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http://exo.missouristate.edu/ast/113/ ASTRONOMY 113 Modern Astronomy Lecture: Tuesday, Thursday 9:30am-10:45am – Temple 0002 Tuesday, Thursday 2-3:15pm – Strong 0002 Dr. Peter Plavchan 626-234-1628 [email protected] @PlavchanPeter Office Hours: Tues,Thurs: 11am-1:30pm Materials: Sapling Learning +Tophat + OpenStax Astronomy Introductions http://exo.missouristate.edu You Pleasetakeoutapieceofpaper,orcomposeanemailtomeonyour phone/computer,andanswer: 1. Name&StudentID#(alsoforattendance) 2. Howmanysemesters haveyoucompletedatMSU? 3. Whatdoyouknoworhaveyouheardaboutastronomy? 4. Whatisyourdreamcareer? 5. Whyareyoutakingthisclass? 6. Whatdoyoudreaddoing?Whatdoyoulovedoing? 7. Canyougivemetipsonhowyoulearnbest? 8. Whatwouldyouliketoknowaboutme? 9. Whatwouldyoulikemetoknowaboutyou? 10. WhatcanIteachyou? 11. Whatcanyouteachme? Syllabus & Exams http://exo.missouristate.edu/ast/113/ Theinternetwillbeusedextensivelyin thisclass. Lecturenoteswillbepostedafterclass. Pleaseletmeknowifyouneedhelp accessingtheweb,orifthewebpages arenotworking. OpenStax – Free! https://openstax.org/details/books/astronomy TopHat WewillbeusingtheTopHat(www.tophat.com)classroom responsesysteminclass.YouwillbeabletosubmitanswerstoinclassquestionsusingAppleorAndroidsmartphonesandtablets, laptops,orthroughtextmessage. YoucanvisittheTopHatOverview (https://success.tophat.com/s/article/Student-Top-Hat-Overviewand-Getting-Started-Guide)withintheTopHatSuccessCenter whichoutlineshowyouwillregisterforaTopHataccount,aswell asprovidingabriefoverviewtogetyouupandrunningonthe system. Anemailinvitationwillbesenttoyoubyemail,butifdon’treceive thisemail,youcanregisterbysimplyvisitingourcoursewebsite. TopHat WewillbeusingtheTopHat(www.tophat.com)classroom responsesysteminclass.YouwillbeabletosubmitanswerstoinclassquestionsusingAppleorAndroidsmartphonesandtablets, laptops,orthroughtextmessage. YoucanvisittheTopHatOverview (https://success.tophat.com/s/article/Student-Top-Hat-Overviewand-Getting-Started-Guide)withintheTopHatSuccessCenter whichoutlineshowyouwillregisterforaTopHataccount,aswell asprovidingabriefoverviewtogetyouupandrunningonthe system. Anemailinvitationwillbesenttoyoubyemail,butifdon’treceive thisemail,youcanregisterbysimplyvisitingourcoursewebsite. TopHat MorningSection: http://app.tophat.com/e/193942 Note:ourCourseJoinCodeis 193942 AfternoonSection: http://app.tophat.com/e/386199 Note:ourCourseJoinCodeis 386199 TopHatwillrequireapaidsubscription,andafullbreakdownofallsubscription optionsavailablecanbefoundhere: www.tophat.com/pricing. $24forasemester;$36forayear;$72for5years ShouldyourequireassistancewithTopHatatanytime,duetothefactthatthey requirespecificuserinformationtotroubleshoottheseissues,pleasecontact theirSupportTeamdirectlybywayofemail([email protected]),theinapp supportbutton,orbycalling1-888-663-5491. Homeworks - SaplingDemo- $40 http://saplinglearning.com/ 2 3(maysay1) ClassBlog http://www.blogger.com Youwillbeinvitedtobeanauthorat: http://ast113.blogspot.com Thisiswheregrouppresentationswillbeposted! GroupPresentations • • • • • • • Sign upforagroup presentation. Presentationsare5 minutes each.Youwillbeexpectedtoprepareapresentation withPowerpoint, Prezi,Google Sheetsorsimilar, andaddanaudio narrativewith freesoftwarelikeJing, Screencast,etc.,andpostthefinalcombined video tothe blog asasingle videoonyoutube orwithothervideosoftware(likeiMovie). Fromeachlecturestopic, pickasubjecttogointodetailon.Consultwiththe professor onthetopicscoveredinclasswellbeforeyouprepareyour presentation. Donotpresentabroadoverviewoftheweekslecturematerials. ThelastpartofthepresentationMUSTincludealistofworksreferences (websitesok). Willcounttowards10%offinalgrade. Students intheclasswillpostquestions ascommentsontheblog, andyouare required torespond totheminthetwoweeksfollowing yourpresentation, which willcounttowardsyourgroup projectgrade. Theweekafteryourpresentation, youwillberequired toaskatleastonequestion ontheblog (postedasacomment)forthenextweek’spresenters.Theywillhave torespond toyourquestions. Extra Credit Options Extracreditisavailableandcancontributeup to5-10%.Thepurpose ofextracreditis tofind abalancebetweenyourinterestsandthesubjectmaterialofastronomy. Possibleextracreditoptions mustbeapproved