Star Maps and Constellations. Star Maps & Constellations. Star Maps & Constellations. A. Constellations & Star Names. 1. The Story of Two Bears 5

Similar documents
WHAT ARE THE CONSTELLATIONS

Modern Name Arabic Name Meaning

The Northern Sky at Night. The Constellations

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

Using the Star Wheel Laboratory 2

The Nature of Stars. The Nature of Stars

Constellations. In ancient times, constellations only referred to the brightest stars that appeared to form groups, representing mythological figures.

Indoor Lab #2: The Starry Sky

Astronomy 101 Lab Manual. Victor Andersen Community College of Aurora

ASTR 101. The Earth and the Sky. February 2, 2018

Time and Diurnal Motion

AST-103L Spring 2001: Astronomical Motions I. The Night Sky

Constellations. In ancient times, constellations only referred to the brightest stars that appeared to form groups, representing mythological figures.

ASTR 101. The Earth and the Sky. September 3,2017

Name: AST 114 Date: THE DEEP SKY

Time and Diurnal Motion

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Introduction. The Constellations of the Winter Sky

Marian Physics! Apparent Magnitude. Flat Prairie Publishing

Reunión preparatoria Vía Láctea

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

Constellations In ancient times, constellations only referred to the brightest stars that appeared to form groups, representing mythological figures.

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

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

Jan/12/2006 Star Maps and Constellations Page SC- 1

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

Introduction to the sky

Time and Diurnal Motion. 1a. The Earth Is Flat. 1c. Aristotle ( BC) 1b. The Earth Is Round. Time and Diurnal Motion

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Guidepost. Chapter 2 A User s Guide to the Sky. Constellations Constellations (2) 8/27/2015. Outline. Outline (continued)

The Brightest Stars in Ursa Major

Time and Diurnal Motion. 1a. The Earth Is Flat. 1c. Aristotle ( BC) 1b. The Earth Is Round. Time and Diurnal Motion

MEASURING ANGLES. name. Fig 2: Tycho Brahe in Denmark. His observations were later used by Kepler.

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

CELESTIAL COORDINATES

OBSERVING THE NIGHT SKY I

Selecting an Observing Target

6/17. Universe from Smallest to Largest:

GREEK MYTHOLOGY. fifthismyjam

FYI. 0 You will need to take notes this information will come in handy when going through this unit and on the cok.

The Earth and the Sky

INDEPENDENT PROJECT: The Autumn Night Sky

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

INDEPENDENT PROJECT: The Autumn Night Sky

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.

A Brief Tour of the Universe Phil Lucht Rimrock Digital Technology, Salt Lake City, Utah last update: Feb 16, 2015

CHAPTER 2 A USER'S GUIDE TO THE SKY

Exploring the Night Sky

Scales of Size and Time

TAAS Fabulous Fifty. Friday July 14, MDT (8:00 pm) All TAAS and other new and not so new astronomers are invited.

The light from the stars we see at night travel great distances to reach Earth. Other than the sun, Proxima Centauriis the next closest

Phys Lab #1: The Sun and the Constellations

It s Full of Stars! Outline. A Sky Full of Stars. Astronomy 210. lights), about how many stars can we see with

The Night Sky (Part 1)

Exploring the Night Sky: Star Charts and Stellarium

Friday April 21, :30 MDT (7:30 pm) All TAAS and other new and not so new astronomers are invited. Ursa Major. Photo Courtesy of Naoyuki Kurita

Stars and Galaxies Phys1403 Lab - Constellations

Constellations and Asterisms

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.

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

4.6 Stars. Star Patterns

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

JSR Year: 2008 PX1511 & PX1512. Planetarium Notes

Merrimack College Astronomy Spring 2017 Ralph P. Pass

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

Planetarium Based Laboratory Activity Constellations

A User s Guide to the Sky

How would you explain the concept of a day, month, and a year to a small child?

