The Ancient Mystery of the Planets
... • Compiled the most accurate (one arcminute) naked eye measurements ever made of planetary positions. • Tycho’s observations of comet and a supernova challenged perfect universe idea. • Still could not detect stellar parallax, and thus still thought Earth must be at center of solar system (but recog ...
... • Compiled the most accurate (one arcminute) naked eye measurements ever made of planetary positions. • Tycho’s observations of comet and a supernova challenged perfect universe idea. • Still could not detect stellar parallax, and thus still thought Earth must be at center of solar system (but recog ...
6._Motions_in_Solar_System_student
... Sun at one focus – 2. As a planet moves around its orbit it sweeps our equal areas in equal times – 3. More distant planets orbit the Sun at slower ...
... Sun at one focus – 2. As a planet moves around its orbit it sweeps our equal areas in equal times – 3. More distant planets orbit the Sun at slower ...
Lecture 1: The Universe: a Historical Perspective
... about the Dutch invention (1608) and made his own ● published The Starry Messenger (1610) ● lunar surface full of irregularities ● Milky Way composed of faint stars ● four moons around Jupiter ● phases of Venus ...
... about the Dutch invention (1608) and made his own ● published The Starry Messenger (1610) ● lunar surface full of irregularities ● Milky Way composed of faint stars ● four moons around Jupiter ● phases of Venus ...
PPT - University of Delaware
... way to feed large sources of energy and mass into the interstellar medium. • So, everything we are made of comes from stars, their winds, and their deaths. WR wind bubble NGC 2359 ...
... way to feed large sources of energy and mass into the interstellar medium. • So, everything we are made of comes from stars, their winds, and their deaths. WR wind bubble NGC 2359 ...
Galaxies - schoolphysics
... two giant plates held face to face with a diameter of a little over 100 000 light years and made up of some hundred thousand million (1011) stars as well as great clouds of gas. (See: 11-14/Astronomy/Text/Milky Way) ...
... two giant plates held face to face with a diameter of a little over 100 000 light years and made up of some hundred thousand million (1011) stars as well as great clouds of gas. (See: 11-14/Astronomy/Text/Milky Way) ...
The Solar System - RHIG - Wayne State University
... Why did we not feel the Earth’s motion? It would be centuries before the underlying mechanics became clear and the Coriolis effect would be demonstrated. If the Earth is circling the Sun, why didn’t the stars move throughout the year? Very refined telescopes were needed to demonstrate the parallax e ...
... Why did we not feel the Earth’s motion? It would be centuries before the underlying mechanics became clear and the Coriolis effect would be demonstrated. If the Earth is circling the Sun, why didn’t the stars move throughout the year? Very refined telescopes were needed to demonstrate the parallax e ...
Space Quiz for CPS
... C. The sun is larger than most other stars. D. The sun is the largest planet in the solar system. ...
... C. The sun is larger than most other stars. D. The sun is the largest planet in the solar system. ...
PowerPoint 2.6Mb
... Solar vs Sidereal Time The Solar day is not the same as the Sidereal day (“sidereal” means when a star crosses the meridian) A sidereal day is 4 minutes shorter (due to Earth's orbiting Sun), so stars come up 4 minutes sooner every (solar) day ...
... Solar vs Sidereal Time The Solar day is not the same as the Sidereal day (“sidereal” means when a star crosses the meridian) A sidereal day is 4 minutes shorter (due to Earth's orbiting Sun), so stars come up 4 minutes sooner every (solar) day ...
November 2013 - Pomona Valley Amateur Astronomers
... by the Chinese. The Crab nebula is expanding by 3 million miles per hour. Now we can see several novas per year by observing millions of galaxies, although few, if any, in a given year can be observed without a telescope. Following Lee's “What's Up” Ron Hoekwater gave a short presentation on his vis ...
... by the Chinese. The Crab nebula is expanding by 3 million miles per hour. Now we can see several novas per year by observing millions of galaxies, although few, if any, in a given year can be observed without a telescope. Following Lee's “What's Up” Ron Hoekwater gave a short presentation on his vis ...
Evolution and the Big Bang, ET Life Lec. 6, Jan 18, 2002
... Example 14C has a half life of about 5000 years. After 5000 years half of the original 14C is gone and after 10,000 years ¾ of original amount has decayed. Note, need to chose an isotope with a half life comparable to the age you are trying to measure. Cant use 14C to measure 4.6 Billion year age of ...
