Patterns in the Sky & Constellations

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

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

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

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

6/17. Universe from Smallest to Largest:

Astronomy 101: 9/18/2008

Introduction To Modern Astronomy I: Solar System

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

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

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

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 Nature of Stars. The Nature of Stars

Astronomical coordinate systems. ASTR320 Monday January 22, 2018

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

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

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

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

Phys Lab #1: The Sun and the Constellations

Announcements. Homework 1 posted on Compass

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

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

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

Now on to scales in the. Let s change scale by TWO orders of magnitude at a time and see what happens.

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

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

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

WHAT ARE THE CONSTELLATIONS

The sky and the celestial sphere

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

A2 Principi di Astrofisica. Coordinate Celesti

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

Lecture 4: August 30, 2010

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

Sky, Celestial Sphere and Constellations

Chapter 2 Discovering the Universe for Yourself

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.

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

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

Astronomy 122 Section 1 TR Outline. The Earth is Rotating. Question Digital Computer Laboratory

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

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

Astronomy is the oldest science! Eclipses. In ancient times the sky was not well understood! Bad Omens? Comets

Astronomy 101 Lab Manual. Victor Andersen Community College of Aurora

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

Introduction to the sky

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

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

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

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

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

Last Time on Survey of Astronomy

Knowing the Heavens. Goals: Constellations in the Sky

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

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

Summary Sheet #1 for Astronomy Main Lesson

Guiding Questions. Discovering the Night Sky. iclicker Qustion

Astronomy Review. Use the following four pictures to answer questions 1-4.

Physics Lab #4:! Starry Night Student Exercises I!

Lecture 2 Motions in the Sky September 10, 2018

CHAPTER 2 A USER'S GUIDE TO THE SKY

Physics Lab #2: Learning Starry Night, Part 1

A Sky Full of Stars - II.

Celestial Sphere & Solar Motion Lab (Norton s Star Atlas pages 1-4)

Astronomy 103: First Exam

The Celestial Sphere. Chapter 1. Constellations. Models and Science. Constellations. Diurnal vs. Annular Motion 9/16/2010

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

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

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

Exploring the Night Sky

Question 1. What motion is responsible for the apparent motion of the constellations (east to west) across the sky?

Astronomy 122 TR Chemistry Annex. Outline. Question. The Data Look up at the night sky. What are the Data?

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

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

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

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Contrast the old definition of constellation with the. State why we see different constellations during. Summarize what is meant by the Celestial

2. Descriptive Astronomy ( Astronomy Without a Telescope )

CHAPTER 2 A USER'S GUIDE TO THE SKY

12.1. The Night Sky. Earth s Motions

AST101: Our Corner of the Universe Lab 1: Stellarium and The Celestial Sphere

Astronomy A BEGINNER S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE EIGHTH EDITION

Kitt Peak Nightly Observing Program

Observing the Universe for Yourself

PHSC 1053: Astronomy Time and Coordinates

ClassAction: Coordinates and Motions Module Instructor s Manual

Introduction to Astronomy

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

Introduction To Astronomy Lesson 1

A Sense of Scale and The Motions of Earth. The guitar player Pablo Picasso (1910)

Astronomy 120 Winter 2005 Highlights of Astronomy. First Midterm Examination

The Sky Perceptions of the Sky

3 - Celestial Sphere

Using the Star Wheel Laboratory 2

ASTR-1010: Astronomy I Course Notes Section II

Constellations. Big Dipper Today 3

What Patterns Can Be Observed in a Year?

Transcription:

Patterns in the Sky & Constellations

Daily Homework & Warm-Ups Before class (8am): answer warm-up questions online about reading for the day http://neutrino.otterbein.edu/~tagg/courses/too ls/warmupdb/astronomy_section_1 After Class: use WebAssign, an online homework system daily! Password & username: first initial plus last name all lowercase, e.g. utrittmann Course Homepage from my homepage

Some of Today s Warm-Up Answers What is a constellation? S. One: A constellation is a pattern formed by a collection of stars. Most often they are named after the shape they make up or a figure in Greek mythology. Why is the Celestial North Pole directly "above" the earth's (geographic) north pole? Thad Guy: The celestial north pole is an extension of the Earth's geographic north pole and therefore always lies directly above it.