bytheinstructor, butcanincludefor example: • Visit Baker Observatory or one of the on campus public viewing nights (by the PSU bear). Bring back proof - photographic - of your visit. To qualify for the extra credit, please write a one page summary of your visit. The public Baker Observatory night is TBD • Astronomy as art. Many of you are non-science majors, and excel in other areas of specialization - art, writing, music, etc. There is a vast history of art inspired by astronomy. For example, consider constructing a scale model of our galaxy or local group of galaxies. In order to qualify for the extra credit, please create an original work of art, music or writing inspired by astronomy and the material you have learned in class. You may team with up to two other people. ALL EXTRA CREDIT REPORTS ARE DUE BY THE FINAL EXAM, DIRECTLY TO ME. AttendanceEnticement! Thereare31lectures.Ifyouhave2orfewer unexcusedabsences,youwillbe: • Excusedfromthefinal,butonlyifclass attendancestaysabove90%forthesemester • Allowedonesheetofnotesonthefinalexam, butonlyifclassattendancestaysabove80% forthesemester Our Place in the Universe Our Modern View of the Universe A Modern View of the Universe Our goals for learning: • • • • What is our place in the universe? How did we come to be? Can we know what the universe was like in the past? Can we see the entire universe? Astronomy The branch of science dedicated to the study of everything in the Universe that lies above Earth’s atmosphere ScaleofourUniverse • Videos Universe 80 yr ago What is our place in the universe? 400 yr 2500 yr Star A large, glowing ball of mostly hydrogen gas that generates heat and light through nuclear fusion at its center Our star – the Sun Context: “gas” in astronomy usually means H, or H2, but could include other atoms and molecules in the gas state. Planet Mars Neptune A moderately large object that orbits (goes around) a star; it shines by reflected light. Planets may be rocky, icy, or gaseous in composition. Moon (or satellite) An object that orbits a planet. Ganymede (orbits Jupiter) Asteroid A relatively small and rocky object which orbits a star. Comet A relatively small and icy object that orbits a star. Solar (Star) System A star and all the material that orbits it, including its planets and moons. Note: planets and orbits are not to scale; planets are tiny compared to their orbits. Nebula An interstellar cloud of hydrogen gas and/or tiny smoke-like particles called “dust” Galaxy A great island of stars in space, all held together by gravity and orbiting a common center M31, The Great Galaxy in Andromeda Universe The sum total of all matter and energy; that is, everything within and between all galaxies How can we know what the universe was like in the past? • The key: light travels at a finite speed – 300,000 km/s, 186,000 miles/s, 670 million miles per hour • You can circle Earth 8 times in 1 second • More on the Speed of Light when we discuss Relativity Destination Light travel time Moon 1 second Sun 8 minutes Sirius 8 years Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million years Thus,weseeobjectsastheywereinthepast: Thefartherawaywelookindistance, thefurtherbackwelookintime. Light-year • • • • • The distance light can travel in one year. About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles). A light-year is NOT a unit of time! Can also talk about light-seconds. At great distances we see objects as they were when the universe was much younger. What have we learned? • Whatisourphysicalplaceintheuniverse? – EarthispartoftheSolarSystem,whichisintheMilkyWaygalaxy,whichisa member oftheLocalGroup ofgalaxiesintheLocalSupercluster • How can we know that the universe was like in the past? – When we look to great distances we are seeing events that happened long ago because light travels at a finite speed • Can we see the entire universe? – No, the observable portion of the universe is about 13.7 billion light-years in radius because the universe is about 13.7 billion years old. (We may round this number to 14 billion for convenience but the best modern measurements give 13.7 billion years since the time from the Big Bang.) The Scale of the Universe Our goals for learning: • • • • • How big is Earth compared to our solar system? How far away are the stars? How big is the Milky Way Galaxy? How big is the universe? How do our lifetimes compare to the age of the universe? It is very important to grasp the huge distances and enormous time spans that we deal with in astronomy. The way to do this is to create a SCALE MODEL. The easy questions • How far away are the Sun and Moon? • The Moon is 384 million m from Earth (~250,000 miles). 