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Physics Reviewer: I. Science C. Alteration Motion

This document provides an overview of physics and early models of the universe. It discusses (1) the branches of science including physical science, biological science, and matter and energy. (2) Early pioneers in astronomy like Thales of Miletus, Anaximander, Pythagoras, Plato, and Tycho Brahe who made qualitative and quantitative observations of celestial motions. (3) Models of the universe including the geocentric model and Kepler's laws of planetary motion, including his discovery that planets move in ellipses with the sun at one focus.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
163 views

Physics Reviewer: I. Science C. Alteration Motion

This document provides an overview of physics and early models of the universe. It discusses (1) the branches of science including physical science, biological science, and matter and energy. (2) Early pioneers in astronomy like Thales of Miletus, Anaximander, Pythagoras, Plato, and Tycho Brahe who made qualitative and quantitative observations of celestial motions. (3) Models of the universe including the geocentric model and Kepler's laws of planetary motion, including his discovery that planets move in ellipses with the sun at one focus.

Uploaded by

amara athena
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PHYSICS REVIEWER

I. SCIENCE - Happens when an object is acted


A. PHYSICAL SCIENCE upon by any external force
- Physics and Chemistry c. Alteration Motion
- Branch of science that deals with the study of non-living “Liquid water turned to ice by
things removing heat from the liquid water”
B. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE - Type of motion that describes
- Biology and Earth Science qualitative changes
- Branch of science that deals with the study of living - Considered as chemistry
things 2. Celestial
C. MATTER - Happens in the cosmos, that includes the Sun,
- Anything with mass and occupies space Moon, Planets etc.
- Solid, liquid, gas a. Diurnal Motion
- God particle enables it to have mass - Daily motion
D. ENERGY - Affected or due to the Earth’s
-A​ bility to do work rotation
- Heat, light sound and chemical - Sun, moon, planets and stars rise in
II. PHYSICS the East and set in the West
- Branch of science that deals with the relationship of - 24 hours
matter, its behavior and energy - Ancient astronomers took all celestial
- As a fundamental science, it aims to unify all law and motions to be diurnal
principles governing matter, motion and energy on Earth - Celestial Sphere
and beyond b. Annual Motion
- Laws are supported by mathematical equations - Yearly motion
A. EXAMPLES - Due to Earth’s revolution
1. Red Moon B. THALES OF MILETUS
- An example of the phenomenon called the - Founded the Ionian School of Philosophers which aims to
Lunar Eclipse explain the universe
- Red because the moon passes through the - Ionian is a moon of Jupiter
shadows of the Earth - Attempted to ask questions about the universe and
- Umbra = dark → Penumbra = light answered them through reason, observation and
- ​Lunar Eclipse: ​4-6 hours, full moon (Sun, Earth, application of geometry
Moon) - Saw the universe from a natural mechanistic view
- ​Solar Eclipse; ​1 minute, new moon (Sun, Moon, - ​Qualitative; ​Observations and descriptions →
Earth) Quantitative; ​Measurements and numbers
- ​Application; ​Motion of the moon affects the C. ANAXIMANDER
Earth and movement of the objects in the sky - Proposed the 1st concept of the universe
are constant - Universe had a cylindrical Earth surrounded by air and a
III. EARLY VIEWS OF THE UNIVERSE AND MODERN solid sphere
ASTRONOMY - Holes in the solid sphere allowed the light from the outer
A. ARISTOTLE’S VIEW OF MOTION rim of fire to shine through, appearing as stars and the sun
- First to discover motion - Qualitative
- Greek philosopher and scientist that categorized motion D. PYTHAGORAS
into two. - He was one of the 1st to use mathematics to challenge,
1. Terrestrial question and support his observations of the stars
- Pertains to the movement of any object on the - Quantitative; He used regular geometric solids like the
Earth sphere to find harmonics and ratios in the natural
- Classified as natural, violent and alteration E. PLATO
a. Natural Motion - Explained the origins of the universe
“A ball thrown up goes down because - Concluded that heaven is circular and the motion of
