Concept of movement of a Solar system... #shorts #solarsystem #helical #vortex #galaxy
In this short,
We're trying to represent the actual movement of solar system... NASA’s learning website for children, they wrote in 2000 that our solar system (the sun, earth and other sun-orbiting planets) moves at an average speed of 828,000 kilometres per hour (about 514,500 miles per hour).
That movement is an orbiting motion around the Milky Way galaxy which takes about 230 million years to make one complete orbit around the galaxy.
Note that on doing a little more research, the speed of the solar system’s movement is stated to be different by different sources. The different speeds are perhaps due to what the speed calculation is being related to.
Most movements of and in the galaxy, and of the solar system and it’s planets seem to be vortex (‘swirly’) in nature.
This type of movement aligns with how energy is said to move at the smaller end of the universe… at the quantum level within atoms, electrons, neutrons and protons.
The pertinent point, however, being that the sun is moving, and quite fast.
Nicolaus Copernicus proposed the heliocentric model in his work published in 1543, according to NASA Earth Observatory(opens in new tab). While the theory of the sun being central was correct, the model in its entirety held many inaccuracies. Because the heliocentric model was initially pieced together without a telescope, all observations had to be made with the naked eye and simple instruments. The positions of planets were predicted largely by observing their position and size against the stars, according to the book The Solar System(opens in new tab) (Jones & Bartlett Learning , 2010).
The Copernican heliocentric model was the first widely accepted idea that the sun was the center of the solar system, rather than Earth. However, Nicolaus Copernicus wasn't the first person to suggest this. As early as a thousand years before that, the 5th century Greek philosophers Philolaus and Hicetas suggested that the Earth could be circling a fiery object, according to the American Philological Association(opens in new tab). Greek astronomer Aristarchus of Samos suggested that this object was the sun two centuries later.
Because nobody was able to explain why the stars looked the same despite Earth changing position, the geocentric model became more widely recognised. Egyptian astronomer and mathematician Claudius Ptolemy overcame this problem with a new theory, that the Earth was fixed at the center of the solar system. This theory remained popular for around 1,400 years, which made the revival of the heliocentric model seem like a new concept.
Special credits to: @DjSadhu
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Thanks for watching
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For more details:
https://www.space.com/heliocentrism
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/OrbitsHistory
https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/earth-move-universe/
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