Download Study Guide Astronomy Chapter 1

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Cosmic distance ladder wikipedia , lookup

Gravitational lens wikipedia , lookup

Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam wikipedia , lookup

Astronomical spectroscopy wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Study Guide
Astronomy Chapter 1
Vocabulary
Astronomy
Leap year
Celestial
equator
Reflecting
telescope
Calendar
Constellation
Ecliptic
Year
Altitude
Light year
Month
Right ascension
Telescope
Electromagnetic
spectrum
Summer
solstice
Winter solstice
Day
Declination
Refracting
telescope
equinox
Calendars:
Based on movements of objects in the sky
Ancient civilizations developed calendars
Mayans: based on cycles of moon, sun, and Venus
Egyptians: calendar 12 thirty day months and one 5 day month
Hebrew: based on moon and sun and had 12 or 13 months per year
Chinese: based on moon’s phases
Our modern calendar based on Roman calendar
Gregorian calendar adjusted leap year correctly
Ancient astronomical observations
Nabta: stones line up with summer solstice
Stonehenge: stones line up with winter and summer solstice sunrise
Chinese: predict eclipses, name stars
Greeks: philosophers tried to understand sky
Aristotle explained phases of moon and earth is sphere
Native Americans: Maya buildings aligned with celestial objects
Used complex mathematics
Arabs: astrolabe, algebra, number system
Continued to develop astronomy as a science
Early Astronomers:
Ptolemy: earth centered “universe” (geocentric) called Ptolemaic Theory
Copernicus: first to theorize sun (heliocentric) at center of “universe”: Copernican
Theory
Tycho Brahe: geocentric belief, first to bring instruments into astronomy
Johannes Kepler: heoliocentric belief, laws of planetary motion
Galileo Galilei: heliocentric belief, first telescope, saw features on moon
Discovered sun spots and four of Jupiter’s moons
Issac Newton: explained why planets orbit sun:GRAVITY
Laws of motion
Modern Astronomy:
Technology improves, tools improve- knowledge increases
Herschel: fuzzy patches not stars, discovered Uranus
Hubble: fuzzy patches were galaxies; found expanding universe
Constellations:
Ancient people group stars into patterns
Constellations break sky into 88 regions, like states in the U.S.
Rotation, revolution and location determine what stars you will see in sky
Circumpolar stars are seen all year round
Circumpolar stars seem to rotate counter clockwise around a stationary North Star
Locating stars:
Very general location: in constellation
Astrolabe used for finding stars at same location at same time
Horizon: place where sky meets Earth
Zenith: 90° above observer
Altitude: angle between horizon and observer
Precise location:
Use right ascension: like longidute but hours past vernal equinox
Use declination: degrees north or south of celestial equator; like latitude
Size and Scale
Measure distance in light years: distance light travels in one year
Telescopes
Look at universe using all of the electromagnetic : radio, infrared, visible,
ultraviolet, x-ray, gamma
Visible spectrum: use reflecting and refracting telescopes
Other telescopes for other frequencies
Put ultraviolet, x-ray, and gamma ray telescopes in orbit as our atmosphere blocks
out most of these rays
Linking radio telescopes makes them act as one larger more powerful telescope
Light pollution, water vapor, and atmospheric interference on earth limits visible
spectrum observation
Place telescopes in space to avoid problems of visibility