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Planetarium Lab 1 __________________________________ Lost in Space. I’m lost and want to go home, which is north of where I am. How do I use the Big Dipper to find north? Locate the two _pointer__ stars on the bowl of the Big Dipper, follow these to the tip of the handle of the Little Dipper, which is __Polaris_ Stars appear to move ___counterclockwise__ around Polaris. Nature & Culture. Most cultures have recognized Orion's stars as a constellation (by some name). Why is this? ___it’s easy to recognize and visible at most places people would be Nature or Culture? Naturally there (N) or culturally constructed (C)? • Are most constellations primarily a product of nature or culture? N or C?___ • Polaris' special star status (the reason we give it special attention)? N or C?_it stays in the same spot in the sky no matter who sees it Winter Hexagon: 1. Rigel is __orion’s foot, 2. Sirius (brightest star) is in CANIS _Major_, 3. Procyon is in CANIS Minor_, 4. Pollux/Castor are the twin stars of _Gemini_, 5. Capella is in AURIGA which looks like a _house___ shape, 6. Aldebaran is the red eye of the bull_ (TAURUS). Give the azimuth and altitude of… top of planetarium ____---___ ____90_____ Polaris _____0_____ _____35____ Aldebaran ___________ ___________ Rigel ___________ ___________ The Horizon Circle: Oriented by Your Position on Earth (Local) Circle called: ___horizon________ Vertical measure: _____altitude_______ in ______degrees_________ Horizontal measure: ______azimuth________ in _________degrees______ The Celestial Equator: Defined by Earth's Equator (Global) Circle called: ___celestial equator Vertical measure: ______declination___ in ________degrees_______ Horizontal measure: ___right ascension___ in _____hours____________ • What is the relationship between earth's equator & the celestial equator? __the CE is just the extension of earth’s eq into space • Does the celestial equator always intersect the horizon at due east and due west? __yes • Is celestial equator always perpendicular to earth's axis & the north celestial pole? __yes • What is the altitude of the celestial equator on the meridian as seen from Shawnee? _55 • From a constant terrestrial latitude will the value for the previous answer change? _no • Is the angle between the celestial equator & horizon the same all year? __yes, always 35 degrees Is there an absolute (universal) frame of reference within nature by which we and/or extraterrestrials can know our place in space? __no What if the United Federation of Planets (Star Trek) legislated such a system? The main basis of this would be____the galaxy that the federation is in Cygnus (swan) flies down Milky Way (plane of _The Milky Way (our galaxy) (teapot) which pours out at galaxy's _center Is the ecliptic (solar system) in same plane as our galaxy? _no_ Equinoxes and Solstices Key Dates rising azimuth noon (meridian) altitude setting azimuth Summer solstice June 21-22 Winter solstice Dec 21-22 Spring/fall equinox March/Sep 21-22 • Sun appears to move east to west along ecliptic. Daily or annually • Sun appears to move east to west along ecliptic. Daily or annually • Is the sun's noontime altitude on the meridian always the same through the year? _no__ • Have you ever seen the sun directly overhead (i.e., at the zenith) in Shawnee? _no___ • On what day is the sun highest at noon? ___June 22___ How close to zenith on that day? _12 or so__° Establish the ecliptic by observation (with planetarium tricks to speed it up) • Sun appears to slip eastward against the fixed _stars____ about 1° per _day___ along a path called the _ecliptic_____ which is inclined by __23__° to the celestial equator (see at meridian) Planetarium Lab 2 _____________________________ How are planets distinguished from the fixed stars? • Wandering motion (describe): _______as compared with stars______ • Rising points on the horizon: _____different (stars always the same) • Brightness: Check one--Brighter ___ Less bright ___ • Which constellations, for the most part, contain the planets? __zodiac____ Inner Planets 1. List the 2 inner planets visible to the naked-eye: _Mercury__, __Venus_, 2. How bright can Venus appear? _______bright enough to read by 3. Record the bounded elongation of... Mercury: _______° Venus: _______° 4. Are Mercury and Venus ever visible at midnight? _no_ Why? __they are always near the sun 5. Define conjunction in terms of celestial longitude ___2 objects must have the same celestial longitude to be in perfect conjunction (like an eclipse) 6. How many conjunctions does Mercury have in a single synodic cycle? _2_ Venus _2_ 7. Why is a planet invisible during its conjunction with the sun? __the sun brights it out____________ Outer Planets 1. List the 3 outer planets visible to the naked-eye: __Mars_____, __Jupiter_____, __Saturn_____ 2. What is the direction, roughly eastward or westward, for direct and retrograde motions? Answer this question below by filling in the two blanks: • Direct motion is ___eastward___________ against the background of fixed stars. • Retrograde motion is ___westward___________ against the background of fixed stars. 3. Outer planets spend most of their time in which motion, direct or retrograde? 4. Define opposition ____________direct_________________________________ 5. Are the outer planets ever visible at midnight? __yes_____ 6. When an outer planet is in the middle of retrograde motion, is it closer to conjunction or to opposition? __opposition (180 degrees from sun)____________ 7. When does an outer planet appear at its brightest? _opposition______ (seen only outdoors) 8. In which direction (east or west) does Mars move... • Prior to its first stationary point? _______ • At opposition? _______ • After its second stationary point? _______ Moon (celestial longitude measurements below are in degrees, and only relative to sun) Why did pre-modern people called the moon a "planet"? ______________________ 1. New moon means the moon is ___0__° of celestial longitude from the sun 2. At the end of first quarter of the moon's drift from the sun it is _90____° of celestial longitude which direction from the sun? Circle one: east / west 3. How far is the moon from the sun at 2nd quarter's end? 180° Also called full moon 4. How far east of the sun is the moon at 3rd quarter's end? _270__° 5. The moon drifts eastward 13___° along the ecliptic daily; the sun only about _1__°; thus the moon drifts eastward about _12__° faster than the sun each day; the moon also deviates up to about _5__° above or below the ecliptic (measured at meridian) 6. Compare the drift eastward relative to the fixed stars of: Sun, Outer Planets, Moon Which fastest? __moon_____ Which slowest? ___outer planets________ Which medium? __sun___