A Review of Coordinates

Similar documents
Understanding Positional Astronomy Part 2 Celestial Co-ordinates Difficulty: Intermediate

Time, coordinates and how the Sun and Moon move in the sky

A2 Principi di Astrofisica. Coordinate Celesti

Exercise 1.0 THE CELESTIAL EQUATORIAL COORDINATE SYSTEM

Meridian Circle through Zenith, North Celestial Pole, Zenith Direction Straight Up from Observer. South Celestial Pole

Appearance of the Sky Orientation Motion of sky Seasons Precession (?)

Oberth: Energy vs. Momentum

Chapter S1 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Celestial Timekeeping and Navigation Pearson Education, Inc.

Section 2. Locating Astronomical Objects in the Night Sky What Do You See? What Do You See? Think About It. Investigate.

Chapter 0 2/19/2014. Lecture Outline. 0.1 The Obvious View. Charting the Heavens. 0.1 The Obvious View. 0.1 The Obvious View. Units of Chapter 0

Appearance of the Sky Orientation Motion of sky Seasons Precession (?)

Astronomy 101 Lab Manual. Victor Andersen Community College of Aurora

Astronomy 101: 9/18/2008

LOCATING CELESTIAL OBJECTS: COORDINATES AND TIME. a. understand the basic concepts needed for any astronomical coordinate system.

The sky and the celestial sphere

The Sky. Day sky: the Sun, occasionally the Moon. Night Sky: stars, and sometimes the Moon

Lecture 2: Motions of the Earth and Moon. Astronomy 111 Wednesday August 30, 2017

Observing the Universe for Yourself

Introduction To Astronomy Lesson 1

Astronomical coordinate systems. ASTR320 Monday January 22, 2018

In all cases assume the observer is located at the latitude of Charlottesville (38 degrees north).

ASTRONOMICAL COORDINATE SYSTEMS CELESTIAL SPHERE

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

Selecting an Observing Target

These notes may contain copyrighted material! They are for your own use only during this course.

Name: NORTH EAST. Figure 7 Your Freehand Sketch of the Image. Figure 8 Direction of Motion of the Asteroid

A Sky Full of Stars - II.

PHSC 1053: Astronomy Time and Coordinates

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself. Copyright 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

Chapter S1 Celestial Timekeeping and Navigation. How do we define the day, month, year, and planetary time periods?

Coordinates on the Sphere

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself. What does the universe look like from Earth? Constellations. 2.1 Patterns in the Night Sky

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

CELESTIAL COORDINATES

6/17. Universe from Smallest to Largest:

2. Modern: A constellation is a region in the sky. Every object in the sky, whether we can see it or not, is part of a constellation.

The. Astronomy is full of cycles. Like the day, the month, & the year In this section we will try to understand these cycles.

Week 2. Problem Set 1 is due Thursday via Collab. Moon awareness Weather awareness

Chapter 1: Discovering the Night Sky. The sky is divided into 88 unequal areas that we call constellations.

Topic Guide: The Celestial Sphere. GCSE (9-1) Astronomy. Pearson Edexcel Level 1/Level 2 GCSE (9-1) in Astronomy (1AS0)

Physics 312 Introduction to Astrophysics Lecture 3

The Nature of Stars. The Nature of Stars

Chapter 2 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Discovering the Universe for Yourself Pearson Education, Inc.

Astronomy 311 Professor Menningen January 2, Syllabus overview books & supplies course goals assignments & grading About the professor

10/17/2012. Observing the Sky. Lecture 8. Chapter 2 Opener

A Warm Up Exercise. The Motion of the Sun. A Warm Up Exercise. A Warm Up Exercise. A Warm Up Exercise

Celestial Sphere Spectroscopy (Something interesting; e.g., advanced data analyses with IDL)

Lecture Module 2: Spherical Geometry, Various Axes Systems

Astronomy 153 & 154 Lab 2 Excel, Units and Conversions + Angles and Coordinates

Name Class Date. For each pair of terms, explain how the meanings of the terms differ.

The celestial sphere, the coordinates system, seasons, phases of the moon and eclipses. Chapters 2 and S1

Astronomy 111 Overview of the Solar system

Discovering the Night Sky

Discovering the Night Sky

Knowing the Heavens. Chapter Two. Guiding Questions. Naked-eye (unaided-eye) astronomy had an important place in ancient civilizations

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

The Earth is a Rotating Sphere

Earth Science, 11e. Origin of Modern Astronomy Chapter 21. Early history of astronomy. Early history of astronomy. Early history of astronomy

Aileen A. O Donoghue Priest Associate Professor of Physics

Equatorial Telescope Mounting

Phys Lab #1: The Sun and the Constellations

Local Coordinates. These are centered upon you, the observer.

