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Dr. Bozidar Mitrovic: We discussed the nature of the motion of planets. Most of the time,
it's from west to east prograde but every now and then, they
reverse the direction of motion. The question is how to fit this
into the Aristotelian model of geocentric universe.
They actually had to invent a system of epicycles to describe the
motion of planets. Let me explain what epicycles are. Imagine that
you have a bicycle wheel mounted horizontally. At the edge of the
bicycle wheel, you have a platform in the form of a disk that is
also spinning, and there is a little ball mounted at the edge of
the disk.
What would be, if both the wheel and the disk are spinning in the
same direction, the trajectory in space of this ball? It would form
these loops, these epicycles. In other words...in epicycle system,
you have that planets are moving along small circles whose centers
are moving along a bigger circle. As a result, the trajectory of
the planet has this loopy shape.
Basically, the prograde motion corresponds to this direction of
motion. When they reverse the direction of motion, the planets are
actually undergoing this motion along the loop, and so on. Again,
prograde motion. Here, it reverses and moves in retrograde motion
and so on. This is the system of epicycles that they had to invent
in order to explain the motion of the planets.
This thing tells you that your theory, the geocentric model, is in
trouble. In science, as in everyday life, once you need to
complicate things more and more in order to explain things
happening around you, usually means that your starting assumption
is wrong.
A hallmark of a correct theory, of correct assumption, is that,
actually, you don't need to do anything to it in order to account
for many, many things that you observe, also predict new
observations, account for observations in the future. If you need
to need to modify the theory, to tweak it all the time to account
for larger number of events, the odds are that your starting
assumption, in this case the assumption of the Earth-centered
universe, is wrong.
Then you have to actually revisit your basic assumption and see
what is happening. Heliocentric model, we can understand this
retrograde motion of planets much more naturally. It turns out that
the closer the planet is to the Sun, the faster it moves, the
bigger its orbital speed is. As the distance from the Sun
increases, the orbital speed drops.
In this case, of the Earth and the Mars, the Earth is moving faster
in its orbit around the Sun than Mars. At some point, when Earth is
here and Mars is here, we see it in the background of stars to be
located at this position one. Sometime later, when the Earth is
here at two, it has moved this distance. Because the Mars is
slower, it has progressed smaller distance. Nevertheless, we see
Mars to be here against the background of stars.
Between four and six, if you will, the Earth is overtaking Mars.
From the vantage point of Earth, it looks to us as if the Mars is
lagging behind. What is happening, the Earth is simply...because
it's moving faster, overtaking the Mars, and to us, moving together
with Earth, it appears as if the Mars started moving backward, but
it hasn't. It simply continues to move along its orbit around the
Sun, it just been overtaken by the Earth.
Then we have for a while, from one to four, we have prograde motion
from west to east. From four to six, we have retrograde motion from
east to west. Then things normalize again after six, starting from
seven, eight and so on. To us, it appears that Mars continued
moving along the same direction. This is how the retrograde motion
of planets is understood within the heliocentric model.
Epicycles basically are...If this is the Earth, the trajectory of
the planet is obtained as follows. The planets are moving along
small circles, whose centers move along the bigger circle. The end
result is basically that you get this looping trajectory. These are
the epicycles.