11 • The Sun is 1.5x10 m from Earth (150 billion m, or ~93 million miles). This distance is called 1 astronomical unit (AU). How big is Earth compared to our Solar System? Let’s reduce the size of the solar system by a factor of 10 billion; the Sun is now the size of a large grapefruit (14 cm diameter or about 5.6 inches; 2.54 cm = 1 inch). How big is Earth on this scale? A. B. C. D. an atom a ball point a marble a golf ball Radius of the Sun = 700,000 km Diameter Sun = 1.4 x 1011 cm Divide by 1010 to get 14 cm Let’s reduce the size of the solar system by a factor of 10 billion; the Sun is now the size of a large grapefruit (14 cm diameter). How big is Earth on this scale? A. B. C. D. an atom a ball point a marble a golf ball How far apart would our model Sun and Earth be on this scale? The scale of the solar system • On a 1-to-10 billion scale: – Sun is size of a large grapefruit (14 cm) – Earth is size of a ball point, 15 meters away – 15 meters is about 107 grapefruits – Which means in the real solar system you could fit about107 Suns into the Earth –Sun distance How far away are the stars? On our 1-to-10 billion scale, it’s just a few minutes walk to Pluto. How far would you have to walk to reach the nearest star to the Sun - Alpha Centauri? A. B. C. D. 1 mile 10 miles 100 miles the distance across the U.S. (2500 miles) How far away are the stars? On our 1-to-10 billion scale, it’s just a few minutes walk to Pluto. How far would you have to walk to reach the nearest star to the Sun - Alpha Centauri? A. B. C. D. 1 mile 10 miles 100 miles the distance across the U.S. (2500 miles) Answer: D,thedistanceacrosstheU.S. Thought Question Suppose you tried to count the more than 100 billion (1011) stars in our galaxy, at a rate of one per second… How long would it take you? A. B. C. D. a few weeks a few months a few years a few thousand years Suppose you tried to count the more than 100 billion stars in our galaxy, at a rate of one per second… How long would it take you? A. B. C. D. a few weeks a few months a few years a few thousand years (100 billion seconds is nearly 3,200 years. Why? Because there are about 30 million seconds in a year, so 1011/3x107 = 0.33x104 = 3.3 x 103) How big is the (observable) Universe? • The Milky Way is one of about 100 billion galaxies. • (1011 stars/galaxy) x (1011 galaxies) = 1022 stars As many stars as grains of (dry) sand on all Earth’s beaches… How do human lifetimes compare to the AGE of the Universe? • The Cosmic Calendar: a scale on which we compress the history of the universe into 1 year! How do human lifetimes compare to the AGE of the Universe? • The Cosmic Calendar: a scale on which we compress the history of the universe into 1 year. 1 day represents about 40 million years; 1 second represents about 440 years. What have we learned? • How big is Earth compared to our solar system? – The distances between planets are huge compared to their sizes—on a scale of 1-to-10 billion, Earth is the size of a ball point and the Sun is 15 meters away • How far away are the stars? – On the same scale, the stars are thousands of km away • How big is the Milky Way galaxy? – It would take more than 3,000 years to count the stars in the Milky Way Galaxy at a rate of one per second, and they are spread across 100,000 light-years What have we learned? • How big is the universe? – The observable universe is almost 14 billion light-years in radius and contains over 100 billion galaxies with a total number of stars comparable to the number of grains of sand on all of Earth’s beaches • How do our lifetimes compare to the age of the universe? – On a cosmic calendar that compresses the history of the Universe into one year, human civilization is just a few seconds old, and a human lifetime is a fraction of a second Spaceship Earth Our goals for learning: • • • • How is Earth moving in our solar system? How is our solar system moving in the Galaxy? How do