Computer Activity #3 SUNRISE AND SUNSET: THE SEASONS

Earth Science, 13e Tarbuck & Lutgens

Lab 2. Observing the Sky. 2.1 Overview

UNIT 6 CELESTIAL SPHERE AND EQUINOCTIAL SYSTEM OF COORDINATES

Fundamentals of Satellite technology

1-2. What is the name given to the path of the Sun as seen from Earth? a.) Equinox b.) Celestial equator c.) Solstice d.) Ecliptic

Day, Night & the Seasons. Lecture 2 1/21/2014

Transforming from Geographic to Celestial Coordinates

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

Name: Date: 5. The bright stars Vega, Deneb, and Altair form A) the summer triangle. B) the winter triangle. C) the Big Dipper. D) Orion, the Hunter.

Lab 2 Astronomical Coordinates, Time, Focal Length, Messier List and Open Clusters

NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF SINGAPORE DEPARTMENT OF MATHEMATICS SEMESTER 2 EXAMINATION Heavenly Mathematics: Cultural Astronomy

Before you Sit. Please Pick-up: Blue Information Sheet for Evening Observing. 1 Red and 1 Blue ticket for Observing/ Planetarium

WHAT ARE THE CONSTELLATIONS

OUTSIDE LAB 3: Finding the Diameters of Celestial Objects

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

Astrometry of Asteroids Student Manual and Worksheet

Questions for Today s Class?

Introduction To Modern Astronomy I: Solar System

MEASUREMENT: From the Lab to the Moon

Chapter 2 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Discovering the Universe for Yourself

Astronomy A BEGINNER S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE EIGHTH EDITION

APPROXIMATING THE PATH OF A CELESTIAL BODY WITH A CIRCULAR ORBIT FROM TWO CLOSE OBSERVATIONS

Astronomy Studio Exercise Geocentric and Heliocentric World Views Guy Worthey

ASTR-1010: Astronomy I Course Notes Section II

Ch. 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

Mounts and Coordinate Systems

ASTR Astrometry of Asteroids Lab Exercise Due: March 4, 2011

ASTRO Fall 2012 LAB #2: Observing the Night Sky

SUB-PROBLEM 2: HOW DO SUN AND EARTH MOVE FOR THE EXISTING CYCLES AND SYMMETRIES TO OCCUR? (The invention of a Sun/Earth model)

Daily Motions. Daily Motions. Solar and Sidereal Days. Annual Motions of the Sun. Coordinate system on Earth. Annual Motion of the Stars.

Summary Sheet #1 for Astronomy Main Lesson

Report 1. Mita Tembe 4 February I. Introduction. Methods and Observations. m = f t f e (1)

PROBLEM SET #1. Galactic Structure 37 pts total. due Tuesday, 2/19/2019

Guiding Questions. Discovering the Night Sky. iclicker Qustion

Early history of astronomy. Early history of astronomy. Positions in the sky. Lecture 3: The Sun & Constellations

Module 2: Mapping Topic 2 Content: Determining Latitude and Longitude Notes

Transcription:

A Review of Coordinates Latitude and Longitude On Earth, one way to describe a location is with a coordinate system which is fixed to the Earth's surface. The system is oriented by the spin axis of the Earth, and has special points at the North and South Poles. We use lines of latitude and longitude to demarcate the surface. It's obvious that latitude is measured away from the equator. But where is the starting point for longitude? There is no "obvious" choice. After a lot of dickering, European nations finally decided to use the location of the Greenwich Observatory in England as the starting point for longitude. There are several ways to specify a location -- for example, that of the RIT Observatory. One can use degrees: latitude 43.0758 degrees North, longitude 77.6647 degrees West of Greenwich

Or degrees, minutes and seconds: latitude 43:04:33 North, longitude 77:39:53 West Or, in the case of longitude, one can measure in time zones. The sun will set at the RIT Observatory about 5 hours and 11 minutes later than it does at Greenwich, so one could say latitude 43:04:33 North, longitude 05 hours 11 minutes West This ought to be pretty familiar. Think you understand it? Then try applying your knowledge of latitude and longitude to solve a simple little problem: The distance(s) between two points on Earth Finding the distance between two locations on Earth is a first step in calculating the distance to other objects in the solar system via parallax... Right Ascension and Declination On can make a similar coordinate system which is "fixed to the sky":

