Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be...

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Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I

Transcript of Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be...

Page 1: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I

Page 2: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Performing Experiments

• Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables

• Possible outcomes of an experiment:– The experiment may support the theory

• We then continue to make predictions and test them

– The experiment may falsify the theory• We need a new theory that describes both the original data and

the results of the new experiment

• Since we cannot do every possible experiment, a theory can never be proven true; it can only be proven false

Page 3: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Making Measurements• Errors

– Random– Systematic

• With every measurement, it is essential to provide an estimate of the uncertainty – the likely range of errors

• Example:– Using a ruler marked in mm, we round to the nearest marking –

at most off by half a division, or 0.5 mm– Cite a measurement of 15 mm as 15 0.5 mm to indicate that

the real value of the length is likely to be anywhere between 14.5 mm and 15.5 mm– If a theory predicts a value of 15. 2 mm, then a reading of 15 0.5 mm is in agreement with the theory but a reading of 15 0.1 mm is probably not

Page 4: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Is the uncertainty small or big?

• It depends! If you have a small uncertainty and the measured length is also small, you might have a huge uncertainty!

• Use percentages: – Percent error = (estimated uncertainty)/(result) x 100%– Example: 51.3 cm ± 0.2 cm gives

– Percent error = (0.2 cm)/(51.3cm) x 100 % = 0.4 % (This is a pretty small uncertainty)

Page 5: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Is the result precise or accurate or what?• Two different concepts: precision and accuracy!

• High precision means small error

• High accuracy means close to an accepted value

• Examples: * * * * high precision, high accuracy

* * * * high precision, low accuracy

* * * * low precision, high accuracy

* * * * low precision, low accuracy

accepted value

Page 6: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

When do results agree?

• Results agree, if they are within the error margins of each other

• Examples:

| O | | O |

values very different, but errors large: agreement!

| O | | O |

values closer, but errors smaller: no agreement!

Page 7: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Astronomical Distance Measurements

• Fundamental technique uses triangulation:– Objects appear to move with

respect to background if looked at from different vantage points

• Try looking at you thumb with only your left, then right eye

• The more the thumb jumps, the closer it is!

• Measure “jump”, get distance• See: Link, Link 2

Liu Hui, How to measure the height of a sea island.

Page 8: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Simple Triangulation

• Use geometry of similar triangles

• You know everything about a triangle if you know– Two sides and an angle– One side and two angles

• Example: baseline 100ft, angles 90° and 63.4° then distance = (100ft)(tan 63.4°) = 200ft

Page 9: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Parallax Basics

• The closer the object, the bigger the parallax (or parallactic angle)– Pencil held close (solid lines)

– Pencil held far (dashed lines)

• The farther the object the harder to measure the small angle, the more uncertain the distance

Page 10: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Triangulating the Size of the Earth• Eratosthenes (ca. 276 BC)

– Measures the radius of the earth to about 20%

Page 11: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Calculation• Angle is measured to be

7.2 = 360/50

• So distance Alexandria-Syene is 1/50 of Earth’s circumference

• Baseline can be measured: 5000 stades

Circumference is 23,330 miles (modern value: 25,000 miles – only 7% off

Page 12: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Baseline: Bigger = Better

• Can use Earth’s large size for a 12,700km baseline

• Just wait 12 hours!

Page 13: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Counterargument or not?

• Objection to Aristarchus’s model of a moving Earth: parallax of stars is not observed (back then)

• Aristarchus argued (correctly) that this means the stars must be very far away

Page 14: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Distances to the Stars

• Use even bigger baseline by waiting ½ year, not ½ day

• Baseline: 300 million km Parallax can be used out to about 100 light years

• The bigger the parallactic angle, the closer the star!

– A star with a measured parallax of 1” is 1 parsec away

– 1 pc is about 3.3 light years

• The nearest star (Proxima Centauri) is about 1.3 pc or 4.3 lyr away

Page 15: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

The most important measurement in Astronomy: Distance!

• The distances are astronomical – of course

• The distance scales are very different– Solar system: light minutes– Stars: light years– Galaxies: 100,000 ly– Universe: billions of ly

• Need different “yardsticks”

Page 16: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

Yardsticks and the Expanding Universe

• Realizing (measuring) the distances to objects means realizing how big the universe is: – We realized that the solar system is not the

universe– We realized that our galaxy is not the universe– We realized that the universe is not static

Page 17: Measurements, Triangulation & Conclusion Part I. Performing Experiments Experiments must be repeatable – requires careful control over variables Possible.

What can we conclude from observing patterns in the sky?

• Earth OR Celestial Sphere rotates

• Earth rotates around the Sun OR Sun moves about Earth

• Moon rotates around the Earth or v.v.?– Must be former, due to moon phases observed!

• Size of the earth from two observers at different locations

• Size of moon & moon’s orbit from eclipses