Movement of stars, planets, sun
Key for survival of ancestors
Astronomy as the first science
Ancient observers believed physical events are quantifiable and predictable
Started in 2800 B.C.
Built over a long time by different peoples
Marks passage of time, specifically the seasons
Still functions today
Historical Background: Ptolemy & Copernicus
Ptolemy: First planetary model with Earth at the center
Copernicus: "On the Revolutions of the Spheres" with the Sun at the center
Observations: Tycho Brahe & Johannes Kepler
Tycho: Observed new star, showed heavens can change, collected data on planetary movement
Kepler: First Law - Planets have elliptical orbits
Galileo Galilei
Mechanics: motions of material objects
Supported Copernicus' view
Speed, Velocity, and Acceleration
Equations for speed and velocity
Relationship among distance, time, velocity, and acceleration
Galileo's experiments on falling objects
Constant acceleration and freefall
The First Law: Objects in motion stay in motion, objects at rest stay at rest unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
The Second Law: Force is proportional to mass and acceleration (F=ma)
The Third Law: Interacting objects exert equal but opposite forces upon each other
Motion depends on mass and speed
Linear momentum equation: p=mv
Law of conservation of linear momentum
Angular momentum
Newton's law of universal gravitation: F=Gm1m2/d^2
The Gravitational Constant, G: G=6.67 x 10^-11m^3/s^2-kg or 6.67 x 10^-11N-m^2/kg^2
Weight and Gravity: Weight depends on gravity, mass is constant
Big G and Little g: Force=(G x mass x ME)/RE^2, g=(G x ME)/RE^2, 9.8 N-kg = 9.8m/s^
Chapter 2 PowerPoint Notes
Movement of stars, planets, sun
Key for survival of ancestors
Astronomy as the first science
Ancient observers believed physical events are quantifiable and predictable
Started in 2800 B.C.
Built over a long time by different peoples
Marks passage of time, specifically the seasons
Still functions today
Historical Background: Ptolemy & Copernicus
Ptolemy: First planetary model with Earth at the center
Copernicus: "On the Revolutions of the Spheres" with the Sun at the center
Observations: Tycho Brahe & Johannes Kepler
Tycho: Observed new star, showed heavens can change, collected data on planetary movement
Kepler: First Law - Planets have elliptical orbits
Galileo Galilei
Mechanics: motions of material objects
Supported Copernicus' view
Speed, Velocity, and Acceleration
Equations for speed and velocity
Relationship among distance, time, velocity, and acceleration
Galileo's experiments on falling objects
Constant acceleration and freefall
The First Law: Objects in motion stay in motion, objects at rest stay at rest unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
The Second Law: Force is proportional to mass and acceleration (F=ma)
The Third Law: Interacting objects exert equal but opposite forces upon each other
Motion depends on mass and speed
Linear momentum equation: p=mv
Law of conservation of linear momentum
Angular momentum
Newton's law of universal gravitation: F=Gm1m2/d^2
The Gravitational Constant, G: G=6.67 x 10^-11m^3/s^2-kg or 6.67 x 10^-11N-m^2/kg^2
Weight and Gravity: Weight depends on gravity, mass is constant
Big G and Little g: Force=(G x mass x ME)/RE^2, g=(G x ME)/RE^2, 9.8 N-kg = 9.8m/s^