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q discuss the variation in day length over a year for different latitudes Day Length = the time when the sun appears above the horizon, from sunrise to sunset There is still daylight after sunset. This period of time is called twilight. Length of a day depends on an area’s latitude (= the distance from the equator) and the tilt of the earth’s axis. The rotation of the earth, along with the latitudes, causes some interesting things: a) At a given latitude, the duration of the longest day in the northern hemisphere (on or about June 21) is the same as the duration of the longest day in the southern hemisphere (on or about December 21); b) Also, the duration of the shortest day in the northern hemisphere (on or about December 21) is the same as the duration of the shortest day in the southern hemisphere (on or about June 21); c) The Arctic Circle is the southernmost latitude where 24-hour daylight can occur at least on one day of a year (northern summer solstice on or about June 21); d) The Antarctic Circle is the northernmost latitude where 24-hour daylight can occur at least on one day of a year (southern summer solstice on or about December 21). (Above) Pictures of the sun taken 1 hour apart. This and the following images were from a scientific expedition in Antarctica, at a base located approximately 75o South. (Above)Although DdU is a little south of the Antarctic circle, the sun is always visible at noon, even at the darkest of the winter. The reason is because of the refraction of light on the low atmosphere layers: you can actually see it while it's somewhat below the horizon. This picture was taken on June 21st with 9 exposures set 11 minutes apart if I remember right. One hour of sunlight is all we get in winter. Enough to go for a walk, but little else. I created my animated HR bar starting from this picture. •Each pole has only one sunrise and one sunset per year, around the time of the equinoxes. Each pole’s sunrise is nearly coincidental with the other’s sunset. Evidence That Shows The Earth Rotates About Its Axis And Revolves Around The Sun 1) Foucault’s Pendulum a) 1851- Foucault suspended a 60-m pendulum weighing about 25kg from the domed ceiling of the Pantheon in Paris. b) He started the pendulum swinging evenly by drawing it to one side with a cord and then burning the cord to start the pendulum swinging. c) The direction of swing of the pendulum was recorded on a ring of sand placed on a table beneath its point of suspension. d) At the end of each swing a pointed stylus attached to the bottom of the bob cut a notch in the sand. e) After a few moments it became apparent that the plane of oscillation (swing) of the pendulum was slowly changing with respect to the ring of sand, and hence with respect to the Earth. Foucault’s Pendulum in the Pantheon in Paris The pendulum bob (left) weighed 28 kg and was brass-coated lead. It was suspended from a wire 67 meters long! This replica in the Pantheon in Paris has been permanently swinging since 1995. These drawings show the pattern that emerged when the pendulum was set in motion. (left) The blue arcs show the pendulum swing; the green lines show the pattern left in the sand. Each pass was 11° different from the previous pass. http://www.youtube.com/watch ?v=6oYvffE6iGY&feature=relat 2) The Earth isn't round. It bulges around the equator, just as you would expect if it rotated. This was known when Foucault made his pendulum. http://earthsky.org/brightest-stars/altair-the-bluish-jewel-of-theeagle Altair needs only 10 hours to spin once on its axis, in contrast to roughly a month for our sun. This mighty star spins on its axis more rapidly than Earth! 3) Coriolis Effect 1) Because each and every part of the Earth rotates full circle in 24 hours, different parts of the face of the Earth are actually moving through space at different speeds. 2) A point on the equator of the Earth moves about 24,000 miles in 24 hours, or about 1000 miles per hour. 3) On the other hand, a piece of ground 4 feet from the North Pole moves only 24 feet in 24 hours, for a slow speed of 1 foot per hour! Here’s an animation: http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizati ons/es1904/es1904page01.cfm Or two: http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=coriolis+animation&qpvt=corioli s+animation&FORM=VDRE#view=detail&mid=F1A36B32B7AC44BE6 B5DF1A36B32B7AC44BE6B5D Or three: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dt_XJp77-mk FUNKY NOTE: The Coriolis Effect was largely a curiosity until World War I, when the Germans built a generation of long-range cannons and found that they could not hit anything if they aimed directly at it; they had to aim to the left. (If the target was exactly east or west of the gun's position, the gun would be aimed directly at it.) If you understand this discussion, you should be able to convince yourself that a cannonball fired southward (toward the equator) from some point in the Northern Hemisphere will be deflected to its right (west). Effects such as these that come about because we live on a rotating frame of reference are referred to as Coriolis effects. The Motion Of Stars And Planets Are Caused By Rotation And Revolution Of The Earth 1) The earth’s axis is in line with one Northern Hemisphere star: Polaris. 