3 - Celestial Sphere

What do you think? 2/3/09. Mastering Astronomy Assignment 2. Constellations the 88 semi-rectangular regions that make up the sky

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Name: Lab Day and Time: Earth and Sky Finding your way. Lab Partner 1: Lab Partner 2: Lab Partner 3: Introduction:

Ricardo Moreno, Rosa M Ros,

AST 105. The Sky. Coordinates and Constellations

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

8.9 Observing Celestial Objects from Earth

2 OBSERVING THE SKY: THE BIRTH OF ASTRONOMY

The sky and the celestial sphere

Announcements. Homework 1 posted on Compass

INDEPENDENT PROJECT: The Autumn Night Sky

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Thank you for not chewing gum or anything else. January 31, Daily Objective: Today we will identify typical objects in our night sky.

The Night Sky in December, 2016

Constellations Workbook

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

Grid lines are drawn at every 15 degrees of declination, and every hour (= 15 degrees at the equator) of right ascension.

Sky, Celestial Sphere and Constellations

Unit 2. Cycles of the Sky

Warm Up. Think about our night sky.in your notebooks write 5 things you know that are in the night sky.

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

days to rotate in its own axis km in diameter ( 109 diameter of the Earth ) and kg in mass ( mass of the Earth)

THE STARS. Information and contacts: -

Constellations Constellations of the Zodiac

Make your own planisphere

Today in Space News: Space.com story. More info from NASA. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Transcription:

Star Maps and Constellations Star Maps & Constellations 2 Dr. Bill Pezzaglia A. Constellations and Star Names B. Coordinates and Star Maps Updated: 2009Sep13 C. Magnitudes and Brightness of Stars Star Maps & Constellations 3 A. Constellations & Star Names 4 1. A constellation Story 2. Constellations 3. Star Names 1. The Story of Two Bears 5 Zeus, father of all the Greek gods, became interested in a mortal maiden called Kallisto. He began to spend a lot of time with her. When Zeus s wife Hera found out about this, she became very jealous and angry 6 1

Using her magic powers Hera turned pretty Kallisto into a great clumsy bear. 7 Now poor Kallisto was doomed to wander forever in the forest in this unnatural form. Zeus was very unhappy with this, but he could not do anything about it without upsetting his wife. 8 A long time after these events, Kallisto s son Arktos was out hunting in the 9 forest when he spotted a bear and was about to shoot it. What he didn't realise was that this bear was actually his mother in enchanted form Zeus was greatly alarmed at this turn of events. He appeared instantly and turned Arktos into a bear as well to stop him from killing Kallisto. 10 Now both mother and son were bears and could be happily reunited at last. 11 To protect both bears from Hera s jealous anger, Zeus 12 decided to throw them by their tails far up into the sky. 2

It also stretched their tails which as you can see are very long unlike normal bears' tails! 13 Bootes, the Heardsman, with his hunting dogs (Canes Venatici) chases the bears around in circles, i.e. keeps them at the North pole 14 2. Constellations: Most maps today don t show the animals, they only show dots and lines. 15 Can you find Bootes? 16 The bright reddish star Arcturus, means "guardian of the bears". Can you find Ursa Major (Big Bear, aka Big Dipper?) 17 Constellations around the North Pole 18 3

Constellations around the North Pole 19 In 1928 the IAU (International Astronomical Union) divided the 20 sky into 88 constellations, each star belongs to exactly one constellation. A.2c Asterisms The Winter Hexagon is not a constellation Its an Asterism, a grouping of stars An asterism might contain several constellations, or just a piece of a constellation Note: this asterism is dominating our southern sky right now! 21 A.3a Star Names Most of the bright star have individual names. The names are often related to the part of the "picture". Alhena in Gemini means "mark", pertaining to a mark on the foot of Gemini twin Pollux. Betelgeuse (Orion) means shoulder (well.) Deneb (in Cygnus the Swan) means "tail". Denebola is "tail of the Lion" (Leo) Deneb Algedi is "tail of the sea goat" Capricornus, Denebokab is "Tail of the Eagle" Aquila. 22 A.3b Bayer Notation: Bayer in 1601 designated a star in a constellation by a lower case Greek letter followed by the genitive form of the constellation. In general the letters are assigned in order of brightness beginning with Alpha For example, Alpha Centauri (abbreviated α-cen) is the brightest star in the constellation Centaurus, while Beta Centauri or "β-cen" is the second brightest. However, in some cases (n.b. Ursa Major), Bayer named the stars not in order of brightness, but in order of location. 23 A.3b The Greek Alphabet 24 4