Once again, we use the Earth's rotation axis to orient the coordinates. There are two special places, the North and South Celestial Poles. As the Earth rotates (to the East), the celestial sphere appears to rotate (to the West). Stars appear to move in circles: small ones near the celestial poles, and large ones close to the celestial equator:

Image copyright David Malin. We again use two orthogonal coordinates to describe a position: Declination, like a celestial latitude Right Ascension, like a celestial longitude As with latitude, Declination is measured away from the celestial equator. But there is again no obvious choice for the starting point of the other set of coordinates. Where should we start counting Right Ascension? The rather arbitrary choice made by astronomers long ago was to pick the point at which the Sun appears to cross the celestial equator from South to North as it moves through the sky during the course of a year. We call that point the "vernal equinox".

Once again, there are several ways to express a location. The star Sirius, for example, can be described as at Right Ascension 101.287 degrees, Declination -16.716 degrees We can also express the Declination in Degrees:ArcMinutes:ArcSeconds, just as we do for latitude; and, as usual, there are 360 degrees around a full circle. For Right Ascension, astronomers always use the convention of Hours:Minutes:Seconds. There are 24 hours of RA around a circle in the sky, because it takes 24 hours for the Sun to move all the way from sunrise to the next sunrise. Thus, 1 hour of RA equals 15 degrees of RA. Along the celestial equator, those 15 "degrees of RA" are the same as 15 ordinary degrees. That is, a star located at (RA = 6 hours, Dec = 0 degrees) would be exactly 15 degrees away from a star located at (RA = 7 hours, Dec = 0 degrees). As one moves away from the celestial equator and toward the poles, the lines of RA converge:

For points off the celestial equator, the real distance in the RA direction is smaller by a factor of cos(dec). Q: What is the angular separation between two stars at (RA = 6 hours, Dec = +60 degrees) and (RA = 7 hours, Dec = +60 degrees)? Converting Sirius' position into sexigesimal form, we find Right Ascension 06:45:09, Declination -16:42:58 the Right Ascension is 6 hours, 45 minutes, 09 seconds the Declination is -16 degrees, 42 arcminutes, 58 arcseconds

What's the difference between an "arcminute" and a "minute"? one degree is divided into 60 arcminutes o one arcminute is divided into 60 arcseconds. Therefore, there are 3600 arcseconds in one degree one hour of time (equal to 15 degrees at the celestial equator) is divided into 60 minutes of time o one minute of time (equal to 15 arcminutes at the celestial equator) is divided into 60 seconds of time. Therefore, there are 3600 seconds of time in one hour of time one second of time is equal to 15 arcseconds at the celestial equator A very little spherical trigonometry You've learned trigonometry in high school: sines, cosines, the Pythagorean Theorem, and all that jazz. However, unless you went to a really good high school, you probably restricted your calculations to planar geometry. Unfortunately, the sky is not a plane. We measure positions and coordinates on the inner surface of an imaginary sphere. That means that the old rules don't always work anymore. The subject of spherical trigonometry is not a simple one, but, in this course, we will only peek into it. Given two vectors, a and b, what is the distance between them? On a plane, we can break up each vector into its components and use the Pythagorean theorem: Along the surface of the celestial sphere, if we want to find the angular distance between two points a and b, we need to use the law of cosines. In the usual case, the two points are expressed in Right Ascension (α) and Declination (δ), like so:

In this case, the law of cosines becomes which gives us the cosine of the desired angular distance γ. If we are interested in very small angular distances on the sky -- the separation between the two components of a binary star, for example, or the distance between two of the moons of Jupiter -- then there are two common approximations. First, if we start with the RA and Dec coordinates of the two points, we can make a pseudo- Pythagorean formula; all we have to do is correct the difference in Right Ascension with the cosine of the Declination. Second, if we start with a picture of some very small region of the sky, together with an indication of the scale in arcseconds, like this: then we can

pick any two orthogonal directions on the picture measure the separation (in arcseconds) in each direction use the good old Pythagorean formula Source: http://spiff.rit.edu/classes/phys440/lectures/coords/coords.html