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August 1, 2025
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History of Astronomy Timeline
Category:
Andere
Wurde aktualisiert:
4 Dez 2021
0
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438
Autoren
Created by
Andie Doscher
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Grace Lukens
Very good timeline!
5 Mon. zuvor
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Ereignisse
Apollo 11: This was the space mission that had the first people walk on the moon.
Declassification of Pluto: The International Astronomical Union made the definition of a planet more specific and Pluto did not make the cut.
Columbia Disaster: The space shuttle Columbia was returning after a 16-day mission. When they were returning, the shuttle broke apart and the whole crew was killed.
Gan De: He was one of the first Chinese astronomers. He recorded his observations using coordinated and dates. This shows that there are different stars visible at different times of the year.
Ptolemy: He was able to predict prescribed pathways and changing velocities. This allowed astronomers to be able to make accurate predictions of where planets would be.
Eratosthenes: He made the first measurement of Earth's size. He did this by using the two points of the relative position of the sun. This also proved that the earth is round because the shadows were at different angles at different latitudes.
Aristarchus: He was the first to say that the Earth rotates on an axis and revolves around the sun. It is evidence for the hellenistic model.
Hipparchus: He discovered the precession of the equinoxes. This is documented by Pliny the Elder. Hipparchus discovered this by observing the alterations in the measured positions of the stars proving from a moving earth.
Nicolaus Copernicus: Earth revolves around the sun, rotates on its axis, and wobbles on its axis. These movements explain irregular movements of celestial objects in the sky.
Galileo Galilei: He discovered that Venus went through phases. This confirmed Galileo's doubts about the geocentric model. This gave more evidence to the heliocentric model.
Isaac Newton: He discovered that gravity is a force that is affected by the size and distance of two bodies. Gravity depends on the amount of matter in the attracted objects and the distance between them.
Johannes Kepler: Kepler had three laws about the fundamental laws of planetary motion. The first is that all planets orbit the sun in an elliptical path. The second is that planets are faster when they are closer to the sun. The third is that the distance from the sun effects the length of a planet's orbital period. He fixed Copernicus's model by having the planets orbit the sun elliptically.
Christiaan Huygens: He thought that light is made up of a series of waves. This competed with Newton's proposition that light was made of particles. Today, scientists believe that light behaves as a particle and a wave.
Edwin Hubble: He was studying the Andromeda Nebula and noticed that it had stars that looks like stars from the Milky Way but much fainter. He came to the conclusion that the stars in the Andromeda Nebula were much farther from Earth. This gave evidence that the Andromeda Nebula was a different galaxy and that not all celestial objects were in the Milky Way.
William Herschel: He discovered the planet Uranus. Herschel was using a telescope he built himself to study stars. He noticed that one of them was unlike the rest and discovered that is was orbiting the sun.
Carl Sagan: He is thought to be one of the first astronomers to suggest that there may exist on other planets. This influenced NASA to search the solar system for signs of life.
Jocelyn Bell Burnell: She is the first person who detected a pulsar, a rapidly spinning neutron star. This discovery influenced many new thoughts and ideas to explain the origin of stars and how they formed and developed.
Georges Lemaître: He drew out an early version of the big bang theory. He proposed that the origin of the universe started from a primeval atom. Since everything in the universe is separating, there must have been a time where everything was compacted together.
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