Title: Class Announcements Monday, August 28
1Class AnnouncementsMonday, August 28
- Labs start tonight, 8pm -10 pm
- Homework 1 due today at end of lecture
- Homework 2 on course website
- Observing/ Clear Sky patrol
- Starts tomorrow night.
- Observing list on website late today
- East elevator, 7th floor VAN Door next to
elevator
2Ecliptic the path of the Sun (and planets) in
the sky complicated by the fact that Earth is
tilted on its own axis by 23.5 degrees
Note Constellations of the zodiac lie on the
path of the ecliptic, since they are behind the
Suns path.
3Observer at North PoleWhere is Suns position on
Summer Solstice (June 21) ?
North Pole Sun is 23.5? above the horizon all
day on June 21
4Observer at Equator (e.g Quito) Where is Sun on
March 21 (Vernal equinox)?
Zenith at noon
Mach 21
Observer at equator on March 21 (or Sept 21) Sun
rises in E, at zenith at noon, sets in W)
5Ecliptic, Celestial Planes and the Path of the
Sun
6Path of Sun from March 21 to Sept 21
June 21
March 21
Sept 21
Sun today
7As the Earth moves in its orbit, The path of the
Sun (and planets) changes because of the tilt of
the rotation axis Note Since rotation axis is
fixed with respect to the stars, star paths do
NOT change!
8Northern Hemisphere Winter
Northern Hemisphere Summer
9What dates correspond to each figure?
4
1
3
2
10Cause of seasons
11(No Transcript)
12Azimuth of sunrise changes with season
East
Northeast
Southeast
Dawn
13Stonehenge Ancient astronomical site aligned to
solar azimuth
14Seasons Summary
- Due to the Earths 23.5º tilt on its axis
N. Summer Northern Hemisphere tilted toward
Sun N. Winter Southern Hemisphere tilted toward
Sun
- 4 important dates
- 1. Summer solstice (June 21) sun most northerly
on ecliptic - 2. Autumnal equinox (Sep 21) sun crosses
celestial equator - 3. Winter solstice (Dec 21) sun most southerly
on ecliptic - 4. Vernal (spring) equinox (Mar 21) sun crosses
c. equator
- Myth The Earth is closer to Sun in summer
Wrong! The suns rays reach (N. hemisphere) of
the Earth more DIRECTLY in (Northern H.) summer,
less DIRECTLY in winter (doesnt have to do with
sun-earth distance)
15Coordinates in the sky Horizon System
Zenith point directly overhead at any
time Horizon the lowest point you can see (the
ground)
16Celestial Sphere Extension of the Earths
Coordinate System
- celestial sphere
- N/S celestial poles
- celestial equator
Like a salad bowl over your head!
17Apparent westward motion of sky
Due to Earths rotation about its axis every
24h in an EASTWARD direction To us, it appears
as if objects in the sky are moving
WESTWARD Sun rises in the E, Sun sets in W
18The Night Sky at the North Pole Polaris (N.
Celestial Pole) fixed overhead
Time-lapse picture from the North Pole looking
straight up (zenith)
19The Night Sky at the Equator North South
Celestial Poles are on the horizon
North Celestial Pole (North Star)
20Most of us are in between these extremes we see
fixed Polaris (N. Celestial Pole star) over the
night, stars move WESTWARD about it
Looking North
E
W
21Transit Crossing the observers prime meridian
- All celestial bodies rise in the east, set in the
west - A line running from N to S crossing the zenith is
the prime meridian - Objects transit when crossing this imaginary line
- Transiting objects are always due south and are
highest in the sky (highest elevation)
Prime meridian line
Transit
22Prime Meridian
23Earths rotation and the apparent motion of stars
- All celestial bodies (stars, planets, sun, moon)
appear to move across the sky east to west - This is caused by the Earth rotating (west to
east) on its own axis, like a spinning top. - The Earths rotational period is 23h 56m 4s. (NOT
24h!) This is called the sidereal period. - Hence, all stars are at the same position in the
sky every successive sidereal period. - This implies that all stars rise appx. 4 minutes
earlier each night. - Since 4 min x 365 days 24 hr, the night sky
patterns repeat annually for a given time of
night
24Daily Motion of Stars, Solar system objects on
the Sky
- Stars move along the same westward track every
night (ignores precession, discussed later in
lecture) - Stars rise, transit, and set 4 min earlier every
night. - Solar system objects also move east to west each
night, but their tracks are more complicated
(because apparent motion is affected by Earths
orbital motion around Sun) - The Sun and all planets (except Pluto) move along
the line of the ecliptic plane, described in next
slide. - Planets generally move eastward with respect to
the stellar background, except during retrograde
motion (Chap 3) - The Moons motion is the most complicated we
will discuss this in chapter 2.
25Night sky The Movie Iowa City looking south
West
East
26Night sky at 24 hour intervals (Solar period)
27Night sky at 23h 56m 4s intervals (Sidereal
period)
28Motion of the Sun Solar vs. Sidereal period
- Since the Earth moves in its orbit each day, the
motion of (nearby) solar system objects is
slightly different from stars. - The Earth needs to rotate an additional 1 degree
daily for the Sun to repeat its position (see
diagram at right). - This takes an additional 4 min
- This means that the Suns position repeats every
24 hrs. This is called the solar period.