2) Polaris is part of the Little Dipper (Ursa Minor) 3) It is found by drawing a line from the outer lip of the Big Dipper (part of Ursa Major). 4) Polaris is located 10 off to the side of the north celestial pole, so it makes a very small arc as the earth rotates 5) All stars and planets rotate around Polaris Polaris Left: Star rotation shown by a long exposure. The star in the middle is Polaris. http://www.nakedeyeplanets.com Above: A shooting star and a passing satellite caught by a long exposure photography. 5C Earth, Moon and Sun Interactions Humans have been aware of the relationships between the Earth, Sun and Moon for thousands of years, but only recently have we began to better understand the true nature of these relationships. 1) Ancient civilizations used the seasons, months, position of stars and other astronomical information in many parts of their lives. 2) Until the past few hundred years, humans believed the Earth was the center of the universe (the geocentric model). The geocentric model was based on the work of the ancient Greek philosopher Ptolemy This drawing from an Icelandic manuscript dated around 1750 illustrates the geocentric model. Figure 3. Dante Alighieri's (1265-1321) scheme of the universe in illustration from "Paradies" in "The Divine Comedy" extends Aristotelian cosmology in a modern way. Dante traverses the material world from the icy core of Earth, the abode of Lucifer, to the Mount of Purgatory. He continues through the nine heavenly spheres, each sphere larger and more rapidly turning than the last, until he reaches the Primum Mobile, the ninth and largest sphere and the boundary of space. His goal was to see the Empyrean, the abode of God. Map of the Square and Stationary Earth, by Orlando Ferguson (1893) Figure 4. The first diagram to illustrate the proposal that the universe is infinite. From the edition by Thomas Digges of his father's A Prognostication everlastinge..., published in 1576 in London, eight years before its publication by Giordano Bruno to whom the idea is often credited (By permission of The Royal Society). Notwithstanding the fact that celestial objects of a certain mass generally are spherical in shape, an article in My Magazine, dated May 1918 (and titled What the World May Come To: The School Maps As They May Be in Millions of Years to Come) predicts that the earth is spinning itself into a tetrahedron. The explanation, as one can imagine, is very dodgy. The accompanying picture of the globe is strange enough to be figured here. Men of science believe that in millions of years the earth will lose the shape of a globe and become a sort of pyramid or tetrahedron. The earth was formed as a round globe. In cooling down the Poles were flattened and its surface was fixed. But the core is still cooling and shrinking, and the hard unshrinking surface must adjust itself to a smaller bulk. The shape of a globe is the shape that gives the biggest possible surface for its size; but there is another shape that gives the smallest possible surface for its size, and the earth seems likely to assume this shape. It is a sort of pyramid shape, and is called a tetrahedron. CREATIONSTORY Red Jacket / Seneca To fully appreciate the narrative of the Great Laws, one must first hear and understand the origin story of theHaudenosaunee, these People of the Long House. According to these origin stories, the first person on the earth was a woman. Her name was Sky-Woman. There are variations of this story, but many are similar to the following: There is a Celestial world above where man-beings dwell—where even animals and all living things today were all once manbeings. There was no sun, but this world was lit by white blossoms on the great Celestial Tree standing in front of the lodge of the presiding chief. In this world was a young girl who had lost her father. She so grieved for him that they took her to his burial place. Here she was content to stay and visit. Her father began speaking to her from the other side. He taught her many things. When she became of age, he told her that she should marry the Sky Chief and directed her as to how this should happen. She followed her fathersinstructions so as not to talk to anyone but the Sky Chief. This chief