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Published byKennedy Glidden Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 9 & 10 Gravity
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Pythagoras (550 BC) n Claimed that natural phenomena could be described by mathematics
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Aristotle (350 BC) n Asserted that the universe is governed by physical laws
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n The ancient Greeks believed that the earth was at the center of a revolving sphere with stars on it.
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n The Geocentric Model implies Earth-Centered Universe.
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Copernicus(1500's) n Developed a mathematical model for a Sun-centered solar system
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Tycho Brahe (1500's) n Made precise measurements of the positions of the planets
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Kepler(1600's) n Described the shape of planetary orbits as well as their orbital speeds
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Kepler’s First Law n The orbit of a planet about the Sun is an ellipse with the Sun at one focus.
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Kepler’s Second Law n A line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal intervals of time.
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Kepler’s Third Law n The square of a planet's orbital period is proportional to the cube of the length of its orbit's semimajor axis. n Or simply… T 2 = R 3 if T is measured in years and R is measured in astronomical units.
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An Astronomical Unit... n …is the average distance of the Earth from the Sun. n 1 AU = 93,000,000 miles = 8.3 lightminutes
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Kepler’s Laws n These are three laws of physics that relate to planetary orbits. n These were empirical laws. n Kepler could not explain them.
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Kepler’s Laws...Simply (See page 192.) n Law 1: Elliptical orbits… n Law 2: Equal areas in equal times… n Law 3: T 2 = R 3
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Newton’s Law of Universal Gravitation n From Kepler's 3rd Law, Newton deduced inverse square law of attraction. G=6.67 10-11 N m 2 /kg 2 G=6.67 10-11 N m 2 /kg 2
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Gravity Questions n Did the Moon exert a gravitational force on the Apollo astronauts? n What kind of objects can exert a gravitational force on other objects? n The constant G is a rather small number. What kind of objects can exert strong gravitational forces?
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Gravity Questions n If the distance between two objects in space is doubled, then what happens to the gravitational force between them? n What is the distance is tripled? n …is quadrupled? n What if the mass of one of the object is doubled? n …tripled? n …quadrupled?
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Weight and Weightlessness n Weight »the force due to gravity on an object »Weight = Mass Acceleration of Gravity »W = m g n Weightlessness - a conditions wherein gravitational pull appears to be lacking –Examples: »Astronauts »Falling in an Elevator »Skydiving »Underwater
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Ocean Tides n The Moon is primarily responsible for ocean tides on Earth. n The Sun contributes to tides also. n What are spring tides and neap tides?
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Sun Earth New MoonFull Moon Spring Tides
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Sun Earth First Quarter Last Quarter Neap Tides
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End of Section…
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Einstein’s Theory of Gravitation n Einstein perceived a gravitational field as a geometrical warping of 4-D space and time.
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BLACK HOLES 4Let’s observe a star that is shrinking but whose mass is remaining the same. 4What happens to the force acting on an indestructible mass at the surface of the star? SFA
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R2R2 F R2R2 F R2R2 F R2R2 F R R R R Remember that the force between the two masses is given by
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4If a massive star shrinks enough so that the escape velocity is equal to or greater than the speed of light, then it has become a black hole. 4Light cannot escape from a black hole. BLACK HOLES
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Near a Black Hole
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