Title: Course
1Course
- Course Website
- http//blogs.umass.edu/astron101-tburbine/
- Textbook
- Pathways to Astronomy (2nd Edition) by Stephen
Schneider and Thomas Arny. - You also will need a calculator.
2Office Hours
- Mine
- Tuesday, Thursday - 115-215pm
- Lederle Graduate Research Tower C 632
- Neil
- Tuesday, Thursday - 11 am-noon
- Lederle Graduate Research Tower B 619-O
3Homework
- We will use Spark
- https//spark.oit.umass.edu/webct/logonDisplay.dow
ebct - Homework will be due approximately twice a week
4Homework 1 (Due today)
- Find an article concerning a topic concerning the
Solar System and write about why you found it
interesting. - Include the name of the article and where it was
published. - Submit using Spark
5Homework 2 (due Tuesday)
- 10 questions
- In Assessment on Spark
6Why should we learn about the Solar System?
- http//www.thisistheend.com/2009/08/the-ihc-on-the
-tv.php
7Metric System
- 1 kilometer 1,000 meters
- 1 meter 100 centimeters
- 1 centimeter 10 millimeters
8Distances
- An Astronomical Unit (AU) is the average distance
between the Sun and Earth - 1 AU 150 x 106 km 150 x 109 m
- 1 light-year is the distance light travels in a
year - 1 light-year 9.5 1015 meters
9Scientific Notation
- 10000 104
- 100000000 108
- 10000000000 1010
- 100000000000000000000 1020
- 0.001 10-3
- 0.0000001 10-7
10How do you write numbers?
- 31,700,000 3.17 x 107
- 2,770,000 2.77 x 106
- 0.00056 5.6 x 10-4
- 0.0000078 7.8 x 10-6
11How do you do multiply?
- 106 x 108 10(68) 1014
- 10-5 x 103 10(-53) 10-2
- (3 x 104 ) x (4 x 105) 12 x 10(45) 12 x 109
1.2 x 1010
12How do you divide?
- 108/106 10(8-6) 102
- 10-6/10-4 10(-6-(-4)) 10-2
- (3 x 108)/(4 x 103) ¾ x 10(8-3) 0.75 x 105
7.5 x 104
13What is a galaxy?
14What is a galaxy?
- Is a massive, gravitationally bound system
consisting of stars, gas and dust, and dark
matter. Galaxies can contain between ten million
and a trillion stars - Dark matter is matter that does not emit or
reflect enough radiation to be seen, but whose
gravitation effects can be felt
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageNGC_4414_28NAS
A-med29.jpg
15When we are looking at stars or galaxies
- We are looking into the past
Light-year is the distance light travels in a
year.
16Milky Way Galaxy
- Milky Way is 100,000 light-years in diameter
- There are 200 billion stars in the Milky Way
(estimates from 100-400 billions stars)
http//www.venusproject.com/ecs/images/photos/gala
xy.jpg
17What is the Universe?
18What is the Universe?
- Sum total of all matter and energy all galaxies
and everything between them - Observable universe portion of the universe
that can be seen from Earth, probably only tiny
portion of the whole universe
93 billion light-years wide
19How many stars in the Universe
- Say there are 100 billion galaxies
- Each galaxy has 100 billion stars
- So how many stars in the universe
20Answer
- Number of stars in universe
- (100 x 109) x (100 x 109) 10000 x 1018
1 x 1022 10,000,000,000,000,000,000
,000 - This is about the same number of grains of sand
in every beach in the world
21Questions
- How many of these 1022 stars have planets?
- How many of these planets have life?
22- My Very Eager Mother Just Served Us Nine Pizzas
23- My - Mercury
- Very - Venus
- Eager - Earth
- Mother - Mars
- Just - Jupiter
- Served - Saturn
- Us -Uranus
- Nine -Neptune
- Pizzas - Pluto
24Does anyone play basketball?
25Assume
- That the sun is the same size as a basketball
- Basketball diameter 24.4 cm
- Suns Diameter 1.4 x 109 m 1.4 x 1011 cm
- Scale Factor 1.74 x 10-10
- Multiply scale factor by actual diameters of
planets to get their approximate size
26Mercury
- Diameter 4.88 x 106 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 8.5 x 10-4 m 0.85 mm
27Mariner 10
Messenger
28Venus
- Diameter 1.21 x 107 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 2.1 x 10-3 m 2.1 mm
29Mariner 10
30Earth
- Diameter 1.28 x 107 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 2.2 x 10-3 m 2.2 mm
31Apollo 17
32Mars
- Diameter 6.80 x 106 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 1.2 x 10-3 m 1.2 mm
33Hubble Space Telescope
34Jupiter
- Diameter 1.43 x 108 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 2.5 x 10-2 m 25 mm 2.5 cm
35Voyager 1
36Saturn
- Diameter 1.21 x 108 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 2.1 x 10-2 m 21 mm 2.1 cm
37Cassini
Six moons are in the picture Titan (5,150
kilometers across), Janus (179 kilometers
across), Mimas (396 kilometers across), Pandora
(81 kilometers across), Epimetheus (113
kilometers across) and Enceladus (504 kilometers
across).
