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Astronomy – the Original Science

Pgs. 4 - 10. Astronomy – the Original Science. Astronomy. The study of all physical objects beyond Earth. Astronomy has been studied for centuries before formal schooling began. Cultures around the world would study the moon, sun and Earth and the stars in the sky.

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Astronomy – the Original Science

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  1. Pgs. 4 - 10 Astronomy – the Original Science

  2. Astronomy • The study of all physical objects beyond Earth. • Astronomy has been studied for centuries before formal schooling began. • Cultures around the world would study the moon, sun and Earth and the stars in the sky. • They studied how these objects moved in the sky and told stories to explain their actions.

  3. The Stars and Keeping Time • Ancient cultures learned seasonal movements of these objects as they moved across the sky and even based their calendars on this motion. • A calendar is a system for organizing time. • A year is the time required for the Earth to orbit the sun once. • A month is the amount of time required for the moon to orbit the Earth once. • A day is the time required for the Earth to rotate once on its axis.

  4. Ancient Calendars • Ancient Mayan cultures had a complex system linking the sun, moon and Venus. • Ancient Egyptian cultures based their calendar on the sun with twelve 30 day months and one 5 day month. • Ancient Chinese cultures based their calendar on the moon’s phases and position in the sky. • Ancient Hebrew cultures based their calendar on the moon and sun. They had years that alternated 12 and 13 months.

  5. Toward a Modern Calendar • The early Roman calendar had 365 days a year, however, the seasons slowly shifted and it was determined that there was 365.25 days a year. • Julius Caesar created the Julian calendar which included an extra day every four years, a leap year. • Pope Gregory XIII found a problem. • The year is actually 365.242 days. • He lowered the number of leap years and dropped 10 days from the calendar. • This is the Gregorian calendar and we use this calendar today.

  6. Early Observers • Scientists have found evidence for astronomical activities all over the world. • They have recognized that there are numerous ancient groups that have observed these phenomena throughout time. • Some of these groups have even left behind the devices they used.

  7. Nabta • In southern Egypt, a group of stones that are 6000-7000 years old are aligned with what would be the summer solstice. • The summer solstice occurs on the longest day of the year. • The site was probably used by cattle herder and used for trade, social bonding and rituals.

  8. Stonehenge • Near Salisbury England is a group of stones arranged primarily in circles, known as stonehenge. • The stones are aligned with sunrise for summer and winter solstices. • Stonehenge was built about 1,500 – 3,000 b.c. • Stonehenge was most likely used as a place for ceremony and rituals, but the origin of it is still a mystery.

  9. The Babylonians • The ancient Babylonians were an empire from 700 b.c. to about 50 a.d.. • They tracked the positions of the planets and the moon . • They could forecast the movement of these celestial bodies and made a fairly accurate calendar.

  10. Ancient Chinese Cultures • Ancient Chinese cultures could predict eclipses. • An eclipse occurs when the sun, the moon, and the Earth line up in space. • They have named 800 stars by 350 b.c. • The Chinese have accurately predicted and tracked the motion of the stars and planets improving their knowledge of the sky.

  11. The Ancient Greeks • Greeks used the sky to keep track of time. • Greek philosophers tried to understand the place of Earth and humans in the universe. • They used mathematics and logic. • Aristotle successfully explained the phases of the moon and eclipses. • He also argued that the Earth was a sphere.

  12. Native Americans • The Maya were the most skilled observers of the sky in the Americas. • They built buildings so that they aligned with celestial bodies. • Also, the Maya had complex systems of mathematics to help them interpret and predict the motion of the celestial bodies.

  13. Ancient Arabs • Ancient Arabs inherited much of their astronomy knowledge from the old Greek empire. • They used that knowledge to develop astronomy. • They created the astrolabe, algebra and the number system we use today.

  14. Early Astronomers – Ptolemy • Claudius Ptolemy wrote a book on astronomy in 140 a.d. that included his theory. • The ptolemaic theory is the theory that the Earth is at the center of the universe with the sun and other planets rotating around it. • Ptolemy’s theory was accepted for more than 1500 years.

  15. Nicolaus Copernicus • In 1543, Copernicus published a new theory in astronomy. • He theorized that the sun is the center of the universe and the planets, including Earth, orbit the sun. • Although correct, Copernicus’ theory was not accepted right away.

  16. Tycho Brahe • Tycho used several large tools to observe the sky. • Tycho favored the Earth-centered theory. • He said that the other planets orbit the sun and the sun and moon orbit the Earth. • With his large tools, Tycho recorded very precise movements of the celestial bodies that were used by later astronomers.

  17. Johannes Kepler • Johannes Kepler was Tycho’s assistant, and upon Tycho’s death, he inherited Tycho’s work. • Kepler used Tycho’s work to publish his own laws of planetary motion. • He said that planets orbit in elliptical orbits around the sun.

  18. Galileo Galilei • In 1609, Galileo was the first to use a telescope to study the celestial bodies. • He found four moons orbiting Jupiter. • He found craters and mountains on the moon. • Galileo also discovered sunspots on the sun and the phases of Venus. • Galileo believed in the sun-centered universe theory.

  19. Sir Isaac Newton • In 1687, Isaac Newton explained why planets orbit the sun and why moons orbit the planets. • He came up with the ideas of the force of gravity. • Newton also came up with three laws of motion that govern the motion of the celestial bodies and objects on Earth.

  20. William Herschel • He discovered Uranus in 1781. • Uranus was discovered using mathematic equations. • Herschel also found small fuzzy patches in the sky and recorded their position.

  21. Edwin Hubble • In 1923, Hubble used photography to discover that the fuzzy patches of sky were actually galaxies from far away. • This led to the idea that the Milky Way Galaxy is not our entire universe, but actually a small part of it. • Hubble also discovered that the universe is expanding.

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