had a dream, and according this, he took a young wife. It is said that in time this young wife was soon to become a mother from inhaling the breath of her husband, but this was unknown to him. That from this, he doubted her honesty to him, so much that it caused him so much distress in his mind, that he became ill from his jealousy. He had another dream which called for the Tree of Light to be uprooted creating a great hole in sky world. Into this hole he could push his young and unsuspecting wife.. In olden times, dreams were held in high regard in everyday life, so much that destiny was controlled by dreams to a great degree. So, accordingly, in the morning he called his wife to him. He had her get her burden basket and he began to fill it with nut tree roots and berry bushed and many other things. Then he had this Tree of Light uprooted. The opening made by uprooting the Tree allowed light to shine through the opening. Thus, today, comes the light of the Sun. This chief managed to deceive his unsuspecting wife to look down through the new opening. In so doing, while she was looking down, he pushed her down into the opening. It is said that in his anger, he also cast down through the opening all man-beings, such as the Deer, the Wolf, the Bear, the Beaver, and all animals and growing things such as the sunflower and red willow. He transformed them into their forms and size as they now appear. And when his anger had cooled down, he had the Tree of Light replaced. Thus, the great change was brought about. It was the beginning of the present world, and all the living things as they are now. Sky-Woman—then falling through the hole of the upper world—was seen by the water animals and water fowl of the great sea. These beings are like man-beings who at once took up the task of making ready a place for her to live. All the larger birds flew up to meet her and with their wings interlaced received her and brought her down. While this was being done, the best divers among the water animals tried to get some earth that had fallen from the Sky World. One animal would swim down but it was so far that its lifeless body floated to the top. Others tried but never came back up. After a while the animals became reluctant to try to get some soil At last, the Muskrat succeeded to bring up a scoop of wet earth from the bottom,. However it was so far and she had exerted herself so that now her lifeless body floated up. The other animals rushed out to help her and discovered the soil on her paws. They took it and they placed on the back of Great Snapping Turtle’s shell, who volunteered to hold up the earth, and who at the time was also a man-being like the rest of them. This wet earth placed on the shell soon expanded in size in all directions, and Sky-Woman was gently placed on it. At once, the Sky-Woman began to walk about this tiny earth, which by her action began to grow in size. She even took handfuls of earth and cast it in all directions, which also caused it to continue to grow, until she could not see the boundary. Thus, this is how North America became known as Turtle Island. http://www.gly.uga.edu/railsback /CS/CSIndex.html 3) We now observe the heliocentric model, where the Sun is the center of the solar system, and the universe expands outward. The heliocentric model is based on the observations of Copernicus and Galileo in the 1500s and 1600s… Nicolaus Copernicus, early16th century, described the first computational system explicitly tied to a heliocentric model In the early17th century AD Galileo Galilei opposed the Roman Catholic Church by his strong support for heliocentrism Andreas Cellarius's illustration of the Copernican system, from the Harmonia Macrocosmica (1660) Unless you lived in India a thousand years earlier. Then you had it right much sooner than Kepler and Copernicus if you knew about this guy. Aryabhata (476–550), in his magnum opus Aryabhatiya (499), propounded a planetary model in which the Earth was taken to be spinning on its axis and the periods of the planets were given with respect to the Sun. He accurately calculated many astronomical constants, such as the periods of the planets, times of the solar and lunar eclipses, and the instantaneous motion of the Moon. The Moon See page 412 Earth’s nearest neighbour in space is the Moon, a natural satellite that most likely formed from a collision between the Earth and a Mars-sized planet during the formation of the solar system. 1. The surface of the Moon, which can be seen clearly with good binoculars, is not protected by an atmosphere like the Earth’s. 2. The surface of the Moon is bombarded with space debris, but also does not suffer from erosional forces like wind and water. 