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileSaturn_during_Eq
uinox.jpg
38Uranus
- Diameter 5.18 x 107 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 9.0 x 10-3 m 9 mm
39Voyager 2
40Neptune
- Diameter 4.95 x 107 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 8.5 x 10-3 m 8.5 mm
41Voyager 2
42Pluto
- Diameter 2.30 x 106 m
- Multiply by scale factor (1.74 x 10-10)
- Relative Diameter 4.0 x 10-4 m 0.4 mm
43Hubble Telescope
44Scientific method
https//www.msu.edu/course/isb/202/snapshot.afs/ts
ao/images/scientific_method01.gif
45What is a constellation?
46Constellations
- People refer to constellations as a pattern of
stars - Astronomers refer to constellations as specific
regions of the sky - In 1928, the IAU (International Astronomical
Union) decided there were 88 constellations - Many of the constellation names go back thousands
of years
47Constellations
- The constellations are totally imaginary things
that poets, farmers and astronomers have made up
over the past 6,000 years (and probably even
more!). - The real purpose for the constellations is to
help us tell which stars are which, nothing more.
48What is this constellation?
49Orion
Bigger the star, the brighter it is
50Orion was the son of the god of the sea,
Poseidon and a great hunter. One story is that he
made an enemy of Hera who sent a scorpion to
sting him. Orion was restored to health by
Ophiuchus, the first doctor of medicine.
Another story is that Artemis was tricked by by
Apollo to shoot an arrow at Orion. When he
died, Poseidon asked Zeus to put him among the
stars.
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55Ursa Major
- Ursa Major, the Great Bear, was identified with a
bear by native American Indians of the
Northeastern United States and the ancient
Greeks. - The name common in Britain, the Plough,seems to
have a medieval origin, - Another common name among northern European
cultures is the Wain, a shortened form of wagon
56What are the constellations named after
- 14 men and women
- 9 birds
- 2 insects
- 19 land animals
- 10 water creatures
- 2 centaurs
- one head of hair
- a serpent
- a dragon
- a flying horse
- a river
- 29 inanimate objects
57- Originally considered part of Leos tail
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59- Named after Queen Berenice II of Egypt, wife of
Ptolemy III Euergetes (246 BC - 221 BC) - Around 243 BC, the king undertook a dangerous
expedition against the Syrians, who had murdered
his sister. - Berenice swore to the goddess Aphrodite to
sacrifice her famous long hair if her husband
returned safely. - He did, she had her hair cut, and placed it in
the goddess' temple. - By the next morning, the hair had disappeared.
- To appease the furious king and queen (and save
the lives of the temple priests), the court
astronomer, Conon, announced that the offering
had so pleased the goddess that she had placed it
in the sky. - He indicated a cluster of stars that at the time
were identified as Leo's tail, but now have been
called Berenice's Hair.
60Zodiac
- The zodiac is an imaginary belt in the heavens
extending approximately 8 degrees on either side
of the Sun's apparent path (the ecliptic), that
includes the apparent paths of the Moon and the
planets Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn,
Uranus, and Neptune.
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63Question
- Why do all the planets seem to follow the same
path?
64Answer
- The planets, the Earth, and the Sun all tend to
fall in the same plane called the ecliptic
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67Why dont all the constellations have ancient
names?
68- Ancient cultures such as the Greeks and Egyptians
could not see the constellations in the Southern
Hemisphere
69Question
- Why is the path of the constellations on the
zodiac not on the celestial equator?
70Answer
- The rotation axis of the Earth is inclined with
respect to the ecliptic
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74- Polaris is called the North Star
- Brightest star in the constellation Ursa Minor.
- 48th brightest star in the night sky
- It is very close to the north celestial pole,
making it the current northern pole star. - Polaris' altitude, or height above the horizon,
is equal to an observer's latitude.
75Question
- How can do know that the sun is travelling along
the zodiac since you cant see stars during the
day?
76Answer
- One can however figure out where the sun is on
the zodiac by noting which is the last
constellation of the zodiac to rise ahead of the
Sun or the first to set after it.
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78Any Questions?