This document discusses our knowledge of the solar system and universe throughout history. It begins by outlining what was known by ancient astronomers like Aristotle and Ptolemy, then progresses to discoveries by Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton that established the sun-centered solar system. Later discoveries include measuring the speed of light by Roemer and Einstein's theory of general relativity. The document also provides facts about the size and motions of objects in the solar system, our galaxy, and the expanding universe.
4. Our Solar System
• Our Solar System orbits our Galaxy, the Milky Way
• Our Galaxy is part of the Local Group of Galaxies
• Galaxies exist throughout the Universe.
5. Our Knowledge of the Solar System
and the Universe
• Aristotle in 340BC wrote book “On the Heavens”.
Postulates Earth is a sphere not a flat disk. If flat
shouldn’t see sails of ships first on horizon.
• He could see five lights moving across sky at night
and called them planets - Greek name for wanderer.
• Aristotle claimed Sun and five planets move around a
stationary Earth; Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter,
Saturn.
6. Our Knowledge of the Solar System
• Eratosthenes, Chief Librarian, Great Library of
Alexandria in 200BC calculates the diameter of the
Earth
• Ptolemy in 200AD created a model of the heavenly
bodies that was reasonably correct
• Copernicus in 1514AD, claims Sun at centre of Solar
system and planets move in a circular orbit.
• Galileo in 1600s, uses telescope to chart the skies
• Kepler, in 1600s claims planets move in ellipses.
7. Our Knowledge of the Solar System
• Roemer in 1676AD is first to calculate speed of light
using Jupiter’s moons
• Newton in 1687AD publishes “Principia
Mathematica”
• Einstein in 1915 published his “General Theory of
Relativity”
• Hubble in 1929 was first to detect other Galaxies.
8.
9. Are You at Rest?
• The Earth's circumference is 40,075 km
• A person on the Equator is travelling at 1,700 km/hr
• A person in Kirkcaldy, Latitude 57 degrees North is
travelling at 900 km/hr
• The earth circles the Sun at 107,000 km/hr
10.
11. Are You at Rest?
• The orbital speed of the Solar System is 792,000
km/hr
• To complete one orbit around the Galaxy takes our
Solar System about 225–250 million years
• The Sun is thought to have completed 20 orbits
during its lifetime
• It has completed 1/1250 of a revolution since the
origin of humans
12.
13.
14. The Universe
• The human eye can observe about 5,000 stars
• This is about 0.0001% of all stars in Milky Way
• There are about 100 billion galaxies in the Universe
• Each Galaxy has about 100 billion stars
15.
16. A Galactic Collision
• The Milky Way and Andromeda are separated by 2.5
million light years
• The two galaxies are slowly moving towards each
other at 120 km/s
• They will collide in approximately 4 billion years
17.
18.
19. The Universe?
• In the 1920s astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered
that galaxies are all moving away from us at a rate
proportional to their distance
• This relationship is called the Hubble constant
• It establishes an expansion rate that is critical for
estimating the age and size of the universe, so far it
is estimated to be 14 billion light years
25. • Absorption lines in the
optical spectrum of a
supercluster of distant
galaxies (right), as
compared to absorption
lines in the optical spectrum
of the Sun (left). Arrows
indicate redshift.
Wavelength increases up
towards the red and beyond
(frequency decreases).
26.
27.
28.
29.
30. Hubble was first to detect other
Galaxies
• A theory is a good theory if it satisfies two
requirements;
• It must accurately describe a large class of
observations
• It can be used to predict future observations
31. Are You Resting?
• The Orbital speed of our Solar System around the
galactic nucleus is 217 km/s
• It takes 226 million years to complete one lap