syrf3763 said:
And could you please explain a little more about did We get the positions(running path) of planets&stars first to calculate the weight? If that's true, that would be amazingly accurate by those ancient people with small telescopes.
I'm not that well versed in the history of science, but from what I read in Resnick & Halliday(a very good college-level introductory book to physics), positions of planets were measured reasonably accurately even before the invention of telescope some four centuries ago.
In fact, Kepler synthesised his laws of planetary motion using data gathered by Tycho Brache, who never used a telescope.
saying that the Milky Way band running at a different angle,isn't that the Earth's angle changes too due to its own orbit towards sun? Since nothing is stationary in the space, did we at least have a stationary formula or equation for this?
I must confess I'm having a somewhat hard time understanding what is "this". If you could try and formulate your questions as clear and to the point as possible, that'd help with getting the right answer.
I'm guessing, though, that you might be asking if the fact that the Earth is tilted on it's axis has any effect?
It has no effect on the angle between the ecliptic(the yearly orbital plane of Earth) and the galaxtic plane.
What it does, is to make the whole sky shift a bit up and down over the year.
I'm glad I could help!
and one more question, while our Earth orbiting the sun,does it perfectly match with our clock time? I mean ideally We thought Earth would be perfect sphere while in reality is only close to it, would that happen Earth running slower or faster in its path than our clock time? since I've been hearing about people saying this winter is coming early or this spring comes sooner.
Again, I'm not sure what is the meat of the question.
If you're asking whether a full orbit takes exactly a year, then no. That's why we get leap years every now and then to compensate for the difference.
If you're asking whether the Earth moves in its orbit with constant speed, then no again. This is what Kepler explained with his laws - orbits are(usually) ellipses, and the closer to the central body(e.g.the Sun), the faster the orbiting one goes.
And if you're asking whether all the speeds and angles and other parameters change over time, then yes.
For example, which star is the northern star changes over ~26000 years(it was Thuban in the constellation Draco 2000 years ago). Planets(esp. Jupiter) tug on each other, constantly perturbing the orbits. The Sun loses mass while planets and moons exchange angular momentum via tidal forces, causing the orbits to get longer, and sometimes shorter. The point of the closest approach to the Sun on Earth's orbit shifts as well(these days it's in January).
It's all in a constant state of flux, but the changes are minuscle when compared to the human history.
Furthermore, it's all governed by very simple laws - notably the universal law of gravitation.
I don't think it's got much to do with short-term climatic changes. It's all very much too slow a process to credit/blame for it.