a100 solar system

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A100 Solar System Today’s APOD Read Chapter 1 in text – History of Astronomy Quiz Today (essential facts and scientific notation) Rooftop Session Sept. 10, 9 PM 1 st Homework due Friday (get it on Oncourse) The Sun Today Monday, Sept. 8

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Monday, Sept. 8. A100 Solar System. Read Chapter 1 in text – History of Astronomy Quiz Today (essential facts and scientific notation) Rooftop Session Sept. 10, 9 PM 1 st Homework due Friday (get it on Oncourse). Today’s APOD. The Sun Today. First Quiz. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A100 Solar System

A100 Solar

System

Today’s APOD

Read Chapter 1 in text – History of Astronomy

Quiz Today (essential facts and scientific notation)

Rooftop Session Sept. 10, 9 PM 1st Homework due Friday (get it on Oncourse)

The Sun Today

Monday, Sept. 8

Page 2: A100 Solar System

First Quiz• Bubble and write your name on the

Scantron form• You may consult with your neighbors• No books, notes, papers, internet,

cell phones

Page 3: A100 Solar System

What can we see in the night sky?With the naked eye, we can see more than 2,000 stars, as well as 5 planets, the Moon, comets, meteors, the Milky Way, and a few other special objects The Milky Way is a band of light that makes a circle around the celestial sphere

Page 4: A100 Solar System

Orion rising

The night sky is familiar, but few people look closely at (or think about) the complex phenomenawe observe in sky.

Page 5: A100 Solar System

The Sky!

The brightness of a star is shown by the size of its dot

North

South

Jupiter & the Moon in Sagittarius

Sky chart for 9 PM TONIGHT

Page 6: A100 Solar System

Jupiter & the Moon in Sagittarius

Sept 9Sept 8

Just look south… Jupiter is the brightest object in the southern sky

Page 7: A100 Solar System

Check out the just south of west, just after sunset

• See Mercury, Venus, and Mars

• You will need to be able to see low on the horizon to the west southwest

Page 8: A100 Solar System

ConstellationsA constellation

is a region of the sky

Constellation regions are irregular in

shape

Page 9: A100 Solar System

Do the Stars in a constellation belong together?•NO!•The stars in a constellation are not all at the same distance from the Sun

•They do not form a real group in space

Page 10: A100 Solar System

The Big Dipper is part of the constellation

Ursa Major

The stars of the Big Dipper are not all at the same distance from the Sun

Page 11: A100 Solar System

The Constellations

The 88 official (defined by the International Astronomical Union) constellations cover the celestial sphere

Page 12: A100 Solar System

The Celestial Sphere

The stars all appear to lie on a large sphere surrounding the Earth (the celestial sphere)

Really, the stars are all at different distances

Page 13: A100 Solar System

Angular Measurement

s

• Full circle = 360º• 1º = 60 (arcminutes) • 1 = 60 (arcseconds)

Page 14: A100 Solar System

We measure the sky

using angles

Page 15: A100 Solar System

Measure the Angular Size

Image taken by the Galileo spacecraft (Jupiter, 1995-97) during its lunar fly-by in December, 1992

Tycho impact basin

The dark areas are lava rock filled impact basins (mare)

The “real” Moon is ½ degree across

Page 16: A100 Solar System

Angular Size distance 2

degrees 360 size physical = sizeangular

An object’s angular size appears smaller if it is farther away

The angular size of Mars changes depending on where Earth and Mars are

in their orbits

angular size

physical size

distance

Page 17: A100 Solar System

The Local

Sky

An object’s altitude (above horizon) and direction (along horizon) gives its location in your local sky

Page 18: A100 Solar System

Definitions:The Local Sky

Zenith: The point directly overhead

Horizon: All points 90° away from zenith

Meridian: Line passing through zenith and connecting N and S points on horizon

Page 19: A100 Solar System

Our view from Earth:• Stars near the north celestial

pole are circumpolar and never set.

• All other stars (and Sun, Moon, planets) rise in east and set in west.

Celestial equator

A circumpolar star never sets

This star never rises in Indiana

Page 20: A100 Solar System

Why do stars rise and set?

Stars in the northern sky circle the northern celestial pole (in the southern hemisphere stars circle the southern celestial pole)

Page 21: A100 Solar System

The Earth spins under

Polaris

(Polaris is NOTthe brighteststar in the sky!)

Page 22: A100 Solar System

Finding Polaris

Find the Big Dipper in the northwestern sky

Sky chart for 9 PM TONIGHT

Find an open area away from nearby lights where you have a good view of the sky

North

South

Big Dipper’s on its side in the northwestern

sky

Page 23: A100 Solar System

Finding Polaris

To find Polaris:• find the Big Dipper• follow to Polaris• the Big Dipper is ALWAYS up

in Indiana!

Page 24: A100 Solar System

Altitude of the celestial pole

= your latitude

Page 25: A100 Solar System

Why do the constellations we see depend on latitude and time of year?

They depend on latitude because your position on Earth determines which constellations remain below the horizon.

They depend on time of year because Earth’s orbit changes the apparent location of the Sun among the stars.

Page 26: A100 Solar System

The sky changes as Earth orbits the Sun

As the Earth orbits the Sun, different constellations are visible at night

At midnight, the stars on our meridian are opposite the Sun in the sky

Page 27: A100 Solar System

Where on the Earth is it possible to see the most stars through the year?

a) From the north pole b) From latitude 23.5 degrees c) From the equator d) anywhere, since latitude makes

no difference.

Page 28: A100 Solar System

Precession!Over time, the

direction of the Earth’s rotation axis drifts around a circle.

At different times, different stars (other than Polaris) are close to the pole

The location of the celestial pole traces out a circle in the sky every 26,000 years

Page 29: A100 Solar System

Vocabulary ReviewoConstellationoEclipticoEquatoroCelestial

sphereoLatitudeoLongitude

oMeridianoZenithoHorizonoAltitudeoNorth and

south celestial poles

Page 30: A100 Solar System

One question I’ve always had about astronomy is…

Page 31: A100 Solar System

ASSIGNMENTSthis week

Read Chapter 1, History of…

Kirkwood Obs. open Weds. Rooftop Sky Viewing Weds. 1st HW due Friday

Dates to Remember