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Page 1: Tegrity Tegrity has been having issues the past few days. Service may be intermittent. Tegrity has been having issues the past few days. Service may be

TegrityTegrity

Tegrity has been having issues the past few days.

Service may be intermittent.

Tegrity has been having issues the past few days.

Service may be intermittent.

Page 2: Tegrity Tegrity has been having issues the past few days. Service may be intermittent. Tegrity has been having issues the past few days. Service may be

Telescope Viewing Tonight!Telescope Viewing Tonight! Professor Buta will be holding an open house at the

Gallalee 16” Telescope on the roof (4th floor) of Gallalee Hall tonight (August 26) from 7:30-9pm.

See Saturn and the Moon.

Event will be cancelled in the event of clouds, so use your best judgment in assessing the weather situation.

Professor Buta will be holding an open house at the Gallalee 16” Telescope on the roof (4th floor) of Gallalee Hall tonight (August 26) from 7:30-9pm.

See Saturn and the Moon.

Event will be cancelled in the event of clouds, so use your best judgment in assessing the weather situation.

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Homework #1Homework #1 Due Monday, August 31, 6PM

Designed to get your familiar with the MasteringAstronomy.com interface

Mandatory, but ungraded (as long as you complete it on time, you get full credit). You will receive 100% even if the program says you did not receive a 100%.

Lose 10% per day for every day late, for 5 days – after that you can still complete the assignment until the day before the final exam for 50% credit (this will be true for all homeworks).

Due Monday, August 31, 6PM

Designed to get your familiar with the MasteringAstronomy.com interface

Mandatory, but ungraded (as long as you complete it on time, you get full credit). You will receive 100% even if the program says you did not receive a 100%.

Lose 10% per day for every day late, for 5 days – after that you can still complete the assignment until the day before the final exam for 50% credit (this will be true for all homeworks).

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ClickersClickers

The following clickers have not been registered yet:

B93EB6

B94623

Please register your clickers if you own these.

The following clickers have not been registered yet:

B93EB6

B94623

Please register your clickers if you own these.

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Chapter 2Discovering the Universe for

Yourself

Chapter 2Discovering the Universe for

Yourself

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What can we see in the night sky?

What can we see in the night sky?

With the naked eye, we can see more than 2000 stars as well as the Milky Way, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, and the Andromeda Galaxy (barely).

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The Milky WayThe Milky WayA band of light making a circle around the celestial sphere.

What is it?Our view into the plane of our galaxy.

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ConstellationsConstellations

A constellation is a region of the sky – it has no real astronomical significance.

Eighty-eight constellations fill the entire (north + south) sky.

Many southern sky constellations have lame names (i.e., Telescopium, Sextans)

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We measure the sky using angles.

The Sun and Full Moon are ½ degree wide 1 circle = 360 degrees 1 degree = 60 arcminutes 1 arcminute = 60 arcseconds

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The Local SkyThe Local SkyAn object’s altitude (above horizon) and azimuth (along horizon) specify its location in your local sky (specified in degrees). These quantities are dependent on your location on Earth.

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The Celestial SphereThe Celestial SphereNorth celestial pole is directly above Earth’s North Pole (Polaris is very near here).

South celestial pole is directly above Earth’s South Pole.

Celestial equator is a projection of Earth’s equator onto sky.

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Why do stars (or Sun) rise and set?

Why do stars (or Sun) rise and set?

Earth rotates from west to east, so stars (and Sun, Moon, planets) appear to circle from east (rise) to west (set) in a given day.

Earth rotates from west to east, so stars (and Sun, Moon, planets) appear to circle from east (rise) to west (set) in a given day.

Altitude of north celestial pole (Polaris) gives your latitude on Earth.

North Star (Polaris)

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The Celestial SphereThe Celestial SphereEcliptic is the Sun’s apparent path through the celestial sphere over the course of a year through 12 signs of the zodiac.

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The sky varies as Earth orbits the Sun

The sky varies as Earth orbits the Sun

As the Earth orbits the Sun, the Sun appears to move slowly eastward along the ecliptic, moving to a new constellation every month.

As the Earth orbits the Sun, the Sun appears to move slowly eastward along the ecliptic, moving to a new constellation every month.

