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Star Maps and Constellations Dr. Bill Pezzaglia. Updated: 2009Sep13. 2. Star Maps & Constellations. Constellations and Star Names Coordinates and Star Maps Magnitudes and Brightness of Stars. 3. Star Maps & Constellations. 4. A. Constellations & Star Names. A constellation Story
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Star MapsandConstellationsDr. Bill Pezzaglia Updated:2009Sep13
2 Star Maps & Constellations • Constellations and Star Names • Coordinates and Star Maps • Magnitudes and Brightness of Stars
3 Star Maps & Constellations
4 A. Constellations & Star Names • A constellation Story • Constellations • Star Names
5 Zeus, father of all the Greek gods, became interested in a mortal maiden called Kallisto. He began to spend a lot of time with her. 1. The Story of Two Bears Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
When Zeus’s wife Hera found out about this, she becamevery jealous and angry… 6 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
Using her magic powers Hera turned prettyKallisto into a great clumsy bear. 7 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
Now poor Kallisto was doomed to wander forever in the forestin this unnatural form. Zeus was very unhappy with this, buthe could not do anything about it without upsetting his wife. 8 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
A long time after these events, Kallisto’s son Arktos was out hunting in theforest when he spotted a bear and was about to shoot it. What he didn't realisewas that this bear was actually his mother in enchanted form… 9 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
Zeus was greatly alarmed at this turn of events. He appeared instantly and turned Arktos into a bear as well to stop him from killing Kallisto. 10 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
Now both mother and son were bears and could behappily reunited at last. 11 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
To protect both bears from Hera’s jealous anger, Zeusdecided to throw them by their tails far up into the sky. 12 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
It also stretched their tails which as you can see are very long unlike normal bears' tails! 13 Ref: http://www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.4006
Bootes, the Heardsman, with his hunting dogs (Canes Venatici)chases the bears around in circles, i.e. keeps them at the North pole 14
2. Constellations: Most maps today don’t showthe animals, they only show dots and lines. 15 The bright reddish star Arcturus, means "guardian of the bears".
In 1928 the IAU (International Astronomical Union) divided thesky into 88 constellations, each star belongs to exactly one constellation. 20
21 A.2c Asterisms • The “Winter Hexagon” is not a constellation • Its an “Asterism”, a grouping of stars • An asterism might contain several constellations,or just a piece of a constellation Note: this asterism is dominating our southern sky right now!
22 A.3a Star Names Most of the bright star have individual names. The names are often related to the part of the "picture". • Alhena in Gemini means "mark", pertaining to a mark on the foot of Gemini twin Pollux. • Betelgeuse (Orion) means “shoulder” (well ….) • Deneb (in Cygnus the Swan) means "tail". • Denebola is "tail of the Lion" (Leo) • Deneb Algedi is "tail of the sea goat" Capricornus, • Denebokab is "Tail of the Eagle" Aquila.
23 A.3b Bayer Notation: • Bayer in 1601 designated a star in a constellation by a lower case Greek letter followed by the genitive form of the constellation. In general the letters are assigned in order of brightness beginning with Alpha • For example, Alpha Centauri (abbreviated α-Cen) is the brightest star in the constellation Centaurus, while Beta Centauri or "β-Cen" is the second brightest. • However, in some cases (n.b. Ursa Major), Bayer named the stars not in order of brightness, but in order of location.
24 A.3b The Greek Alphabet
25 A.3c Flamsteed Number Notation: • Lacaille extended Bayer's notation by using lower case (and some upper case) Latin letters. • John Flamsteed (1646-1719)First Royal Astronomer of England • Assigned stars “numbers”, starting with1 in the west, and working eastward. • Hence Vega is • a-Lyrae in Bayer • 3-Lyrae in Flamsteed!
26 A.3c Conflicting Notations Portion of Norton's Star Atlas showing both Bayer and Flamsteed notations. Note "q" Herculis is an example of Lacille's notation.R, S, T, U and V Coronae Borealis are Argelander's Variable Star notation.
27 B. Celestial Cartography • The Celestial Sphere • Coordinates • Map Projections
B.1a The sky looks like a big ball called “Firmament” 28 Fig 1-1, p.20
B.1b Angular Size 29 • All the stars look the same distance away • We measure the angle between stars • Your finger at arms length is about 1 degree wide
B.1c Ancient Observatories 30 • Have gigantic protractors to measure angles • This one is at the ancient observatory of Beijing
33 B.2a Geographic Coordinates Review Latitude and Longitude
34 B.2b Celestial Coordinates • Declinationis the name of celestial latitude • Right Ascensionis the name of celestial longitude (and we measure it in hours).
35 B.2c. What are the coordinates of Rigel? • Note: North is “up” • Dec= -10 deg • RA = 5h 10 min
36 B.3a Mercator Projection Map How to “project” a round ball onto flap map? Mercator Map is made by project a ball onto a cylinder (problems at the poles!)
37 Things at top and bottom are S – T – R – E – T – C – H – E - D B.3b Mercator Map of Earth N E
38 Hours RA 18 12 6 3 1 0 B.3c Mercator Map of Sky 60 N 30 E Degrees Declination
39 B.3d Which Way is East? Because you are looking up rather than down, East and West are reversed on star maps!
40 B.3e Ortographic Map Can only get a portion of sky on one map,but has much less distortion!
41 B.3f Polar Map This is an orthographic map with the North Star in the center. It has must less distortion, but you can only get half the sky on it. Need a second one for South Polar region.
42 B.3g Your Starwheel Your starwheel (aka “Astrolabe” aka Planisphere) has a polar map in it. The rivet in the center is the North Star!
43 C. Magnitudes and Brightness • Magnitude Scale: Hipparchus of Rhodes (160-127 B.C) assigns “magnitudes” to stars to represent brightness. The eye can see down to 6th magnitude
44 William Herschel (1738-1822) extended the scale in both directions C.2a Herschel Extends the Table
45 Herschel’s measurements suggested a 1st magnitude star is 100x more luminous that a 6th magnitude one. Norman Pogson (1854) showed that this is because the eye’s response to light is logarithmic rather than linear. C.2b Herschel-Pogson Relation 22.5
46 C.3a Number of Stars by Magnitude • There are only about 15 bright (first magnitude and brighter) stars • There are only about 8000 stars visible to naked eye • There are much more stars with higher magnitude!
Mag 2 Mag 3 Mag 4 Mag 6 47 C.3b Gemini
48 References (updated 09Aug) On Constellations • http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/constellations/index.html • http://www.seds.org/Maps/Const/constS.html • http://www.lindahall.org/services/digital/ebooks/semler/semler32_33.shtml • http://www.astromax.org/con-page.htm