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Even before taking an astronomy class, most people have a sense of how gravity works. No mathematics is needed to understand the idea that every mass attracts every other mass and that gravity is the force that causes apples to fall from trees. But what if you want to know how much you'd weigh on Saturn's moon Titan, or why the Moon doesn't come crashing down onto the Earth, or how it can possibly be true that you're tugging on the Earth exactly as hard as the Earth is tugging on you? The best way to answer questions like that is to gain a practical understanding of Newton's Law of Gravity and related principles.
This chapter is designed to help you achieve that understanding. It begins with an overview of Newton's Law of Gravity, in which you'll find a detailed explanation of the meaning of each term. You'll also find plenty of examples showing how to use this law – with or without a calculator. Later sections of this chapter deal with Newton's Laws of Motion as well as Kepler's Laws. And like every chapter in this book, this one is modular. So, if you're solid on gravity but would like a review of Newton's Third Law, you can skip to that section and dive right in.
This chapter reviews four important mathematical concepts and techniques that will be helpful in many quantitative problems you're likely to encounter in a college-level introductory astronomy course or textbook. As with all the chapters in the book, you can read the sections within this chapter in any order, or you can skip them entirely if you're already comfortable with this material. But if you're working through one of the later chapters and you find that you're uncertain about some aspect of unit conversion, the ratio method, rate problems, or scientific notation, you can turn back to the relevant section of this chapter.
Units and unit conversions
One of the most powerful tools you can use in solving problems and in checking your solutions is to consistently include units in your calculations. As you may have noticed, among the first things that physics and astronomy professors look for when checking students' work is whether the units of the answer make sense. Students who become adept at problem-solving develop the habit of checking this for themselves.
Understanding units is important not just in science, but in everyday life as well. That's because units are all around you, giving meaning to the numbers that precede them. Telling someone “I have a dozen” is meaningless. A dozen what? Bagels? Minutes to live? Spouses? If you hope to communicate information about quantities to others, numbers alone are insufficient. Nearly every number must have units to define its meaning. So a very good habit to start building mastery is to always include the units of any number you write down.
In astronomy, virtually all of the information that we can learn about the Universe comes from various forms of light. Since planets, stars, and other objects in space are so far away and our ability to travel in space is rudimentary, we must glean as much information as possible from their light. Therefore, it behooves you to understand how light works and what kind of information it carries.
A great deal of the information in light from astronomical objects can be derived from the spectrum of that light. You can read about astronomical spectra in the first section of this chapter, and the later sections discuss some of the techniques astronomers use to interpret spectra.
Light and spectrum fundamentals
The most fundamental property that distinguishes one type of light from another is its color. This section introduces the concept of a spectrum as a graphical presentation of the brightness of different colors in light, and you'll learn how to translate between various quantitative properties associated with the color of light. Light behaves both as waves and particles, and you'll see how the properties related to color can be used to describe both the electromagnetic-wave and the photon-particle aspects of light. If you'd like to understand why light is called an electromagnetic wave and exactly what's doing the waving in light, you can find additional resources about the nature of light on the book's website.
Two of the most popular topics in astronomy classes are black holes and cosmology. Both of these subjects can be somewhat abstract, hard to visualize, and quite mathematical, giving them a mystique which likely contributes to their popularity. Precisely because some of the objects and processes are hard to visualize, the mathematical foundations of these topics are a valuable source of insight into their nature. So for these topics, even more than for other topics for which you have physical intuition on your side, it behooves you to understand the mathematics.
This chapter deals with “limiting cases” by investigating the mathematical ramifications of taking one variable to an extreme, such as allowing the radius of an object to shrink to zero or permitting time to run to infinity. The physical manifestations of these mathematical limiting cases lead to the most exotic concepts in astronomy: black holes, which are singularities of mass; and cosmology, which deals with the history and fate of the Universe. The chapter draws upon many of the tools discussed previously in this book, including units, solving equations using ratios and the absolute method, gravity, light, and graph interpretation. Black holes and cosmology bookend the entire range of possible sizes, from the infinitesimally small to the unimaginably immense, and are well worth the investment of time it takes to understand their mathematical foundations.
Before diving into black holes, you should make sure you have a solid understanding of the concepts and equations related to density and escape speed. Those are the subjects of the first two sections of this chapter, so if you're already comfortable with those topics, you can jump ahead to Section 6.3.
This book has one purpose: to help you understand and apply the mathematics used in college-level astronomy. The authors have instructed several thousand students in introductory astronomy courses at large and small universities, and in our experience a common response to the question “How's the course going for you?” is “I'm doing fine with the concepts, but I'm struggling with the math.” If you're a student in that situation, or if you're a life-long learner who'd like to be able to delve more deeply into the many wonderful astronomy books and articles in bookstores and on-line, this book is here to help.
