12-1 The View from Earth.

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Presentation transcript:

12-1 The View from Earth

The North Star Polaris Directly above the North Pole

Naked Eye Astronomy Just your eyes for viewing

Constellations Patterns in the sky People, animals, or objects Ptolemy – identified dozens of star patterns 2,000 years ago

https://www.horoscope.com/us/index.aspx

Telescopes Collects lots of light Hubble Launched in 1990

https://scaleofuniverse https://scaleofuniverse.com/the-largest-picture-taken-to-date-andromeda-from-hubble/

Star Spectra Range of wavelengths that a star emits Radio – cold dark regions Infrared – star forming regions UV – young stars X-rays and Gamma – high energy gas jets

Spectroscopes Spreads light into different wavelengths Used to determine: Temperature Composition Energy

Parallax Apparent change in an objects position Caused by looking at an object from two points

Distance Parallax used to measure distances in space 2 different points on Earth’s orbit

Distances in Solar System Astronomical Unit – AU Sun to the Earth 150,000,000 km

Distances Beyond Solar System Light year – distance light travels in a year Light – 300,000 km/s 10 trillion km Proxima Centauri – 4.2 light years

Looking Back in Time!

Apparent Magnitude How bright an object appears from Earth 1 – Brightest stars Negative – Moon, Sun, Venus, some bright stars

Absolute Magnitude Luminosity – True brightness of an object Depends on temperature and size, not distance