A.3c Flamsteed Number Notation: Lacaille extended Bayer's notation by using lower case (and some upper case) Latin letters. John Flamsteed (1646-1719) First Royal Astronomer of England Assigned stars numbers, starting with 1 in the west, and working eastward. Hence Vega is α-lyrae in Bayer 3-Lyrae in Flamsteed! 25 A.3c Conflicting Notations 26 Portion of Norton's Star Atlas showing both Bayer and Flamsteed notations. Note "q" Herculis is an example of Lacille's notation. R, S, T, U and V Coronae Borealis are Argelander's Variable Star notation. B. Celestial Cartography 1. The Celestial Sphere 2. Coordinates 3. Map Projections 27 B.1a The sky looks like a big ball called Firmament 28 Fig 1-1, p.20 B.1b Angular Size 29 All the stars look the same distance away We measure the angle between stars B.1c Ancient Observatories 30 Have gigantic protractors to measure angles This one is at the ancient observatory of Beijing Your finger at arms length is about 1 degree wide 5

B.1c The Beijing Observatory (1231 Kublai Khan) 31 B.1c The Beijing Observatory (1231 Kublai Khan) 32 B.2a Geographic Coordinates Review Latitude and Longitude 33 B.2b Celestial Coordinates i. Declination is the name of celestial latitude ii. Right Ascension is the name of celestial longitude (and we measure it in hours). 34 B.2c. What are the coordinates of Rigel? Note: North is up Dec= -10 deg RA = 5h 10 min 35 B.3a Mercator Projection Map 36 How to project a round ball onto flap map? Mercator Map is made by project a ball onto a cylinder (problems at the poles!) 6

B.3b Mercator Map of Earth 37 Things at top and bottom are S T R E T C H E -D N B.3c Mercator Map of Sky 38 N 60 30 E Degrees Declination E Hours RA 18 12 6 3 1 0 B.3d Which Way is East? Because you are looking up rather than down, East and West are reversed on star maps! 39 B.3e Ortographic Map 40 Can only get a portion of sky on one map, but has much less distortion! B.3f Polar Map 41 This is an orthographic map with the North Star in the center. It has must less distortion, but you can only get half the sky on it. Need a second one for South Polar region. B.3g Your Starwheel 42 Your starwheel (aka Astrolabe aka Planisphere) has a polar map in it. The rivet in the center is the North Star! 7

C. Magnitudes and Brightness 43 1.Magnitude Scale: Hipparchus of Rhodes (160-127 B.C) assigns magnitudes to stars to represent brightness. The eye can see down to 6 th magnitude C.2a Herschel Extends the Table 44 William Herschel (1738-1822) extended the scale in both directions C.2b Herschel-Pogson Relation 45 Herschel s measurements suggested a 1 st magnitude star is 100x more luminous that a 6 th magnitude one. Norman Pogson (1854) showed that this is because the eye s response to light is logarithmic rather than linear. C.3a Number of Stars by Magnitude 46 22.5 There are only about 15 bright (first magnitude and brighter) stars There are only about 8000 stars visible to naked eye There are much more stars with higher magnitude! C.3b Gemini Mag 47 23 46 References (updated 09Aug) 48 On Constellations http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/constellations/index.html http://www.seds.org/maps/const/consts.html http://www.lindahall.org/services/digital/ebooks/semler/semler32_33.shtml http://www.astromax.org/con-page.htm 8