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Celestial Coordinates PHYS390 (Astrophysics) Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 1
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Basic Information Professor Lee Carkner Office Hours: MWF 1-2pm Office: Hanson Science 208 You will need: “An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics” by Carroll and Ostlie, Second Edition (2007) Calculator Pencil and Paper Bring all to class each day
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How the Class Works Read the material before class Do the homework and turn in at the start of class Go to web page and download lecture notes http://helios.augustana.edu/~lc/ph390 Web outline also gives readings and homework Fill in blank areas of notes during class Do the in-class activities Give 2 presentations One on a stellar object and one on an extra-galactic object (TBD) Take the 3 exams and final
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Grading Two exams -- 30% (10% each) In Class Activities -- 20% Can drop (or miss) three Homework -- 20% Can drop (or miss) three Homework due at the start of class Can be handed in late for reduced credit, but not after the start of the next class Two class presentations – 10% (5% each) Final Exam (Partially Comprehensive) – 20%
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Celestial Sphere Zenith – overhead Meridian – line running from north to south passing through zenith Horizon system Altitude (h) -- Azimuth (A) -- Only useful in one place at one time
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Equatorial Coordinates Declination (DEC or ) – Measured in (degrees:arcminutes:arcseconds) Right Ascension (RA or ) – measured in (hours:minutes:seconds) 24 hours = 360 degrees 1 hour = 15 degrees
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Motions of the Sky All stars move around the North Celestial Pole Once per year (~ 1 degree per day) due to annual motion All 360 degrees of RA pass over your location in one day
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The Sun The larger DEC is for the Sun, the higher it is in the sky Noon is when Sun’s RA is on meridian
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Motion in the Sky Transverse (in the plane of the sky, v ) Radial (along the line of sight, v r ) Get from spectroscopy (Doppler shift) Suppose we observe a star move a transverse distance in the sky d = r Where d and r are in the same linear units and is in radians (whole angle) r d Earth
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Distance on the Celestial Sphere Distance between two points = How large is depends on the value of ( ) 2 = ( cos ) 2 + ( ) 2 Convert everything to decimal degrees first
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Parallax Earth-Sun distance is 1 Astronomical Unit (AU) 1 AU = 1.5X10 11 m tan p = 1 AU / d Convert from radians to arcsec and use small angle approximation d = 206265/ p (units of AU) d = 1/p (d in pc, p in arcsec) 1 pc = 3.26 lightyears
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Parallax Issues Very hard to measure All stars have parallax angles less than 1 arcsec (1”) From Earth need several years of measurement and can only go out to ~100 pc Hipparcos space mission can get to 0.001” or 1000 pc
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Next Time Read: 1.3, 3.1, 3.2, 3.6 Homework: 1.8, 1.10, 3.3, 3.15a, 3.15b Download and print out lecture notes
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