it seeks its natural place --- the ground” celestial bodies are as perfect objects have to be constant
- ​Determined by nature of an object’s and circular
composition - Retrograde motion (east to west)
b. Violent Motion 1. Saving the Appearances
“Shooting a bow with an arrow” - Explains thinking of Philosophers
- Push and Pull - Faced with the difficulty of explaining the
PHYSICS REVIEWER
retrograde motion of planets → Plato used the - Danish nobleman known for his accurate and
cave story (allegory)vto save the appearances comprehensive astronomical and planetary
and provide an explanation without dismissing observation
the present belief → Saving the appearances - Discovered Cassiopeia
means discovering and understanding the reality - Before Galili, he had no telescope
behind what humans perceived to be true D. EDWARD HUBBLE
- Truth of logic, number and geometry > - Hubble telescope
Observations - Many objects previously thought to be dust or gas
- Don’t rely on personal knowledge - Classified as nebulae were actually galaxies beyond the
IV. MODELS AND DESCRIPTIONS OF THE UNIVERSE milky way
A. GEOCENTRIC V. LAWS OF PLANETARY MOTION BY JOHANNES KEPLER
- Earth is the center A. JOHANNES KEPLER
1. Eudoxus - ​German mathematician and astronomer who developed
- Called the Eudoxus Model of the Homocentric laws by planetary motion in 1601
Model 1. Law Of Ellipses
- Used concentric spheres that had a certain - Planets orbit is elliptical and the sun is located
arrangement in one of the foci
- Planets were attracted to on of the spheres and - Major Axis (x) → Minor Axis (y)
travels around the center making periodic - ​Perihelion; ​Orbit of the planet closest to the
retrograde motion sun
2. Aristotle - Aphelion; ​Farther from the sun
- Spherical earth at the center - Perigee; ​Close to moon
- Everything revolved around us - Apogee; ​Farther from the moon
- ​Prime Mover; ​Responsible for revolution - axis = distance → period = time
- 56 auxi sphere 2. Law of Equal Axis
3. Ptolemy - Imaginary line segment connecting a planet to
- Eccentric Model the sun
- Different eccentricities, deferents and epicyclic - Sweeps out areas in equal time intervals
B. HELIOCENTRIC 3. Law of Periods
1. Aristarchus - Square of the time it takes for the planet to
- Sun is bigger than the Earth and its at the make a revolution around the sun (Orbital
center of the universe Period) is proportional to the cube of the
- All planets orbit the sun Semimajor axis of the planets elliptical unit
2. Copernicus VI. MOTION
- Sun is at the center and not at center A. MOTION
- All heavenly bodies, resolve around it in a - Change in an object’s position and on a reference point
circular path - Quantities (vector and scalar)
C. OTHERS 1. Scalar
1. Galileo Galili - Magnitude only with no direction
- Italian - Mass, temperature, density
- Discovered that the sun has sunspots, and dark - Ex. Speed and magnitude
patches which makes it imperfect 2. Vector
_ Sunspots were moving which made him - MAgnitude and direction
believe that the sun was rotating unknown to - Velocity, acceleration and force
Aristotle and Ptolemy - Determine if vector of scalar
- Moon was rough disregarded Aristotle’s belief B. KINEMATICS
- Mediccean Sidera is the brightest Galiliean - Branch of physics that involves motion
moon - ​Spatial and temporal description of motion (Space and
- Supernova was observed time)
- Galileo Galili saw 2 supernovas (1572 and 1604) - Motion can be thought of as an object's change in
- Venus went through a complete sets of phases position with respect to reference point
just like the moon which is consistent with the - 5 kinds; Freefall, Rectilinear, Projectile, Circular,
cepenician system but not with ptoleic systems Rotational
2. Tycho Brahe - Direction indicates sign of answer
- Born 3 years after death of Copernicus
PHYSICS REVIEWER
B. UNIFORMLY ACCELERATED MOTION
- ​Constant acceleration
- Velocity increases at equal rate for every unit of time
Rectilinear - Straight line motion along the x axis
- 1 dimensional motion - Acceleration brought about by change in; speed, velocity
- ​Speed; ​Distance Travelled by an and direction
object over time VIII. LAWS OF MOTION
- ​Velocity; ​Speed and direction -- - Formulated by Isaac Newton
displacement of an object over a
- ​Weight; W ​ eight of an object is the gravitational force
period of time
- ​Acceleration; ​Change of velocity per acting on it on the surface of the earth -- it is not mass --
