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Question Answer
Kepler's 1st law of Planetary Motion  The orbit of each planet about the Sun is an ellipse with the Sun at one focus  
Newton  Built the first reflecting telescope (1668)  
Copernicus  Published heliocentric theory of the Universe (1543)  
Galileo  Used telescope for astronomical purposes and discovers 4 Jovian moons, Moon's craters, and Milky Way Galaxy (1609)  
Ptolemy  Suggested geocentric theory of the universe in work Mathematike Syntaxis (140 BC)  
Brahe  Discovered a supernova in the constellation Cassiopeia (1572)  
Aristarchus  Suggested the Earth revolves around the Sun. He provided the first estimate of Earth-Sun distance (280 BC)  
Eratosthenes  Measured the circumference of the Earth with surprising accuracy (240 BC)  
Hipparchus  Developed first accurate star map and star catalogue with over 850 bright stars (130 BC)  
First Solar/Lunar calendars  2000 BC in Egypt and Mesopotamia  
Julian Calendar  Purely solar calendar implemented in the Roman Empire (45 BC)  
Hans Lippershey  Spectacle maker invents telescope (1608)  
Kepler  Created the 3 laws of Planetary Motion (1609 - 1619)  
Kepler's 2nd law of Planetary Motion  As a planet moves around its orbit, it sweeps out equal areas in equal times. This tells us that a planet moves faster when it is closer to the Sun (near perihelion) than when it is farther from the Sun (near aphelion) in its orbit.  
Newton's Laws  3 Laws of Motion and the Universal law of gravitation  
Newton's Laws of Motion  1) In the absence of a net force, an object moves with constant velocity 2) a net force affects an object's motion. Force = rate of change in momentum or force = mass X acceleration 3) For any force, there is always an equal and opposite reactive force.  
Newton's Universal law of Gravitation  The force of gravity (Fg) between two objects given by the formula Fg = G(M1M2/d2)  
Drake Equation  Lays out the factors that play a role in determining the number of communicating civilizations in our galaxy.  
Circles within circles  Ancient Greek theory that the earth was the center of the Universe and all planets moved in perfect circles around Earth.  
Heliocentric  Belief that the sun is the center of the Universe  
Geocentric  Ancient belief that the Earth is the center of the Universe  
Conservation of energy  Energy (including mass-energy) can be neither created nor destroyed, but can only change from one form to another  
Conservation of momentum  In the absence of net force, the total momentum of a system remains constant  
Conservation of angular momentum  in the absence of net torque (twisting force), the total angular moment of a system remains constant  
Azimuth  Direction around the horizon from due north, measured clockwise in degrees  
Astronomy  The study of the Universe and movement of the planets  
Astrology  The study of the movement of the stars and how their alignment affects people's lives  
Stars in Milky Way  100 Billion  
Stars in the entire Universe  100 Billion X 100 Billion = 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 or 10^22  
Speed of Light  300,000 km per sec  
Size of the Earth  Earth = tip of a ballpoint pen Sun = size of a grapefruit  
Distance to the Sun  1 AU or 150,000,000 km  
Distance to the moon  4 days from the earth  
Age of the Solar System  13.7 Billion Years  
Ecliptic  Apparent movement of the sun and stars across the sky  
Zenith  90 degrees above the horizon (straight up)  
Azimuth  left to right direction  
Mass  amount of particles in a given space  
Acceleration due to gravity  The acceleration of a falling object which is designated by g = 9.8 m/s squared  
Energy  what makes matter move; kinetic, potential, radiative  
Astronimical Units (AU)  The average distance (semimajor axis) of the Earth from the Sun which is about 150 million km  
Light Year  Distance light travels in one year which is 9.45 trillion km (9.46 x 10^14) which = 300,000 km/sec  
Rotation  The spinning of an object around its axis  
Revolution  The orbital motion of one object around another