Lecture Notes ASTR 1000: Fall 2009 Slide Set #1
Lecture Notes ASTR 1000: Fall 2009 Slide Set #1
Lecture Notes ASTR 1000: Fall 2009 Slide Set #1
ASTR 1000
Fall 2009
Slide Set #1
Celestial Motions
Dr. H.A. McAlister
Dept. of Physics & Astronomy
Georgia State University
The Constellations
• 88 constellations in the sky. Those in the northern celestial
hemisphere named by the Greeks. Constellations in the
extreme southern sky were named in modern times.
• The rotation of the Earth about its spin axis once every
24 hours causes diurnal effects including day and night
and the rising and setting of celestial objects.
• The revolution of the Earth about the sun once every
365.2422… days produces annual effects such as the
sun appearing to move with respect to the stars along a
path in the sky called the ecliptic. The twelve
constellations lying along the ecliptic comprise the
zodiac.
• The apparent motions of celestial objects on the sky
are the combined result of diurnal and annual motions
and, in the case of the planets their own orbital
motions around the sun.
The Celestial Sphere
north celestial pole
Earth’s
spin
axis
north pole
equator
celestial equator
south pole
celestial
sphere
* Greenwich
* Atlanta
latitude Equator
longitude
For Atlanta:
latitude = 33o 45’ N
longitude = 84o 23’ W
Lunar Months
t1
sunrise
waning Earth
waning sunlight
gibbous
crescent
third
quarter
Questions About Lunar Phases
• What is the time interval between new and full moons?
two weeks
• What time does the full moon culminate?
midnight
• What time does the new moon culminate?
noon
• What time does the new moon rise?
sunrise
• What is the phase of the moon that culminates at
sunset?
first quarter
• What
full is the phase of the rising moon at sunset?
Moon
Sunlight reflected off day lit side of Earth
illuminates dark part of crescent moon. sunlight
to the Sun
Earth
Earth
Moon
2. The presence of the Moon
produces a gravitational attraction
on the Earth whose strength varies
inversely with distance from the 1. Imagine a perfectly spherical
Moon. Earth uniformly flooded by an ocean.
Moon Factoids
23.5o tilt
The Earth’s spin axis is tilted by 23.5 degrees off vertical with respect to
the “ecliptic plane” (plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun)
The spin axis remains essentially parallel to itself during the course of the year
Summer Solstice – 21 June
tropic of
Cancer arctic sunlight
circle
equator
antarctic sunlight
circle
Winter Solstice – 21 December
tropic of
Cancer arctic
sunlight
circle
equator
sunlight antarctic
circle tropic of
Capricorn
Vernal Equinox – 21 March
arctic
circle
sunlight
tropic of
Cancer
equator
tropic of
Capricorn
sunlight
antarctic
circle
Autumnal Equinox – 21 September
arctic
circle
sunlight
tropic of
Cancer
equator
tropic of
Capricorn
sunlight
antarctic
circle
The Culminating Sun
S N
E
winter equinox summer
solstice solstice
The sun rises on the east point and sets on the west point on the days of the equinoxes, giving
equal periods of “day” and “night”.
The sun is in the sky for the longest duration on the summer solstice and illuminates
the northern hemisphere most directly.
Temperature Effect
Penumbra
Earth’s Orbit
Moon’s Orbit
Occurs at Full Phase when Moon is also at the “line of nodes” of its orbit
with respect to the ecliptic
A lunar eclipse lasts for many hours and can be seen from the majority of the
Earth’s surface
Eclipse of the Sun (Solar Eclipse)
Earth’s Orbit
Moon’s Orbit
Occurs at New Phase when Moon is also at the “line of nodes” of its orbit
with respect to the ecliptic
A solar eclipse lasts for only for a few minutes and can only be seen from very restricted
locations on the Earth’s surface
Total and Annular Eclipses
Vertex of Umbral shadow is above Earth’s surface, so only an annular eclipse is possible
Example of a Solar Eclipse Path
Solar Corona
“Diamond Ring”
Upcoming Lunar and Solar Eclipses
Solar Eclipses:
15 Jan 2009 (annular) – Asia & Africa
11 July 2010 (total) – South Pacific Ocean
4 Jan 2011 (partial) – Europe, Africa & central Asia
1 Jun 2011 (partial) – east Asia, far N. America, Iceland
1 Jul 2011 (partial) – south Indian Ocean
25 Nov 2011 (annular) – south Africa, Antactica, Tasmania, New Zealand
The next total solar eclipses visible from the U.S. will be on 21 Aug 2017 and
8 Apr 2024. The 2017 eclipse will be visible from Georgia.
Lunar Eclipses:
31 Dec 2009 – not U.S.
15 Jan 2010 (annular) – not U.S.
26 Jun 2010 (partial) – not U.S.
21 Dec 2010 (total) – all U.S.
15 Jun 2011 (total) – not U.S.
10 Dec 2011 (total) – all U.S.
Motions of the “Wanderers” – The Planets
Mars
East West
direct motion
retrograde motion
around “opposition”
Sun
direct motion
Earth Mars
“Favorable”
“Unfavorable” Opposition
Opposition
Earth is at aphelion
Earth is at perihelion
closest approach is
closest approach is 34 million miles
68 million miles
Mars is at perihelion
Mars is at aphelion
Inferior Superior
Earth
Conjunction Conjunction
Sun
Maximum Western
Elongation
Orbital Configurations
Eastern Quadrature
for a Superior Planet
Western Quadrature
Giants of the Heliocentric Theory
• Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543) – Developed the Heliocentric
Theory but waited until just before his death to release his great
book, De Revolutionibus.
• Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) – Greatest pre-telescopic observer,
produced extensive observations of Mars that were critical to
proving the Heliocentric Theory.
• Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) – Hired as Tycho’s assistant but only
gained access to Tycho’s complete data after Tycho’s premature
death. Kepler discovered three “laws of planetary motion” that
revolutionized the understanding of the solar system.
• Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) – First used the telescope for observing
the night sky in 1609. His discoveries were monumental and
included proof of the Heliocentric Theory.
planet
sun
+
focus center focus
Kepler’s Second Law
The line from the sun to a planet sweeps out equal areas in
equal time intervals.
t1
t2 areaA
t4
aphelion
perihelion
(slowest)
(fastest)
areaB
areaA = areaB if t2-t1 = t4-t3
t3
Kepler’s Third Law
For any two planets, the ratio of their mean distance from
the sun cubed equals the ratio of their orbital periods
squared.
(D1/D2)3 = (P1/P2)2