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Comet Machholz passes the Pleiades

Comet Machholz passes the Pleiades. Comet Machholz C/2004 Q2. Discovered byDonald Machholz, Jr. on August 27, 2004 Period of about 120,000 years Just up to naked eye visibility now, but much easier to see in binoculars. Comet Machholz’s path through the sky.

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Comet Machholz passes the Pleiades

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  1. Comet Machholz passes the Pleiades

  2. Comet Machholz C/2004 Q2 • Discovered byDonald Machholz, Jr. on August 27, 2004 • Period of about 120,000 years • Just up to naked eye visibility now, but much easier to see in binoculars

  3. Comet Machholz’s path through the sky By the end of this week, the moon will be brightening in the evening sky, making observing more difficult Until moonset.

  4. Comet Machholz’s two tails

  5. Sidereal Time and Celestial Coordinates

  6. AST 208 Web Page • The AST208 web page now has the syllabus and the powerpoint file from the first lecture: http://www.pa.msu.edu/courses/AST208/

  7. Celestial Coordinates • Altitude and azimuth

  8. Right ascension and declination

  9. Declination

  10. The Daily Motion daily circles --- CCW looking north, CW looking south

  11. Circumpolar stars

  12. Which stars are circumpolar? • The altitude of the North Celestial Pole is equal to our latitude, about 43 degrees. • Only those stars within 43 degrees of the NCP are seen as circumpolar at our location • So stars with a declination greater than 90 - 43 = 47 degrees are circumpolar for us

  13. Which of the following stars are circumpolar as seen from a latitude of 60 degrees north? • Polaris declination = 89 degrees • Sirius declination = -17 degrees • Vega declination = 39 degrees

  14. Some stars never rise above our horizon • A star directly overhead has a declination equal to your latitude. A star that just manages to appear above your southern horizon will be 90 degrees further south. • A star with a declination below -47 degrees will never rise above our horizon

  15. Rules • For an observer at latitude x north • Circumpolar: stars of dec > 90-x • Never seen: stars of dec < -(90 –x) • All of the stars with inbetween declinations are sometimes above our horizon and sometimes below it

  16. If you are at the North Pole • Which stars are circumpolar? • Which stars would you never see?

  17. If you are at the equator • Which stars are circumpolar? • Which stars do you never see?

  18. Local Skies • Lines of constant declination cross the sky at different altitudes, depending on your location on Earth. • declination line = your latitude goes through your zenith • the altitude of the N or S celestial pole = your latitude

  19. lines of Right Ascension & Declination lines of constant R.A. continually move in the sky as Earth rotates Celestial Coordinates Movie. Click to play.

  20. Hour Angle

  21. Big sunspot group

  22. Huygens probe landed on Saturn’s moon Titan • First data expected later today if all goes well

  23. Solar vs. Sidereal Day • Sidereal day – time it takes a star at the meridian to return to the meridian. • 23 hours 56 min 4 sec • Solar day – time it takes the Sun at meridian (noon) to return to the meridian. • noon to noon or 24 hours • Why the 4-minute difference? • as it rotates, the Earth also orbits the Sun • Earth must rotate an extra degree (4 min) each day… • for any observer on Earth to be at noon again

  24. What is the LST? • LST = local sidereal time • LST = 0 when the Vernal equinox is transiting the meridian • LST = 0 at local midnight at the autumnal equinox • LST is 2 hours later at midnight for every month that goes by since the autumnal equinox

  25. What is the LST at local midnight tonight? • LST = 0 + 2 X (3.7 months) = 7.4 hours 7.4 hours = 7 hours 24 min • At midnight eastern standard time LST = 7 h 24 m – 37 minutes = 6 h 47 min A star with right ascension 6h 47 min would be on the meridian at that time

  26. What is the LST at 8pm? • LST = 6 h 47 min – 4 = 2h 47 min

  27. Annual Motion of the Sun • The R.A. of the Sun… • increases about 2 hours per month • The Declination of the Sun… • varies between –23º and +23º

  28. The Cause of the Seasons

  29. Review questions (open notes) 1. At local midnight on April 1, 2005, what will be the approximate LST? 2. You are on a ship at latitude 10 degrees north. a. Stars of what declination are circumpolar for you? b. Stars of what declination never rise above your horizon? 3. At the summer solstice, around June 21, what is the declination of the sun? 4. At the summer solstice what is the altitude of the sun at local noon as seen from East Lansing (latitude about 43 degrees)?

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