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Astronomy Contents of the universe We live in the solar system. Earth orbits the sun every yr in elliptical orbit. Distance Earth to sun 1 AU
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Birth of the Solar System Solar system born ~4.5 BYA 2 min http://www.youtube.com/watch?v= qfdDWdZcpOw
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Our Solar System planets/moons/asteriods
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Asteroid Belt mars-Jupiter
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Icy Comets -All orbit the sun -very elliptical orbits
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Solar system is part of the milky way galaxy. Orion Arm. The galaxy revolves around black hole. Sun revolution ~ 250 million y.
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Galaxies –large aggregates of stars, gas, & dust containing ~ 100 billion (10 11 ) stars ranging in diameter from 1,500 to 300,000 light-years across. Orbit central point. Av distance btw stars 10 ly.
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Stars can form stellar clusters w/i galaxies – smaller groups of stars held by gravity. ~ 1000’s of stars.
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Constellations – star groups not necessarily near each other.
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Galaxies form groups too. Galactic Clusters Nearest cluster = Virgo cluster
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Open Cluster also galactic cluster- a group of up to a few thousand stars that were formed from the same giant molecular cloud and have roughly the same age. Contain gas and dust
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Globular Cluster - older Generally outside Milky Way in Halo.
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Nebulae Gas clouds – Star nurseries Formed after Big Bang from supernova
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It’s a long way btw stars. Use Light Years LY The d light travels in 1 yr. 1 LY = 9.46 x 10 15 m. 1 AU = 1.5 x 10 11 m 1 pc parsec = 3.09 x 10 16 m
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Powers of 10 Film 6:30 min http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnhken4_-A0
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Earth’s Rotation makes stars appear to rotate on fixed sphere. Rotation is around Polaris on 24 h cycle. Sun/planets wander through stellar backdrop.
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From Earth Stars Appear to be embedded in sphere.
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Stars rotate around Polaris 24 hr cycle rise east set west Stars appear fixed on sphere relative to each other. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCr_Pz4h2Bw
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Planetary Motion Wanderer & Retrograde
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Know the planets in order, their relative sizes, the asteroids, Kuiper belt. Clusters, galaxies, nebula
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Measuring Stellar Distances Stellar Parallax few hundred pc Absolute & Apparent Magnitudes distance Spectroscopic Parallax Cepheid variables
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Hold up pencil Blink eyes Pencil moves against backdrop. Look at post. Blink eyes. Stellar Parallax
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Earth’s motion in orbit causes parallax. Sun 1 AU
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Measure Parallax Angle Angles are very small – measured in arc seconds.
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Angular Measurements expressed in degrees, arc-minutes or arc-seconds. 360 o in circle 1° = 60 arc minutes. 1 arcminute = 60 arc sec. 1 pc= distance where an object has a parallax angle (p) of one arc second.
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Stellar Parallax d = 1/p p = 1/d d (dist) – #parsecs p (parallax angle) – #arc-seconds.
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Ex 1: The nearest star to Earth is Alpha Centauri, which is at a distance of 4.37 ly. Calculate the parallax angle that was measured to obtain that distance. 4.37 LY / 3.26 = 1.34 pc. p = 1/d1/1.34 pc 0.746 arc-sec
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Ex 2: A star has a parallax of 0.66 arc sec. A. What is this in parsecs? B. Meters? d = 1/p d = 1/ 0.66 = 1.5 pc. 4.63 x 10 16 m.
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Why can’t stellar parallax be used to measure very distant stars? Angle gets too small. Few hundred pc upper limit.
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Parallax Method Clip 11 min https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUQAI ldqPwwhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUQAI ldqPww
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