Peer Instruction: How it works Peer instruction is learning by instructing your fellow students and being instructed by them The process involves 6 steps: Mini-lecture by course instructor Conceptual multiple-choice question is put up Flash-cards are used to poll the audience A few minutes of discussion between students Final answer via flash-cards The instructor explains the correct answer

Who was the first man on the Moon? Yuri Gagarin Buzz Aldrin Neil Armstrong John Glenn

Concept Questions Concept questions maybe easy to answer, but are not simple You need background knowledge to answer them They teach you how to use facts and knowledge to find the answer to a problem They test if you got the concept rather than just knowing facts

It is New Moon. In one week, what will the phase of the Moon be? New Moon First Quarter Moon Full Moon Last Quarter Moon

Why it works Carefully chosen questions It is easier to be convinced and to convince if the reasoning is sound and hence the answer correct How answers are revised in a typical question Right to right Wrong to right Right to wrong No 2 nd answer wrong to wrong 1 2 3 4 5

What is Astronomy? The science dealing with all the celestial bodies in the Universe Cosmology is the branch of astronomy that deals with the cosmos, or Universe as a whole The medieval list of the Liberal Arts: grammar, rhetoric, logic (trivium); arithmetic, music, geometry and astronomy (quadrivium) Is an exact science for ~5000 yrs Most rapid advancements in astronomy have occurred during the Renaissance and the 20 th century Success has been a result of development and exploitation of the scientific method

Why study Astronomy? Practical reasons: seasons, tides, navigation, space technology, satellite communication Idealistic reasons: cosmological questions ( Where do we come from? ), aesthetics, curiosity Two things fill the mind with ever new and increasing admiration and reverence, the more frequently and enduringly the reasoning mind is occupied with them: the star spangled sky over me and the moral law in me. (I. Kant)

Astronomy and Culture Astronomy had and has an enormous influence on human culture and the way we organize our lives For example: The year is the rotation period of the Earth around the Sun The year is subdivided into months, the period of the Moon around the Earth The weeks seven days are named after the seven bodies in the solar system known in antiquity: Sunday, Monday, Saturday (obv.), Tuesday=Mardi, Wednesday = Mercredi, Thursday=Jeudi, Friday=Vendredi

Our vantage point: Earth

Basic Observations in Astronomy We see (on clear days!): A very bright disk that is up about 12 hours. It comes up in a specific direction, rises higher until it reaches a maximal altitude in a second direction, then sinks lower until disappearing in a direction opposite of the direction where is came up A less bright object that changes its appearance and is also up for a (different) duration of 12 hours. Same rise/set pattern as very bright object. When the very bright disk is not visible, we see many tiny specs of light of different brightness and color

Basic Observations in Astronomy We see further: The tiny specs move across the sky as the hours go by. One group moves across the sky in 12 hours. Same rise/set pattern as bright object. The position of the specs wrt other specs is fixed, but they move wrt to the ground Careful observation reveals a handful of exceptions from this rule: some bright specs move slowly wrt to the other fixed specs, and also are visible 12 hours. Same rise/set pattern as bright object. One spec sits at the center of this motion and does not move

Conventions These patterns repeat every day, let s name them Sun East, South, West Moon Daytime + Nighttime = Day (needs to be revisited later!) Planets Polaris, the North Star

More names, now that we ve seen Observer Coordinates Horizon the plane you stand on Zenith the point right above you Meridian the line from North to Zenith to south

Hypothesis During a day, it looks like all lights in the sky travel around us, like the are fixed to an (invisible) sphere that turns around us. Call it The Celestial Sphere

Further Observation If we move to a new observing place on Earth, the pattern remains the same (bright light rises& sets, etc.), but: Position of North Star changes Maximal altitude of Sun, special stars changes

Conclusion: Earth s coordinates The Celestial Sphere An imaginary sphere surrounding the earth, on which we picture the stars attached Axis through earth s north and south pole goes through celestial north and south pole Earth s equator Celestial equator projected onto Sky

Earth: latitude, longitude Sky: declination (dec) [from equator,+/-90 ] right ascension (RA) [from vernal equinox, 0-24 h ; 6 h =90 ] Examples: Westerville, OH 40.1 N, 88 W Betelgeuse (α Orionis) dec = 7 24 RA = 5 h 52 m Celestial Coordinates

Confusing! Let s go with Patterns in the Sky! We can group specs of light together to form triangles, squares, etc. This allows us to find them the next night and follow their motion Talk to other observers, and give them names: Bear, Bull, Lion, Hunter, Queen, etc. The Constellations

Constellations of Stars About 5000 stars visible with naked eye About 3500 of them from the northern hemisphere Stars that appear to be close are grouped together into constellations since antiquity Officially 88 constellations (with strict boundaries for classification of objects) Names range from mythological (Perseus, Cassiopeia) to technical (Air Pump, Compass)

Constellation 1: Orion Orion as seen at night Orion as imagined by men

Orion from the side Stars in a constellation are not connected in any real way; they aren t even close together!

the Hunter Constellation 1: Orion Bright Stars: D) Betelgeuze E) Rigel Deep Sky Object: i) Orion Nebula

Constellation: Gemini the Twins zodiacal sign Brightest Stars: I) Castor J=K) Pollux