" which is:
  • The law that velocity of recession of distant galaxies is from our own is proportional to...
  • ...their distance from us,

GEOCENTRIC

  • Aristotle created the idea
  • It meant that the earth was the center of our solar system
  • and was used for ~2000 years
  • Was also used by Ptolemy
  • Until Copernicus' correction was used for ever

HELIOCENTRIC

  • Created Aristarchus
  • It meant that the sun was the center of the solar system
  • Used also by Copernicus and modern scientists
  • but was only used ~2000 years later
  • When Copernicus corrected them