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Basic Observations of the Night Sky. Things that shine in the Night. Looking up at a clear night sky, there are some obvious sights: Individual stars Patterns, or groupings, of stars Some extended glowing bands of light The Moon Planets Sometimes ‘shooting stars’ and occasionally comets.
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Things that shine in the Night Looking up at a clear night sky, there are some obvious sights: • Individual stars • Patterns, or groupings, of stars • Some extended glowing bands of light • The Moon • Planets • Sometimes ‘shooting stars’ and occasionally comets
Patterns in the Sky • Asterisms • Groupings of stars that seem to have a “recognizable” shape; for example, • The Big Dipper • The Southern Cross • Orion
Asterisms Let's see how the familiar "Big Dipper" has appeared to people around the world: In pre-classical Greece, this asterism formed a 'Great Bear' (Apianus – German ca. 1535AD) Note: All of these 'Big Dipper' illustrations are from a book, "The New Patterns in the Sky" by Julius Staal
Asterisms By about the 2nd Century AD, the pattern in the sky was more elaborate – this is an 1800 German illustration copied from a 2nd century drawing of Ptolemy
Asterisms The Seven Plowing Oxen are from Classical Rome
Asterisms Tribes in northwest europe saw a wagon being drawn by horses or a plow
Asterisms In Babylon, this asterism was seen as a wagon
Asterisms Whereas in North America, the Sioux saw a skunk
Asterisms In China, the Emperor Wen-Chang was holding court for: K'uei, the Minister of Literary Affairs of the World; Chuh, Mr. Red Coat; Chin-Chia, Mr. Gold Armor and Kuan-Ti, the God of War
Asterisms For the Aztecs, this was the evil god Tezcatlipoca Who brought strife and problems to all things while dancing on his pegleg about the north star
Motion through the Ages • Despite the Ancients idea of the ‘Fixed Stars’ they are actually moving (although very slowly from our perspective) • There are two motions: • Radial Motion - toward and away from Earth • Proper Motion – “sideways” against the pattern of the sky
Constellations • Official boundaries marking regions of the sky • These may be asterisms by themselves or may contain asterisms within their boundaries • The Great Bear (Ursa Major) • Orion • Cassiopea • Scorpio • There are 88 official constellations marking regions of the sky • Those that are positioned along the Ecliptic are known as the Zodiac • There are 12 of these according to tradition; however, in reality, there are 13 • Everyone forgets poor Ophiuchus, (oh-fee-YOU-kus), the Serpent Bearer The ecliptic is the line connecting the Earth and Sun; therefore also the path the Sun apparently travels through the stars. Sometime extended to the Ecliptic Plane
Constellations The night sky
Constellations Adding the ecliptic line
Constellations Adding the constellation boundaries
Constellations Adding the constellation lines
Extended Glows of Light • Nebulae • Fuzzy, patches of light, sometimes hard to define in shape or to resolve into stars • Andromeda • Triffid Nebula • Zodiacal Light • A faint glow along the ecliptic • Gegenschien • Counterglow – A faint glow opposite the Earth from the Sun
Labeling the Night Sky • Constellations • Generally Latin Names • Ursa Major • Scorpio • Lyra • Coma Berenices • Stars • Proper names • Aldebaran • Antares • Vega • Sirius • Altair • Polaris
Proper Names Orion Betelgeuse Bellatrix Mintaka Alnilam Alnitak Rigel Saiph
Labeling the Night Sky • Stars • Catalogs • Bayer • By descending order of brightness • Greek letter + Constellation • Lyrae • Flamsteed • Numbered by increasing time of appearance on the observer’s N-S axis (increasing Right Ascension) • 3 Lyrae • Groombridge • Nebulae • Proper Names • Catalogs • Messier • NGC
Diurnal Motion of the Sky • Stars appear to rotate about Polaris – The North Star. • The group of stars which never set (for a given observer's latitude) are known as circumpolar stars • The sky as seen from the North Pole: • Polaris is nearly at the zenith • The stars 'move' parallel to the horizon • The sky as seen from the Equator: • Polaris is on the horizon to the north • The stars rise vertically, Looking East they move up, looking West they move down
The Motion of the Sun • Diurnal Motion • Daily motion of the sun • Solar Day • Length of time between successive meridian passages. • Can be marked out by the shadow of a gnomen (sundial)
The Motion of the Sun • The Sun appears to rise in the East and set in the West as seen from a vantage point on the Earth. • If you could see it against a background of fixed stars however, the Sun moves East at about 1 per day * * * • * • * East West
Apparant Motion of the Sun • The daily movement from East to West is due to the Earth's rotation about its axis. • Earth rotates toward the east, or counterclockwise if seen looking down on the north pole. • This easterly motion against the stars is due to the Earth's motion about the Sun • Earth's orbit is also counterclockwise if seen looking down on the north pole.
The Siderial Day • The Solar Day was defined as a single rotation of the Earth with respect to the Sun • What about a single rotation of the Earth with respect to the Stars? • This is a Siderial day (or star day) • It is about 4 minutes shorter than a Solar day * * * * *
N The Motion of the Sun • The line connecting the earth and sun lies in a plane – The Ecliptic Plane • This is not the same as the Equator because the Earth is tilted at 23½
Observed Motions of the Sky First some 'Navigational Aids': The Celestial Sphere • A projection of the Earth's coordinates onto the sky • The poles are extended to become the celestial poles • The equator is projected to become the celestial equator • The Latitude lines (parallels) are projected onto the celestial sphere and given the name 'Declination' • The Longitude lines (meridians) are projected out and are now called 'Right Ascension'
The Motion of the Sun Special points: Winter Solstice Summer Solstice Vernal Equinox Autumnal Equinox
Equinox Winter solstice Summer solstice
The Seasons • It is this 23½ inclination of the Earth's axis which causes the seasons. • It is NOT because we are closer to the Sun in the summer months; in fact, we in the northern hemisphere are actually slightly farther away from the sun during the summer. • Austrailia is slightly closer during their summer. • In our summer, we are tilted toward the sun – as you can see in the illustration on the preceeding slide, this has the effect of making the Sun appear to rise higher in the sky and provides a longer period of daylight • In winter, we are tilted away – lower height to the Sun and shorter days
The Seasons And, in Summer, delivers the heat longer
Precession of the Equinoxes • The Earth 'wobbles' like a top; this is known as precession. • It takes 26,000 years for the Earth to make one complete cycle • This means that Polaris was not always, nor will it remain, the North Star • Of course, if the north pole wobbles in a circle so do the directions to the equinoxes • The vernal equinox is no longer the 'first point in Aries'
Precession In fact, superimposed on the precession, there is an additional motion, nutation, which means the wobble doesn’t draw a smooth circle, but rather a series of ‘S’ shapes about the circle. The nutation has an 18.6 year period
The Motion of the Moon • The moon orbits about the earth in the same direction as the earth orbits the sun It takes 27.3 days to orbit once with respect to the stars – This is it's Siderial Period It takes 29.5 days from New Moon to New Moon -- This is it's Synodic Period
Phases of the Moon waning sunlight waxing Last Quarter Cresent Gibbous New Full Cresent Gibbous First Quarter