ASTR 207 Chapter2 Part2
ASTR 207 Chapter2 Part2
ASTR 207 Chapter2 Part2
on Mars
The tilt of the rotation axis of Mars is nearly the same as that of Earth (by coincidence). The orbit of Mars is quite elliptical, which causes larger variation in the orbital speed of Mars. The Analemma on Mars has a different shape.
Clicker
Ques2on
If
the
Sun
rises
precisely
due
East:
A:
You
must
be
located
at
Earth s
Equator
B:
It
must
be
the
day
of
either
the
Spring
or
fall
equinox
C:
It
must
be
the
day
of
the
Summer
Sols2ce
Uranus has the most extreme seasons because its axis 2lt is nearly 90o
Seasons on Uranus
Precession
Precession is a gradual change of direction of the axis of a spinning object. The tilt angle of the axis does not change The rate at which the axis changes direction is much slower than the rate at which the object spins around its axis. Precession is not the cause of seasons
Precession shiGs the seasons steadily through the year (26,000 year cycle)
As a result of precession, our winter will once begin in May The Summer will then begin in November (still 6 months later)
Face
of
the
Moon
directed
to
Earth
with
loca2on
of
moon
landings
(rst
moon
landing
40
years
ago
20
July
1969)
The Moon always faces the Earth with the same side. The other side of the Moon is invisible for us.
Terminator This sketch is always true! There is always a day side and a night side. Always start setting up this sketch first. The only question is: Where is the observer?
Observer 1 sees only the night side (New Moon) Observer 2 sees half of the night side and half of the day side (First Quarter or Third Quarter) Observer 3 sees most of the day side and a tiny edge of the night side (Gibbous phase) Observer 4 sees the same as Observer 3 because they look along the same line of sight!
Observer 1 Observer 2
Clicker
Ques2on
How
many
2mes
brighter
is
the
full
moon
than
the
moon
in
rst
quarter?
A:
They
are
the
same
brightness
B:
Twice
as
bright
C:
Ten
2mes
brighter
Clicker
Ques2on
How
many
2mes
brighter
is
the
full
moon
than
the
moon
in
rst
quarter?
The
full
moon
is
actually
ten
2mes
brighter
than
the
moon
in
rst
quarter
(half
moon)
This
Opposi2on
eect
is
the
result
of
the
shadows
in
the
roughness
of
the
moon s
surface
that
disappear
if
the
light
comes
from
straight
above
Clicker
Ques2on
True
or
False:
The
far
side
of
the
moon
is
always
dark
Clicker Ques2on
From your perspec2ve, you see the Sun A: At sun rise, in the East B: On the meridian C: In the Zenith D: At sunset, in the West
Clicker Ques2on
From your perspec2ve, you see the Earth A: Rising in the East B: At eleva2on 50o C: In the Zenith D: Sebng in the West
Eclipses
Solar eclipse of August 1999, partial phase In the run-up to totality, the moon covers an increasingly bigger part of the Sun The observer is now in the Penumbra. One does not notice the daylight gets dimmer until the last minute before totality.
Solar eclipse of August 1999, partial phase Here the Moon covers most of the Sun. We see only a narrow crescent of the Sun We are looking at the night side of the Moon here, so the surface of the Moon appears dark
Totality (Eclipse of August 1999) In the last few second before totality it suddenly gets dark. During totality we see the atmosphere of the Sun (Corona) that is not covered by the Moon. Stars and planets are visible (sometimes a comet!). Totality typically lasts only a few minutes
Diamond Ring visible when the first sunlight reappears through valleys on the limb of the Moon
If you ever want to plan to travel to see a total eclipse of the Sun, you can find detailed information on websites that NASA makes for every eclipse at http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse.html
Only the Umbra is really dark! In the Penumbra (half-shadow) the Sun is partly covered. It is still quite bright. Compare the word Penumbra with Peninsula (Latin for almost an island)
If you see this, you are in the Umbra of the Moon The entire Sun is covered.
If you see this, the alignment is perfect but the Moon is too distant to cover the entire Sun. You are in the Penumbra
Solar Eclipse: visible only from the right loca9on, being in the shadow of the moon
Penumbra
Mars moon Phobos partially eclipsing the Sun Picture taken by Mars rover from the surface of Mars
Mars moon Deimos partially eclipsing the Sun. Picture taken by Mars rover from the surface of Mars.
Mars has two moons: Phobos and Deimos. Both are much smaller than Earths Moon. Phobos orbits much closer to Mars than Deimos, so it can cover a larger fraction of the Sun. There are no total eclipses of the Sun on Mars.
Eclipses in Jupiters system of moons (both solar and lunar) can be observed from Earth with a modest backyard telescope.
Venus
Transit
The inner planets Mercury and Venus occasionally appear in front of the Sun. This phenomenon is not called an eclipse but a transit. Next year, there will be a Venus transit on June 5, 2012. After that you will have to wait until the year 2117!
Composite image of the Venus transit in 2004. Venus transits come in pairs, separated by 8 years. The time between two pairs of Venus transits is approximately a century.
Lunar eclipse: visible from any loca9on where the moon is visible during the eclipse
Eclipse Seasons
Stellar parallax
Clicker
Ques2on
True
or
False:
Because
of
Precession,
in
26,000
years
the
seasons
will
temporarily
disappear
and
return
26,000
years
later
A:
True
B:
False
Clicker
Ques2on
A
week
aGer
full
moon,
the
moons
phase
is
A:
First
Quarter
B:
Third
Quarter
(Last
Quarter)
C:
New
D:
Full
again
Clicker
Ques2on
When
we
see
Saturn
going
through
a
period
of
apparent
retrograde
mo2on,
it
means
A:
Saturn
is
temporarily
moving
backward
in
its
orbit
around
the
Sun
B:
Earth
is
passing
Saturn
in
its
orbit,
with
both
planets
on
the
same
side
of
the
Sun
C:
Saturn
and
Earth
must
be
on
opposite
sides
of
the
Sun
D:
Something
is
wrong
with
the
observa2ons
because
Saturn
never
displays
retrograde
mo2on