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Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2

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Page 1: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomy

1/22/2018

Lecture 2

Page 2: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

The Metric System • The world uses the metric system and so do astronomers.

• 1 meter = 3.28 feet, I am 1.92 meters tall.• The French originated the meter in the 1790s as one/ten-millionth of the

distance from the equator to the north pole along a meridian through Paris.• Now defined as the distance light travels in 1 second

• 1 kilogram = 2.20 pounds, I weigh 92.9 Kg• a cylinder of platinum-iridium alloy

• Units of time are seconds• "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the

transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the Caesium133 atom”

• Units of temperature are Kelvins• No Negative temperatures• 295 Kelvin is 750 F

Page 3: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Scientific Notation and the Metric system

• Large number are hard to write and read• 1,652,000,000 meters = 1.652x109 meters = 1.652 gigameters• 0.003 seconds = 3x10-3 seconds = 3 milliseconds

• Unlike imperial units, larger metric units are converted by multiplying/dividing by 10.• 72,000 feet = 7.2x104 feet = 2.4x104 yards = 13.63 miles

Page 4: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Light Speed

• Light travels really fast at 299,792,458 meters per second

• Large distance can be measure using light speed:• The moon is 1.28 light seconds away

• The sun is 8.31 light minutes away

• Neptune is 4.02 light hours away

• The edge of our solar system is about 0.2 light days away

• The nearest star is about 4.37 light years away

• Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light!

Page 5: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Astronomers use angles to denote the positions

and apparent sizes of objects in the sky

• The basic unit of angular measure is the degree (°).

• Astronomers use angular measure to describe the apparent size of a celestial object—what fraction of the sky that object seems to cover

• The angular diameter (or angular size) of the Moon is ½° or the Moon subtends an angle of ½°.

• 1° = 60 arcmin = 60´, 1´ = 60 arcsec = 60”

Page 6: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The
Page 7: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Measuring Distances in Astronomy

• If two angles and a side are know for a right triangle, all other angles and sides can be calculated.

• Any distance to an object can be measured this way if one can measure angles and distances accurately.

Page 8: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Measuring Distances in Astronomy

If the angle between B’ and A’ is measured and the baseline between A and B is know, the distance to the object in space can be measured.

Page 9: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Eratosthenes Determines the Size of the Earth in about 200 B.C.

SyeneAlexandria

Sun's rays

7.2oS

N

Earth

In Syene Egypt, the sun shown directly overhead on the summer solstice

In Alexandria Egypt, the sun shown at 7.2o on the summer solstice

Page 10: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

He knows the distance between the two cities is 5000 "stadia".

From geometry then:

7.2o = 5000 stadia360o Earth’s circumference

=> circumference is 250,000 stadia, or 40,000 km.

So radius is:40000km = 6366km

Very close to today’s value of 6378 km!

Page 11: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Inverse Square Laws

• What in an inverse square relation?

𝑌 =1

𝑥2

• As x gets bigger, y decreases and visa versa.

• If x is distance and Y is the force of gravity…• Double the distance -> gravity decrease by factor of 4

• Triple the distance -> gravity decreases by 9

• If x is distance and Y is the apparent brightness…• If the star is 100 miles away, it would appear 1002 = 10,000 times dimmer

than if you were at its surface (do not try at home)

Page 12: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

The Celestial Sphere

• Think of objects in the night sky as pasted on some distant sphere that encompasses the earth.

• The sphere slowly rates at a rate of about one rotation per day (23 hr 56 mi).

Page 13: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The
Page 14: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The
Page 15: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

The Sun’s Daily Motion

• Sun’s motion is not quite the same as stars motion on celestial sphere.

• The Sun moves on the sphere over the course of a year.

• The Sun takes 24 hours to return to the same spot in the sky. (solar day)

• The stars take 23 hours and 56 minutes to return to the same spot in the sky. (sidereal day)

Page 16: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The
Page 17: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The
Page 18: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

As the Sun moves across the celestial sphere, it covers up different constellations.

Page 19: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

• The path the sun takes across the celestial sphere is called the ecliptic

• Note that the celestial equator is tilted 23.50

• Other objects “wander” across the sky in more complex paths. These objects are planets.

• Planets are some of the brightest objects in our night sky

Page 20: Charting the Heavens, Foundations of Astronomyphysics.unm.edu/Courses/McFadden/lectures/02_Foundations.pdf · Foundations of Astronomy 1/22/2018 Lecture 2. The Metric System •The

Constellations

• Most stars movement across the celestial sphere is not noticeable with the human eye.• Moving very slow relative to us

• Very far away (almost always this!)

• Human instinct to form patterns from the chaos of nature.

• Constellations are a way of organizing the sky:• Story telling/ Mythology

• Night time navigation

• Astronomy