unit of time -- speed increasing Example of vector force -- IF very far from the surface of
the earth, the gravitational force is better approximated
Freefall - Along y-axis by FG -- How heavy the object is while mass is how heavy
the substance is
Projectile - Parabolic with respect to x&y
A. LAWS OF MOTION
Circular - Planets (no axis) 1. Law of Inertia
- An object will persist in it state of rest/motion
Rotational - Has an axis unless acted upon by an external force
C. HORIZONTAL MOTION - An object at rest will stay at rest
1. Aristotle 2. Law of Acceleration
- Force is needed to start and sustain the motion - Acceleration of an object is directly
of an object, for it to move, you need to move proportional to the net force and inversely
2. Galileo proportional to its mass
- Force is not needed to sustain motion of an 3. Law of Interaction
object - For every action there is equal and opposite
- Force is required to change motion reaction
D. VERTICAL MOTION 4. Law of Universal Gravitation
1. Aristotle - Extension of Newton’s laws
- Objects fall at a rate proportional to the weight - There always exists an attractive force between
- Heavier objects fall much faster than lighter two masses that is directly proportional to the
objects mass but inversely proportional of their distance
2. Galileo - Farther = lower fg → Closer = higher fg
- Objects fall at the same rate regardless of their IX. MOMENTUM
weight if air resistance is negligible - Contains the mass and velocity
E. FREEFALL MOTION - The inertia of moving objects
- Gravity is the only force acting on the subject - Inertia is directly proportional to mass
- Along y-axis X. SCIENTISTS
- Positive 9.8 m/s​2 is used when the object is moving A. ISAAC NEWTON
towards the surface of the Earth - Developed laws of motion and mechanics and invented
- Negative 9.8 m/s​2 differential calculus
F. PROJECTILE MOTION B. HERMAN VON HELMHOLTZ
1. Aristotle - Developed the first law of thermodynamics, a statement
- Force needed for object to move through air of conservation of energy (law of energy)
until it’s natural motion eventually brings it to - Energy is the ability to do work
Earth C. JAMES PRESCOTT JOULE
2. Galileo - Discovered the mechanical equivalent of heat
- Projectile is influenced by vertical motion due D. ALBERT EINSTEIN
to the force of gravity and horizontal motion that - Explained Brownian motion and photoelectric effects
is uniform - Formulated theories of special and general relativity
VII. MOTION GRAPHS - 1908 NP
- Given the motion of an object, physical quantities like XI. TYPES OF COLLISION
displacement, velocity and acceleration of a moving object A. ELASTIC
can be described and calculated - Both kinetic energy and momentum are conserved in the
A. UNIFORM MOTION system
- Motion at constant velocity B. INELASTIC
- Only momentum is conserved in the system
PHYSICS REVIEWER
XII. LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MOTION
- If no external force acts on the system, the momentum
of the system is said to be conserved
XIII. WAVES AND OPTICS
- Light is an example of the wave
A. MECHANICAL WAVES C. DISPERSION
- Energy is a disturbance travelling through space that - Confinement of wave propagation in 1 plane
requires a medium
1. Transverse
- Vibrations in strings, ripples on water surface

2. Longitudinal D. REFRACTION
- Earthquake and explosions - Changing of wave speed when passing through another
- Oscillations parallel to wave propagation medium
- Sound = Vibration → Music = Rhythm - Bending of light
XVI. LAW OF REFRACTION
- Index of Refraction (n)
→ Measure of how much the speed of light changes in the
medium

B. ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
- Does not require a medium for transmission
- Ex. light waves, thermal radiation, x-ray, visible light,
microwave, infrared, gamma rays
- Travel at a constant speed, the speed of light.
- ​C = Speed of light ​(3x10​8​m/s)
XIV. PHYSICAL WAVE CHARACTERISTICS
A. WAVELENGTH
- Minimum distance between 2 points on the wave that
behave identically
B. FREQUENCY
- # of oscillations per unit of time
C. WAVE SPEED
- Rate at which the wave travels
XV. PROPERTIES OF WAVE/LIGHT
A. REFLECTION
- Bouncing off of waves upon encountering a medium
- Happens on smooth surfaces

B. DIFFRACTION
- Spreading of waves as it passes through an opening or
aperture

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