We want to be clear that this book is not intended to be your first exposure to astronomy, and it is not a comprehensive treatment of the many topics you can find in traditional astronomy textbooks. Instead, it provides a detailed treatment of selected topics that our students have found to be mathematically challenging. We have endeavored to provide just enough context for those topics to help foster deeper understanding, to explain the meaning of important mathematical relationships, and most of all to provide lots of illustrative examples.
We've also tried to design this book in a way that supports its use as a supplemental text. You'll notice that the format is modular, so you can go right to the topic of interest. If you're solid on gravity but uncertain of how to use the radiation laws, you can skip Chapter 2 and dive right into Section 3.2 of Chapter 3.
While it remains true that “entropy is not a localized, microscale phenomenon at which we can point, even in our imaginations, and say, ‘Look! There is entropy’” and that, “if we insist on trying to understand a subject in ways inconsistent with its nature, we will be disappointed,” the eight chapters of this guide have prepared us to give a constructive answer to the question “What is entropy?”
Any short description of entropy will necessarily be figurative. After all, one task of a figure of speech is to transfer a complex meaning from an extended description to a word or short phrase. In fact, we have already considered several figurative descriptions of entropy that are appropriate in special contexts: transformation content, disorder, uncertainty, spread in phase space, and missing information. Transformation content was Clausius’s way of referring to how the entropy function indicates the direction in which an isolated system may evolve. Spread in phase space, while appropriate for statistical systems, depends upon familiarity with the technical concept of phase space.
Disorder has long been a popular synonym for entropy. But recently order and disorder as describing low and high entropy systems have fallen into disfavor. This is because scientists have become fascinated with isolated systems that generate apparent order from apparent disorder. For instance, consider a thoroughly shaken bottle of water and olive oil. When left undisturbed, the water and olive oil begin to separate into distinct layers with the less dense olive oil on top. Yet even in this process the entropy of the oil–water system increases. Thus, while order and disorder are suggestive, they can mislead.
This innovative physics textbook intended for science and engineering majors develops classical mechanics from a historical perspective. The presentation of the standard course material includes a discussion of the thought processes of the discoverers and a description of the methods by which they arrived at their theories. However the presentation proceeds logically rather than strictly chronologically, so new concepts are introduced at the natural moment. The book assumes a familiarity with calculus, includes a discussion of rigid body motion, and contains numerous thought-provoking problems. It is largely based in content on The Mechanical Universe: Introduction to Mechanics and Heat, a book designed in conjunction with a tele-course to be offered by PBS in the Fall of 1985. The advanced edition, however, does not coincide exactly with the video lessons, contains additional material, and develops the fundamental ideas introduced in the lower-level edition to a greater degree.
Data analysis lies at the heart of every experimental science. Providing a modern introduction to statistics, this book is ideal for undergraduates in physics. It introduces the necessary tools required to analyse data from experiments across a range of areas, making it a valuable resource for students. In addition to covering the basic topics, the book also takes in advanced and modern subjects, such as neural networks, decision trees, fitting techniques and issues concerning limit or interval setting. Worked examples and case studies illustrate the techniques presented, and end-of-chapter exercises help test the reader's understanding of the material.
The Austrian physicist Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann (1844–1906), educated at the University of Vienna, was appointed professor of mathematical physics at the University of Graz in 1869 at the age of only twenty-five. Boltzmann did important work in the fields of statistical mechanics and statistical thermodynamics; for instance, he contributed to the kinetic theory concerned with molecular speeds in gas. Boltzmann also promoted atomic theory, which at the time was still highly controversial. He was a member of the Imperial Austrian Academy of Sciences from 1885 and became a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1888. This three-volume work, prepared in 1909 by the physicist Fritz Hasenöhrl, one of Boltzmann's students, comprises all his academic publications from 1865 to 1905. Volume 1 contains papers from 1865 to 1874, including work on the movement of electricity, the theory of heat, and atoms in gases.
The Englefield mountain barometer was designed to calculate altitude and was so easy to use that a reading could be taken out of the window of a carriage – provided the horses stood still. Using a bar of mercury, which fell in the lower air pressure of higher altitudes, the barometer gave readings accurate to one thousandth of an inch. By taking a mercury reading at two locations, the owner could work out the difference in altitude between them. In this companion book, first published in 1817, the maker of the new barometer, Thomas Jones, provides tables listing the heights of objects measuring between fifteen and thirty-one inches of mercury. These measurements account for the heights of all mountains in England. He also includes tables that show how to allow for the expansion of both air and mercury. A fascinating book for historical researchers and experimenters in physics alike.