... Example 14C has a half life of about 5000 years. After 5000 years half of the original 14C is gone and after 10,000 years ¾ of original amount has decayed. Note, need to chose an isotope with a half life comparable to the age you are trying to measure. Cant use 14C to measure 4.6 Billion year age of ...
Wasp-17b: An Ultra-Low Density Planet in a Probable Retrograde
... eccentricity λ (deg) MP (MJup ) RP (RJup ) ρP (ρJup ) ...
... eccentricity λ (deg) MP (MJup ) RP (RJup ) ρP (ρJup ) ...
Chapter 11 Review
... 2. Briefly explain how a star forms. 3. Is our Sun a low mass, intermediate mass, or high mass star? 4. Describe a supernova. 5. How does a black hole form? 6. What is a star’s spectrum? 7. Explain the Doppler effect. ...
... 2. Briefly explain how a star forms. 3. Is our Sun a low mass, intermediate mass, or high mass star? 4. Describe a supernova. 5. How does a black hole form? 6. What is a star’s spectrum? 7. Explain the Doppler effect. ...
Measuring the Stars pages 813-820
... The age, like the age of Aquarius is the house that the axis of the Earth is pointing to for about the next 2,000 years. The Earth has a wobble, and the axis will only point at Polaris for a few hundred years, then, another star will be north. The ancient Egyptians could not have used Polaris as a c ...
... The age, like the age of Aquarius is the house that the axis of the Earth is pointing to for about the next 2,000 years. The Earth has a wobble, and the axis will only point at Polaris for a few hundred years, then, another star will be north. The ancient Egyptians could not have used Polaris as a c ...
Review Powerpoint - Physics and Astronomy
... • Stars seem to be on the inner surface of a sphere surrounding the Earth. • They aren’t, but we can use two-dimensional spherical coordinates (similar to latitude and longitude) to locate sky objects. ...
... • Stars seem to be on the inner surface of a sphere surrounding the Earth. • They aren’t, but we can use two-dimensional spherical coordinates (similar to latitude and longitude) to locate sky objects. ...
Life in the Universe - abersychanastronomy
... maybe one or two) are gaseous giants and are unlikely to have surface life. ...
... maybe one or two) are gaseous giants and are unlikely to have surface life. ...
Earth and Space Review 2016
... 16. Which moon phase occurred on Sunday the 11th? Which phase will be observed on Sunday the 18th? Why? Tides 17. What is a tide? ...
... 16. Which moon phase occurred on Sunday the 11th? Which phase will be observed on Sunday the 18th? Why? Tides 17. What is a tide? ...
File - Earth and Environmental Science and Biology
... near the poles. In addition, extensive ice and snow at the poles reflects back to space some of the sun's energy that reaches the earth. Much more sunshine is absorbed to heat the earth at the equator. This means the land at the equator becomes hotter than the poles. If we had no atmosphere or ocean ...
... near the poles. In addition, extensive ice and snow at the poles reflects back to space some of the sun's energy that reaches the earth. Much more sunshine is absorbed to heat the earth at the equator. This means the land at the equator becomes hotter than the poles. If we had no atmosphere or ocean ...
Rare Earth hypothesis
In planetary astronomy and astrobiology, the Rare Earth Hypothesis argues that the origin of life and the evolution of biological complexity such as sexually reproducing, multicellular organisms on Earth (and, subsequently, human intelligence) required an improbable combination of astrophysical and geological events and circumstances. The hypothesis argues that complex extraterrestrial life is a very improbable phenomenon and likely to be extremely rare. The term ""Rare Earth"" originates from Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe (2000), a book by Peter Ward, a geologist and paleontologist, and Donald E. Brownlee, an astronomer and astrobiologist, both faculty members at the University of Washington.An alternative view point was argued by Carl Sagan and Frank Drake, among others. It holds that Earth is a typical rocky planet in a typical planetary system, located in a non-exceptional region of a common barred-spiral galaxy. Given the principle of mediocrity (also called the Copernican principle), it is probable that the universe teems with complex life. Ward and Brownlee argue to the contrary: that planets, planetary systems, and galactic regions that are as friendly to complex life as are the Earth, the Solar System, and our region of the Milky Way are very rare.