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REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES

BULACAN STATE UNIVERSITY


CITY OF MALOLOS, BULACAN
BELEN, Lemuel Kim C. SCI313 ASTRONOMY
BEEd Generalist 3 B MR. GARCIA CIRIACO

THE UNIVERSE
As the totality of everything that exists, including all matter and energy,
the planets, stars, galaxies, and the contents of intergalactic space.
CLAUDIUS PTOLEMY
Ptolemy is most famous for his contribution to astronomy, which is in his 13-book work
called the Almagest.
The Ptolemaic system of astronomy placed the Earth at the center of the universe and explained
all the observed motions of the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars with a system of uniform circular
motions.
Ptolemy borrowed heavily from the previous work of Hipparchus.
The Ptolemaic astronomical system was wrong, but it was a good enough scientific model to last
over 1400 years until the time of Copernicus.
ARISTARCHUS OF SAMOS
Aristarchus (310 BC -230 BC) was a famous Greek mathematician and astronomer,
popular for his theories regarding the heliocentricity of our solar system.
He was the first to say that the Sun, and not the Earth, was the center of our universe. This theory
brought him ridicule during his lifetime.
Aristarchus was one of the first astronomers to calculate the relative sizes of the Sun, the Moon
and the Earth.
NICOLAS COPERNICUS
The Universe was Earth centered. His theory answered the fact that the planets sizes
were different throughout the year and the fact that the orbits of the planets were irregular now
and then would be explained. He wrote his theory in a book, De Revolutionibus Orbium
Coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres)
GALILEO GALILEI
In 1609, instrument put together by a lens-grinder in Holland, he constructed the first
complete astronomical telescope.
Galileo discovered that the moon, shining with reflected light, had an uneven, mountainous
surface and that the Milky Way was made up of numerous separate stars.
In 1610 he discovered the four largest satellites of Jupiter, the first satellites of a planet other
than Earth to be detected. He observed and studied the oval shape of Saturn (the limitations of
his telescope prevented the resolving of Saturn's rings), the phases of Venus, and the spots on the
sun. His investigations confirmed his acceptance of the Copernican theory of the solar system;
but he did not openly declare a doctrine so opposed to accepted beliefs until 1613, when he
issued a work on sunspots.

ISAAC NEWTON
Gravity, Newtons other great contribution, is one of the four fundamental forces in the
universe.
Because of Galileos work, Newton knew that an object fell to the Earth at a rate of about
9.8 meters (32 feet) per second. Thus the apple [that] fell from the tree fell to the Earth at
about this rate.

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