17 Observations of Motion: Brahe, Kepler, and Galilei

Image of an artist's rendition of Danish Astronomer Tychos Brahe.
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Tycho Brahe made numerous measurements of the positions of astronomical objects until his death in 1601. His measurements were accurate to better than 1/100 of a degree.

Johannes Kepler was Tycho’s assistant. Kepler tried to obtain Tycho’s data to fit the Copernican Heliocentric Solar System Model. (Kepler’s and Tycho did not get along.) But Tycho’s data did not exactly work for a Heliocentric Solar System! So Kepler looked for a new model, and from that he developed Kepler’s Laws.

Kepler’s First Law

The planets travel around the Sun in elliptical orbits. Copernicus thought the planets moved in perfect circles, whereas Kepler defined these as ellipses, based on Brahe’s data.

Kepler’s Second Law

As a planet orbits the Sun, it sweeps out equal areas of its ellipse in equal periods of time. The closer the planet to the Sun (or its star), the faster it moves.

Kepler’s Second Law is stated as:

Image of Kepler's second law in an equation. V equals the square root of four multiplied by pie to the second power multiplied by a to the third power divided by p to the third power multiplied by 2 divided by r minus 1 divided by a.

Where:

  • is the orbiting object’s velocity
  • is the semimajor axis of the object’s orbit
  • is the sidereal period of revolution
  • is the distance between the orbiting object and the body being orbited, such as Earth orbiting the Sun, or the Moon orbiting Earth

Kepler’s Third law

A relationship exists between the planet’s period and its distance from the Sun.

Kepler’s Third Law is stated as:

Image of Kepler's third law in an equation. A to the third power equals k multiplied by p to the second power.

Where:

  • is the orbiting object’s semimajor axis
  • is the orbiting object’s period to orbit
  • is a constant, referred to as Kepler’s constant

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