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Transcript
Name:
Section:
Date:
Lab 1: Introduction to Astronomy
Directions: Complete the attached crossword puzzle using the clues given below. Note two-word answers become
one word in the puzzle. You are allowed to use whatever resources you’d like, including the internet. Each completed
clue is worth one point. If you have trouble, feel free to ask your TA for help! The total lab is out of 30 points, so
there are two points of extra credit available!
Across
2: This object is Roman Vulcan’s home in our Solar System
3: First seen by Galileo around the 6th planet, these are mostly icy in nature
5: Third Rock from the Sun
7: His three laws describe orbital motion
8: Point on celestial sphere straight above your head
9: The real-life Death Star (think Star Wars)
12: Hermes is tidally locked to the Sun
14: “Space Rocks” that can have moons
17: The wanderer
18: Naked-eye astronomer famous for his work with supernovae
20: From the horizontal coordinate system; word that describes angle from observation to observed
25: What can be seen through your eyepiece
26: The loneliest “planet,” demoted in 2006 to dwarf status
29: Regions of magnetic activity on solar surface that cycle every 11 years
30: Celestial Equator’s longitude
31: Open cluster home to seven sisters
32: Goddess of love, also the cloudy twin of Earth
Down
1: Huygens’s cryovolcanic liquid world, where ethane lakes reside
4: The “father” of Astronomy
6: From the horizontal coordinate system, word that describes angle swept out along horizon from north
10: Milky Way’s nearest spiral neighbor
11: Allows us to view celestial objects larger
13: “Father” whose only child is the Heliocentric model
15: The celestial equator’s latitude
16: Our Sun’s real name
19: Type of telescope that uses mirrors to direct light through reflection
21: Part of the telescope through which celestial objects are observed
22: King of the gods; be careful, he might “spot” you!
23: Greeks called it the “Milky Circle;” Romans the “Milky Road”
24: Name for a clump of stars in the sky, usually attached to “open” or “globular”
27: The “hunter;” on clear nights, Betelgeuse, Bellatrix, and Rigel can all be seen
28: Zeus’s Hoth-like moon (think Star Wars)
This lab was developed by Christiana Erba for the University of Delaware’s PHYS 133 Lab Class, last updated by the author on
August 25, 2015.
Word Bank
Reflector
Eyepiece
Magnification
Field of View
Mercury
Venus
Earth
Sol
Pluto
Rings
Europa
Titan
Andromeda
Cluster
Asteroid
Sunspots
Planet
Milky Way
Orion
Mimas
Pleiades
Jupiter
Io
Galileo
Kepler
Tycho Brahe
Copernicus
Right Ascention
Declination
Altitude
Azimuth
Zenith
Puzzle
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