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Seeing the Sky Naked-Eye Astronomy.

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Presentation on theme: "Seeing the Sky Naked-Eye Astronomy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Seeing the Sky Naked-Eye Astronomy

2 Naked-Eye Astronomy Stars Planets (move relative to stars)
Sun (disk about 1/2 degree) Moon (disk about 1/2 degree) Other (comets, meteors, UFOs, etc.)

3 Angles Can only measure angles on the sky (circle spans 360 degrees; 1 degree = 60 minutes; 1 minute = 60 seconds) Angular distance is the angle on the sky between two celestial objects Use your fist (about 10 degrees at arm’s length)

4 Sky Directions Face South (sun at noon), then North is to your back
West is to your right East is to your left (Northern hemisphere!)

5 Sky Motions Only see angular speeds (angle covered per unit time-day, month, year) Motions are relative with respect to some reference (stars, horizon) Same object can have different motions at the same time relative to different references

6 Stars Patterns: “fixed” constellations (88 official); no visible change over human lifetimes Daily: Rise in east, set in west (relative to horizon) Seasonal: Different constellations visible at different seasons

7 Moon Daily: Rises in east, sets in west (relative to horizon)
Monthly: Cycle of phases; angle relative to the sun (opposition-full) Monthly: Moves eastward relative to zodiacal stars Eclipses can occur at new (solar) or full (lunar)

8 Sun Daily: Rise in east, set in west (relative to the horizon)
Due south at noon (northern hemisphere!); greatest angle (for the day) above horizon at noon Seasonally: noon height varies (highest, summer, lowest winter); rising, setting points also vary

9 Sun Moves eastward relative to stars
Moves through constellations of the zodiac, about 360 degrees in one year (about 1 degree per day) Path in sky relative to the stars defines the ecliptic

10 Planets Daily: Rise in east, set in west (relative to horizon)
Long-term: Move eastward relative to stars (zodiac) In regular cycles, move westward relative to the stars (retrograde)

11 Planets-Long term Mercury, Venus stay near sun (morning, evening stars) Mars, Jupiter, Saturn anywhere in zodiac relative to sun Average angular speeds of eastward motion through zodiac: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn

12 Planets-Retrograde Mercury, Venus retrograde only near sun (when moving from evening to morning “star”) Mars, Jupiter, Saturn retrograde only when opposite the sun in the sky (opposition, 180 degrees apart)


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