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Lecture 3 Review 1. Our solar system formed from collapsing gas. Residual angular momentum causes the Sun, the planets, and the moons to all rotate in the same prograde motion. Looking down from a point in our northern sky all objects appear to rotate counterclockwise in the plane of the ecliptic. If you are attached to the fixed stars, looking down you see the following sidereal time (with respect to the fixed stars) periods: Sun Earth Moon A) 25.4 days 365.2564 days 27.3 days Moon - because the Earth is moving around the Sun, the full-moon to full-moon month is longer than the sidereal month, i.e. 29.53 days = synodic month = lunar month B) Earth - the Earth is tilted 23½o with respect to the ecliptic. This axis precesses once every 28,000 years. This causes the seasons to advance and the seasonal or tropical year to change to: 365.2422 days = synodic year = tropical year = equinox year 2. The planets are: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are called the terrestrial planets. They are rocky planets with similar elemental content. They have iron - nickel cores Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are called gas giants or Jovian planets. They are large, gaseous, and similar in elemental content. Pluto is an anomaly. Planets on the sunward side of the Sun from Earth are said to be in conjunction. Planets on the night side of the Sun from the Earth are said to be in opposition. Planets revolve more slowly about the Sun the further away from the Sun; thus, the Earth catches up to an outer (superior) planet as it rotates the Sun. At opposition an outer planet appears to exhibit retrograde motion. This is illustrated: 3. Some definitions our latitude = 42½o = Lo 88 constellations, 12 in the ecliptic called the Zodiac 4. The seasons result from the tilt of 23½o of the Earth’s rotational axis from Earth’s orbital plane about the Sun = the ecliptic. Vernal equinox ½ day, ½ night, spring Autumnal equinox ½ day, ½ night, fall Summer solstice - longest day of the year Winter solstice - shortest day of the year 5. The ecliptic is the path of the Sun through the sky from day to day. Since the planets, including the Earth, formed roughly in a plane, the planets appear to follow this same path. The stars rotate about the North Celestial Pole which today is Polaris in the Little Dipper. The pole is at an angle of your latitude Lo above your horizon looking towards the North. Stars in a conic section of angle Lo are always visible and describe circles about Polaris. The celestial equator is a great circle about the polar axes. Your zenith is the point directly you. Stars take an easterly to westerly path through the sky in a single night. This is called diurnal motion. The Earth’s 23½o tilt of its rotational axis to the plane of rotation about the Sun (ecliptic) is the cause of the seasons. Thus, the Sun shines more directly on the Northern Hemisphere during the summer and more directly on the Southern Hemisphere during the winter. The Path of the North Star Celestial Pole - As the Earth precesses, the north celestial pole slowly traces out a circle among the northern constellations. At present, the north celestial pole is near the moderately bright star Polaris, which serves as the “pole star.” Twelve thousand years from now the bright star Vega will be the pole star.