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Introduction to the Night Sky

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Title: Introduction to the Night Sky


1
Introduction to the Night Sky
  • This presentation will review some of the
    important objects that can be viewed in the night
    sky without the aid of a telescope.
  • It will review the motion of stars as viewed from
    Earth, both on a daily basis and on an annual
    basis.
  • It will also review the concept of a celestial
    sphere and the coordinate system associated with
    it.

2
Basic Direction Coordinates
  • Probably the simplest way to describe the
    position of an object in the sky is to describe
    its DIRECTION and ELEVATION.
  • DIRECTION is usually referenced to magnetic
    North.
  • ELEVATION is an angle, from 00 to 900, where 00
    is horizontal and 900 is straight up.
  • Example Point to NNE, elevation 600.

3
Celestial Coordinates
  • To understand the concept of Celestial
    Coordinates, it is helpful to first understand
    the concept of a celestial sphere.
  • In our normal experience, the Earth is a fixed,
    non-moving position from which we observe the
    sky.
  • Since ancient times, it was noted that the stars
    seemed to rotate each day around a fixed point in
    the sky.

4
Celestial Coordinates
  • The daily motion of the stars around a fixed
    point is called diurnal or daily motion. It
    can be seen clearly in the picture on the next
    slide.
  • The point that stars rotate around also has a
    star located at it. Do you know what it is
    called?

5
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6
The Celestial Sphere concept
  • To the ancients, it was totally logical to assume
    that the stars were fixed to a distant, invisible
    sphere that rotated around the Earth
    approximately once per day.
  • Every star occupied a spot on that sphere, which
    could be described using a coordinate system
    exactly like latitude and longitude.

7
The Celestial Sphere
8
The Celestial Sphere
9
Defining Celestial Position
  • In the celestial coordinate system the North and
    South Celestial Poles are determined by
    projecting the rotation axis of the Earth to
    intersect the celestial sphere, which in turn
    defines a Celestial Equator. The celestial
    equivalent of latitude is called declination and
    is measured in degrees North (positive numbers)
    or South (negative numbers) of the Celestial
    Equator. The celestial equivalent of longitude is
    called right ascension.

10
Defining Celestial Position
  • Right ascension can be measured in degrees, but
    for historical reasons it is more common to
    measure it in time (hours, minutes, seconds) the
    sky turns 360 degrees in 24 hours and therefore
    it must turn 15 degrees every hour thus, 1 hour
    of right ascension is equivalent to 15 degrees of
    (apparent) sky rotation

11
Digression - Groups of Stars
  • Historically, constellations were groupings of
    stars that were thought to outline the shape of
    something, usually with mythological
    significance. There are 88 recognized
    constellations, with their names tracing as far
    back as Mesopotamia, 5000 years ago.

12
Constellations and Asterisms
  • Some of the more familiar "constellations" are
    technically not constellations at all. For
    example, the grouping of stars known as the Big
    Dipper is probably familiar to most, but it is
    not actually a constellation. The Big Dipper is
    part of a larger grouping of stars called the Big
    Bear (Ursa Major) that is a constellation.
  • A well-known grouping of stars like the Big
    Dipper that is not officially recognized as a
    constellation is called an asterism.

13
The Big Dipper is an Asterism found within the
Constellation Ursa Major.
14
Stars Look Different from Planets
15
Planets
  • The term "planet" originally meant "wanderer" it
    was observed long ago that certain points of
    light wandered (changed their position) with
    respect to the background stars in the sky. In
    ancient times, before the invention of the
    telescope and before one understood the present
    structure of the Solar System, there were thought
    to be 7 wanderers or planets Mercury, Venus,
    Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, the Moon, and the Sun.
  • Question How is this list different from a
    modern list of planets?

16
  • The Earth is missing, because it was not
    understood that the points of light wandering on
    the celestial sphere and the Earth on which we
    stood had anything in common.
  • Uranus, Neptune, and Pluto are missing because
    they would only be discovered when the telescope
    made them easily visible.
  • Uranus is barely visible to the naked eye it was
    discovered in 1781.
  • Neptune and Pluto are too faint to see at all
    without a telescope they were discovered in 1846
    and 1930, respectively.
  • The Sun and the Moon were classified as planets
    because they wandered on the celestial sphere,
    just like Mars and Jupiter and the other planets.

17
Wanderers
  • Planets (and the sun and moon) move with respect
    to the background stars. This motion is not
    easily connected to the daily or annual motion of
    the celestial sphere (except for the sun.)
    However, the ancients did notice that the motion
    of the wanderers was essentially always along a
    certain path, which they named the Ecliptic.

18
The Ecliptic
  • The apparent path of the Sun and planets on the
    celestial sphere is called the ecliptic. Because
    the rotation axis of the Earth is tilted by 23.5
    degrees with respect to the plane of its orbital
    motion (which is also called the ecliptic), the
    path of the Sun on the celestial sphere is a
    circle tilted by 23.5 degrees with respect to the
    celestial equator.

19
Defining Zero right ascension
  • The zero point for celestial longitude (that is,
    for right ascension) is the Vernal Equinox, which
    is that intersection of the ecliptic and the
    celestial equator near where the Sun is located
    in the Northern Hemisphere Spring. The other
    intersection of the Celestial Equator and the
    Ecliptic is termed the Autumnal Equinox. When the
    Sun is at one of the equinoxes the lengths of day
    and night are equivalent (equinox derives from a
    root meaning "equal night"). The time of the
    Vernal Equinox is typically about March 21 and of
    the Autumnal Equinox about September 22.

20
Celestial Coordinates
21
The Constellations of the Zodiac
  • The zodiac is an imaginary band 18 degrees wide
    centered on the ecliptic. The constellations that
    fall in the zodiac are called the 12
    constellations of the zodiac. They were at one
    time thought to have great mystical and
    astrological significance.
  • The constellations of the zodiac are still of
    importance because the planets, as well as the
    Sun and Moon, are always found within one of the
    zodiac constellations.

22
Connecting the sky and the Earth
  • As you saw in the previous slide, the important
    positions where the celestial equator and the
    ecliptic intersect are connected to important
    moments on Earth during the year. By noting the
    position of the sun, moon, and stars using stone
    circle (or similar) calendars, people made a
    connection between positions of objects in the
    sky and seasonal events on Earth.

23
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24
Annual Motion
  • Each day, the stars return to nearly the same
    place they were the previous night. But aver
    time, the positions drift until a star that was
    once high in the sky at a certain hour sets on
    the Western horizon and eventually becomes
    invisible during the night sky. The star
    reappears on the Eastern horizon later in they
    year (at the same hour) and eventually returns to
    its original spot in the sky.

25
Annual Motion
  • Because this process takes about one year, it is
    called annual motion. We now understand that
    the change is caused by Earths orbit around the
    sun, but to the ancients, it was the SUN moving
    independently from the rest of the Celestial
    Sphere as the Earth remained in a fixed position.
  • Lets set up a classroom demonstration.
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