3. Light-coloured surfaces are highlands made of very old rock, while darker surfaces are called mare, and are lower, flat stretches of basalt. Phases of the Moon The Moon, reflecting light from the Sun, appears to change in size and shape as it rotates on its axis and revolves around the Earth. 1) It takes the Moon 29.5 days to make a complete orbit around the Earth. During this time, different portions of the Moon can be viewed as the changing phases. Interestingly, the Moon rotates at almost the same rate as it revolves, meaning that the same surface of the Moon (the “near” side) always faces the Earth. The “far” side is always facing away from the Earth! What we see as the changing phases are actually just different viewing points of the Moon’s “daylight”, time periods when the Sun shines on the Moon. See pages 412 - 413 2) The Moon’s gravity pulls on the oceans on Earth to create tides. Seymour Narrows Surge Narrows Provincial Park 1875: The USS Saranac runs around on the famed Ripple Rock off British Columbia and sinks. The side-wheel steamer sloop of war had previously served with the Union army in the Civil War. In 1979, the William J. Stewart was purchased by the Oak Bay Marine Group of Victoria, renamed the Canadian Princess and refurbished. She was then towed to Ucluelet harbour where she now operates as a floating hotel/salmon fishing resort. Barge at Ripple Rock. This barge was Plan A for a design to destroy Ripple Rock The anchor cables kept snapping, and another route to the rock was needed. The rock needed to be removed. 110 people had died in shipwrecks. http://www.sitnews.us/Kiffer/RippleRock/092305_ripple_ rock.html Two diagrams of Plan B. Did it work? The Earth’s Rotation and Tilt See pages 414 - 415 The time it takes the Earth to revolve around the Sun is 365 days (one year). Every 23 hours and 56 minutes (one day), the Earth rotates on its axis. The tilt of the Earth’s axis gives us seasons. 1) As the Earth rotates, it is tilted at 23.5º from vertical. Depending on what part of the year (orbit around the Sun) and which hemisphere (North or South) you are at, your location will either be tilted toward the Sun (summer) or away (winter). 2) At the equator, the Sun’s energy strikes the Earth the same all year long - in other words, there are no seasons! 3) It is this tilt that also changes the length of the daylight hours each part of the Earth receives. 4) The shortest day (Winter solstice) occurs when we are tilted the most away from the Sun, while the longest day (Summer solstice) occur when the tilt is closest to the Sun. 5) The Spring and Autumnal equinoxes occur when the number of hours of light and dark are equal. Eclipses See pages 416 - 418 An eclipse occurs when a celestial object obscures the normal view of another celestial object. 1) Eclipses frightened ancient peoples, who believed supernatural forces controlled the Sun and Moon. Lunar eclipse panic. Historical artwork of men firing rifles at a lunar eclipse (top right corner) to ward off "evil spirits". The eclipse occurred over Constantinople, Turkey in 1877. 2) Solar eclipses occur when the Moon comes between the Earth and the Sun. Normal daylight disappears, and only small amounts of light make it to the Earth during the few minutes it takes the Moon to pass between the Earth and Sun. The Moon is so small, its full shadow only covers a small portion of the Earth. This area is said to undergo a total eclipse. 3) Lunar eclipses occur when the Earth comes between the Moon and the Sun. The Earth’s shadow causes the full moon to slowly disappear, again taking a few minutes before the shadow passes. Lunar eclipses happen far more frequently than solar eclipses. Constellations and Meteors Ancient civilizations studied the night sky for patterns, and created many myths based on patterns they recognized from their lives. The night sky appears to be flat because of the huge distances between stars, but actually the stars in one constellation can be several thousand, or even millions, of light years apart! In the northern hemisphere, the “pointer stars” of Ursa Major show the location of the North Star, Polaris. The location of Polaris is special, as it does not change position throughout the year, unlike all other stars. See pages 419 - 420 Meteoroids are pieces of space rock floating through space without a specific orbit. When they pass through the Earth’s atmosphere, they begin to heat from friction, and are called shooting stars. If any of the meteoroid reaches the Earth’s surface, it is called a meteorite. Meteor Explodes Over Russia, Leaving Nearly 1,000 Injured, Up to $33M In Damages [PHOTOS/VIDEO] By Fionna Agomuoh | February 15 2013 1:50 PM The meteor that exploded over Chelyabinsk, Russia, early Friday has left the city’s residents in a panic as reports indicate that nearly 1,000 people have now sought medical attention.