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Movement of the SunSun makes a complete circuit in the sky (360 degrees) every 365 days (i.e, from Taurus in 2015 to Taurus in 2016) relative to background stars Sun moves ~1 degree/day (twice the angular size of the Sun) relative to background stars

Sun moves ~30 degrees per month (stays in one zodiac constellation each month) relative to background stars moves 12 constellations in 12 months (due to Earth’s revolution around the Sun)

Of course, Sun (and stars) rise/set together over the course of a single day (due to Earth’s rotation on axis).

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Suppose on a given day you wake up at sunrise, and the Sun is in the middle of the constellation Scorpius. In what constellation will it be in at sunset?

Suppose on a given day you wake up at sunrise, and the Sun is in the middle of the constellation Scorpius. In what constellation will it be in at sunset?

A) In ScorpiusB) One zodiac constellation from ScorpiusC) Three zodiac constellations from ScorpiusD) Six zodiac constellations from Scorpius

A) In ScorpiusB) One zodiac constellation from ScorpiusC) Three zodiac constellations from ScorpiusD) Six zodiac constellations from Scorpius

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Suppose on a given day you wake up at sunrise, and the Sun is in the middle of the constellation Scorpius. In what constellation will it be in at sunset?

Suppose on a given day you wake up at sunrise, and the Sun is in the middle of the constellation Scorpius. In what constellation will it be in at sunset?

A) In ScorpiusB) One zodiac constellation from ScorpiusC) Three zodiac constellations from ScorpiusD) Six zodiac constellations from Scorpius

Remember, the Sun only moves 1 degree per day relative to the background stars, and constellations are ~30 degrees wide.

A) In ScorpiusB) One zodiac constellation from ScorpiusC) Three zodiac constellations from ScorpiusD) Six zodiac constellations from Scorpius

Remember, the Sun only moves 1 degree per day relative to the background stars, and constellations are ~30 degrees wide.

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Obviously wrong, since we have summer when Australia has winter.

23.5° tilt of Earth’s axis is responsible for the different hemispheres receiving different amounts of daily sunlight throughout the year seasons.

For Tuscaloosa: ~14 hours of daylight in summer, ~10 hours in winterFor the equator: 12 hours of daylight in summer, 12 hours in winterFor North Pole: 24 hours of daylight in summer, 0 hours in winter

Astronomy Myth #1Astronomy Myth #1

Seasons are caused by the changing distance of the Earth from the Sun during the year.

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What causes the seasons?What causes the seasons?

Seasons depend on how Earth’s axis affects the directness of sunlight.Northern Summer – northern hemisphere points toward SunNorthern Winter– northern hemisphere points away from Sun

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Sun’s altitude also changes with seasons.

Sun’s altitude also changes with seasons.

Sun’s position at noon in summer: Higher altitude means more direct sunlight.

Sun’s position at noon in winter: Lower altitude means less direct sunlight.

Sun image taken about every 2 weeks at noon for a year.

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Why doesn’t distance matter?

Why doesn’t distance matter?

• variation of Earth–Sun distance is small-about 3%; this small variation is overwhelmed by the effects of axis tilt.

• distance does matter for some other celestial bodies -- notably Mars (19%) and Pluto (66%).

• variation of Earth–Sun distance is small-about 3%; this small variation is overwhelmed by the effects of axis tilt.

• distance does matter for some other celestial bodies -- notably Mars (19%) and Pluto (66%).

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How do we mark the progression of the seasons?

How do we mark the progression of the seasons?

• We define four special points (Northern hemisphere only!):summer (June 21) solstice – longest daylightwinter (December 21) solstice – shortest daylightspring (March 21) equinox - 12 hours daylightfall (September 21) equinox – 12 hours daylight

solstice = “sun stops”

equinox = equal day and night

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We can recognize solstices and equinoxes by Sun’s path across sky:

We can recognize solstices and equinoxes by Sun’s path across sky:

Summer (June) solstice: highest path; rise and set at most extreme north of due east

Winter (December) solstice: lowest path; rise and set at most extreme south of due east

Equinoxes: Sun rises precisely due east and sets precisely due west.

Northern hemisphere only!

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How does the orientation of Earth’s axis change with time?

How does the orientation of Earth’s axis change with time?

• Although the axis seems fixed on human time scales, it actually precesses over about 26,000 years.

Polaris won’t always be the North Star in a few thousand years.

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What’s Wrong With These Drawings?

What’s Wrong With These Drawings?