1 / 30

Course Announcements

Course Announcements. Homework: “Scale of the Universe” will be available on-line at the Mastering Astronomy (MA) website (“masteringastronomy.com”) on Thursday ASSIGNMENT #1 IS DUE SEPTEMBER 10th, 11 pm.

Download Presentation

Course Announcements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Course Announcements • Homework: “Scale of the Universe” will be available on-line at the Mastering Astronomy (MA) website (“masteringastronomy.com”) on Thursday • ASSIGNMENT #1 IS DUE SEPTEMBER 10th, 11 pm. • These awesome presentations are available on my home server, http://evilo.dyndns.org/courses You should take a look at these as you begin to study for Test I. • When is our first test? • September 17...that's a Thursday in two weeks.

  2. Did you get the Key Ideas from the Motion Lecture Tutorial?

  3. Imagine you are located in the Northern Hemisphere and see a star directly overhead(zenith). In what direction will you have to look to see this star set? • A) southwest • B) west • C) northwest • D) This star will never set.

  4. You are looking toward the north and see the Big Dipper to the right of Polaris. Fifteenminutes later, the Big Dipper will appear to have moved in roughly what direction? • A) east (to your right)‏ • B) west (to your left)‏ • C) up (away from the horizon)‏ • D) down (closer to the horizon)‏

  5. How much time is there between when a star rises and when it sets? • A) less than twelve hours • B) about twelve hours • C) more than twelve hours • D) It depends on the star.

  6. So now we understand nightly motion. How about weekly and monthly changes? You go out tonight and see the brightest star in the constellation Orion just rising above youreastern horizon at 10 PM. One week later at 10 PM this same star will be A) slightly higher in the sky. B) at the same height as before. C) below your horizon. D) setting on your western horizon.

  7. Astrology: The belief that the positions of the stars and planets as seen from Earth impact human events. These weekly and monthly changes lead to ... Science or Pseudoscience?

  8. Your Birth Sign ROUGHLY, it is the constellation that the Sun is covering up during the day you are born if you were born 2000 years ago.

  9. Leo Libra Virgo Scorpius Ophiuchus Sagittarius Capricornus Zodiac - The 13 Zodiacal constellations that our Sun covers-up (blocks) in the course of one year (used to be only 12)‏ • Aquarius • Pisces • Aries • Taurus • Gemini • Cancer

  10. Constellations – the 88 semi-rectangular regions that make up the sky • Northern constellations have Latinized Greek-mythology names: • Orion, Cygnus, Leo, Ursa Major, Canis Major, Canis Minor • Southern constellations have Latin names: • Telescopium, Sextans, Pyxsis • The actual constellation boundaries were drawn up by Eugène Delporte in 1930 then later approved by the IAU (International Astronomical Union).

  11. Use the Summer Triangle to find constellations during summer evenings

  12. Use the winter triangle to find constellations during winter evenings

  13. Anyone recognize any shapes here?

  14. Islamic(ish) Star Names Betelgeuse Aldebaran Rigel SIRIUS

  15. Pleiades Using Orion in to find other objects Aldebaran Sirius

  16. Seven Sisters Subaru Pleiades

  17. Pleiades Great Orion Nebula Using Orion in to find other objects Aldebaran Sirius

  18. Use the Big Dipper in the northern sky as a way to find other groups of stars

  19. How to find stuff in the sky – Star Chartshttp://skymaps.com/http://www.fourmilab.ch/yoursky/cities.htmlhttp://www.astro.wisc.edu/~dolan/constellations/constellationjavalist.html

  20. Tutorial: Seasonal Stars – p. 7 Work with a partner! Read the instructions and questions carefully. Discuss the concepts and your answers with one another. Come to a consensus answer you both agree on. If you get stuck or are not sure of your answer, ask another group. If you get really stuck or don’t understand what the Lecture Tutorial is asking, ask me for help.

  21. Post Tutorial Question What component of Earth’s motion causes〠the stars to rise earlier on successive nights? A) its rotation about its axis B) its orbit around the Sun C) the tilt of its rotation axis

  22. Post Tutorial Question One night, you see the star Sirius rise at exactly 7:36 PM. The following night it will rise A) slightly earlier. B) at the same time. C) slightly later.

  23. Post Tutorial Question One evening at midnight, you observe Leo high in the southern sky at midnight. Virgo is to the east of Leo and Cancer is to the west. One month earlier, which of these constellations was high in the southern sky at midnight? A) Leo B) Virgo C) Cancer

  24. GO CONFIDENTLY (To the Physics Lab) IN THE DIRECTION OF YOUR DREAMS!! LIVE THE LIFE YOU’VE IMAGINED

More Related