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Page 1: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

The Contents of the Milky Way

• Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of interstellar dust and gas in the disk

• There are about 400 billion stars in the Milky Way

Page 2: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Where to find thingsDept home page (www.astro.washington.edu) Department ToolsAstr322 home page (www.astro.washington.edu/astro322/www.astro.washington.edu/astro322/ ) Links

Catalogs: positions, brightness, type, distance, velocity, referencesAstronomical Almanac - everything http://aa.usno.navy.mil/Yale Bright Star Catalog (6th mag)- HR#, 1900, 2000 coordsHD catalog - spectra- HD#SAO Catalog (10th mag) SAO# 1950 coords (HEASARC,etc)GSC (14th mag) http://gsss.stsci.edu/webservices/GSC2/GSC2WebForm.aspxGCVS >28000 http://www.sai.msu.su/gcvs/gcvs/index.htmAstrophysical Quantities by Allen - general info (book)

Star charts:SAODSS - Digitized POSS http://archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_form/http://archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_form/ (Dept Tools)USNO - coords, mags http://archive.eso.org/skycat/servers/usnoahttp://archive.eso.org/skycat/servers/usnoaAAVSO - link from my home page

General star info: http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/ (Dept Tools, 322 Links)

Astronomical research:ADS - http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abstract_service.html (Dept Tools)Astro-ph - http://xxx.lanl.gov/archive/astro-phhttp://xxx.lanl.gov/archive/astro-ph (Dept Tools)

Page 3: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Terms to be Familiar with:1. Distances:

• AU (earth-sun distance) = 93 million miles = 1.55x108km• LY (distance light travels in 1 yr) = 3x105km/s x 3x107s = 1013km• parsec (astronomer’s unit) = 206265 AU = 3.3 LY

Earth Diameter = 8000 mi = 12756 km

Earth-moon = 240,000 mi = 384,000kmEarth-sun = 93 million mi = 155 million km = 1AUSun-Pluto = 40 AUSun-Oorts Cloud = 50,000AUSun-nearest star = 300,000AU*****************************************************c= 3x105 km/s = 186,000 mi/s1 lightsec = 3x105 km, 1 lightmin = 3x105 km/s x 60s = 18 million km, 1 LY=3x105 km/s x 3x107s=1013 kmEarth-moon = 1.3 lightsecEarth-sun = 8 lightminEarth-Pluto = 5 lighthoursSun-nearest star = 4 LYDisk diameter of Milky Way = 150,000 LYNearest galaxies ~ 150,000 LY****************************************************1 pc = 3.26 LY = 206265 AUDiameter of Milky Way = 50 kpcNearest galaxies ~ 50 kpcMilky Way- Andromeda ~ 700 kpc“radius of universe” ~ 4 billion pc

Page 4: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

2. SKY terms:• horizon - where the sky meets the ground

• zenith - point over observer’s head• celestial sphere - NCP, SCP, CE• meridian - circle through zenith and NCP and SCP• altitude - angle above horizon• azimuth - degrees E from N point to object along horizon• ecliptic - apparent path of Sun on celestial sphere• vernal equinox - where Sun crosses CE from S to N• declination - angle N or S of CE for object in sky• hour angle - angle W along CE from meridian to hour circle• right ascension - angle E along CE from to hour circle of star

ST = RA + HA

3. TIME terms:• UT = GMT = local time at Greenwich (UT=PST+8 hr = PDT+7 hr)• JD = Julian Date (Jan1, 2013 0h UT = 2,456,293.5)• HJD - set to Sun• MJD = JD - 2,400,000.5 day (used by spacecraft)

Page 5: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Astronomical Coordinate Systems:

• Horizon (altitude and azimuth)

• Celestial (RA and Dec)

• Galactic (b and l)

Page 6: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

CE horizon View from south

The Celestial Sphere

Page 7: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

In Northern hemisphere:

altitude of NCP = latitude ø

ø90-ø

ø 90-øhorizon

SN

z

NCP

CE

Page 8: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

The Horizon (altaz) System of Coodinates

• horizon is the reference frame

• altitude is height above horizon (0-90o)

• azimuth is angle measured E along horizon from north point (0-360o)

Page 9: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Horizon system

azimuth = ?

Page 10: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Due to Earth rotation, stars circle celestial Poles

Stars between CP & horizon are circumpolar stars

Page 11: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of
Page 12: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

The earth orbits the Sun (proof is parallax)

Page 13: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Due to Earth’s revolution around Sun

We see different constellations at different times of the year

Page 14: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Earth’s orbit causes a difference between solar and sidereal time

360o/365 days = ~1 deg/day

1 deg = 24h x 60min /360o = 4 min/day

stars rise 4 min earlier each day

4 x 30 days = 2 hrs/month

Page 15: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

Tilt of Earth rotation axis to ecliptic (23.5o) causes seasons and forms basis for Celestial coordinates

ecliptic

Page 16: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of
Page 17: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

The Celestial (equatorial) Coordinate system

• celestial equator is reference frame

• declination () is height above or below CE (-90 to 0 to +90)

• right ascension (RA:) is angle E along CE from vernal equinox point (0-24 hrs)

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Sun on June 21:

RA= ?

Dec = ?

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Advantages of Celestial Coord:

• Coords don’t change during night

• Coords don’t change for different locations on earth

• Objects can be found in catalogs

Advantages of Horizon Coord:

• Easier to describe objects during night

• Telescopes can handle heavy instruments

Page 20: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

2. SKY terms:• horizon - where the sky meets the ground

• zenith - point over observer’s head• celestial sphere - NCP, SCP, CE• meridian - circle through zenith and NCP and SCP• altitude - angle above horizon• azimuth - degrees E from N point to object along horizon• ecliptic - apparent path of Sun on celestial sphere• vernal equinox - where Sun crosses CE from S to N• declination - angle N or S of CE for object in sky• hour angle - angle W along CE from meridian to hour circle• right ascension - angle E along CE from to hour circle of star

ST = RA + HA

3. TIME terms:• UT = GMT = local time at Greenwich (UT=PST+8 hr = PDT+7 hr)• JD = Julian Date (Jan1, 2013 0h UT = 2,456,293.5)• HJD - set to Sun• MJD = JD - 2,400,000.5 day (used by spacecraft)

Page 21: The Contents of the Milky Way Our Galaxy has a disk about 50 kpc (160,000 ly) in diameter and about 600 pc (2000 ly) thick, with a high concentration of

dL/dt = <>

P=26,000 yrs

Precession affects coordinates

F1 > F2

23.5o

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Sky rotates about N point from E to W

Earth spins W to E,

P = 1 day

Sun moves E among stars

(1 deg/day); stars rise 4 min earlier each day

Earth orbits sun,

P = 1 year

Earth has seasons

(temperature, daylight changes)

Spin axis tilted 23.5 deg

to orbit

Moon moves among stars (12 deg/day), rises 50 min later/day; has phases

Moon orbits earth,

P = 1 month

Moon and sun have eclipses Angular sizes same,

alignment of orbits

Planets move east among stars and have retrograde motion

Planets orbit sun with different periods

Observation Explanation


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