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Chapter 4 Gravity and the motion of Planets

Chapter 4 Gravity and the motion of Planets

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Chapter 4 Gravity and the motion of Planets. Retrograde Motion – the apparent backwards motion of a planet across the sky. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Chapter 4

Gravity and the motion of Planets

Page 2: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Retrograde Motion – the apparent backwards motion of a planetacross the sky

Page 3: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Explaining Retrograde Motionbecame a real challenge for early

astronomers, particularly those who believed that the earth was at the center of the universe – an idea that was popular until just

500 years ago!

Page 4: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets
Page 5: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Nicolaus Copernicus(1473 – 1543)

His great contribution to astronomy was to place the Sun atthe center of the Universe.

Now retrograde motion has a more rational explanation.

Page 6: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets
Page 7: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

The two key concepts in explaining retrograde motion

1. The planets orbit the Sun (not the earth).

2. The orbital velocity decreases with increasing distance from the Sun

Page 8: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

The full understanding of retrograde motion came with

important work by 3 more individuals

1. Tycho Brahe (1546 – 1601)2. Johannes Kepler (1571 – 1630)3. Isaac Newton (1642 – 1727)

Page 9: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Introducing….

Tycho Brahe

Page 10: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Introducing…..

Johannes Kepler

Page 11: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets
Page 12: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

Introducing……..

Isaac Newton

Page 13: Chapter 4  Gravity and the motion of Planets

The Law of Gravitation

F = G Mm/r2

Gravity provides the centripetal force that cause planetsto orbit the Sun

F = mv2/r

Equate these two equations and one finds that

v = G M/r

Which is why planets furthest from the Sun (big r) orbit with theslowest velocities (small v).