galaxies move within the Universe? Are we ever sitting still? How is Earth moving in our solar system? • Contrary to our perception, we are not “sitting still.” • We are moving with the Earth in several ways, and at surprisingly fast speeds… The Earth rotates around its axis once every day. The spin rate at the Equator is ~1000 mph, twice as fast as a commercial airliner. Earth orbits the Sun (revolves) once every year: • at an average distance of 1 AU ≈ 150 million km • with Earth’s axis tilted by 23.5º (pointing to Polaris) • and rotating in the same direction it orbits, counterclockwise as viewed from above the North Pole. Our Sun moves relative to the other stars in the local Solar neighborhood… • typical relative speeds of more than 70,000 km/hr • but stars are so far away that we cannot easily notice their motion … And orbits the center of the Milky Way galaxy every 230 million years. More detailed study of the Milky Way’s rotation reveals one of the greatest mysteries in modern astronomy Most of Milky Way’s light comes from disk and bulge … …. but most of the mass is in a huge and DARK halo. How do galaxies move within the universe? The Universe is expanding. In the 1920s Edwin Hubble discovered that galaxies are carried along with the expansion of the Universe. But how did Hubble figure out that the universe is expanding? Hubble discovered that: • All galaxies outside our Local Group are moving away from us. • The more distant the galaxy, the faster it is racing away. Conclusion: We live in an expanding universe. What have we learned? • How is Earth moving in our solar system? – It rotates on its axis once a day and orbits the Sun at a distance of 1 A.U. = 150 million km • How is our solar system moving in the Milky Way galaxy? – Stars in the Local Neighborhood move randomly relative to one another and orbit the center of the Milky Way in about 230 million years What have we learned? • How do galaxies move within the universe? – All galaxies beyond the Local Group are moving away from us with expansion of the Universe: the more distant they are, the faster they’re moving • Are we ever sitting still? – No! OKAY, NOW WE HAVE A GOOD OVERALL PERSPECTIVE. NEXT WE NEED SOME MORE DETAILS DiscoveringtheUniversefor Yourself PatternsintheNightSky Ourgoalsforlearning: • WhatdoestheuniverselooklikefromEarth? • Whydostarsriseandset? • Whydotheconstellationsweseedependon latitudeandtimeofyear? TheCelestialSphere Starsatdifferent distancesallappear tolieontheCelestial Sphere. EclipticisSun’s apparentpath throughthecelestial sphere. TheCelestialSphere The88official constellations coverthecelestial sphere. Itisimportanttorealizethat thesenamedpatternshaveno relationtolifeonEarthand thestarsinagiven constellationareoftennot connectedwitheachother physically. TheMilkyWay FishEyelensview Abandoffaintlight makingacircle aroundthecelestial sphere. Whatisit? Ourviewintothe “plane” ofour spiralgalaxy. TheLocalSky Altitude (above horizon) Azimuth (along horizon) specifies location Zenith: The point directly overhead Horizon: All points 90° away from zenith Meridian: Line passing through zenith from N to S points Wemeasuretheskyusingangles • Fullcircle=360º • 1º=60¢ (arcminutes) • 1¢ =60² (arcseconds) AngularSize 360 degrees angular size = physical size × 2π × distance € Anobject’sangular sizeappearssmaller ifitisfartheraway Aside:Wecandefine anewunitofangular measurecalledaradian suchthat 1radian=360/2π =57.3degrees Whydostarsriseandset? Earth rotates west to east, so stars appear to circle from east to west. Theskyvarieswithlatitudebutnot longitude Theskyvaries asEarthorbitstheSun • AstheEarthorbitstheSun,theSunappearstomoveeastward alongtheecliptic. • Atmidnight,thestarsonourmeridianareoppositetheSunin thesky. TheReasonforSeasons Ourgoalsforlearning: • Whatcausestheseasons? • Howdowemarktheprogressionofthe seasons? • HowdoestheorientationofEarth’saxis changewithtime? Whatcausestheseasons? Seasonsdepend onhowEarth’saxisaffectsthedirectnessofsunlight Axistiltchangesdirectnessofsunlight duringtheyear Sun’saltitudeintheskyalsochanges withseasons Sun’sposition atnoon insummer: higher altitudemeansmoredirect sunlight. Sun’sposition atnoon inwinter: loweraltitudemeanslessdirect sunlight. Howdowemarktheprogressionoftheseasons? • Wedefinefour specialpoints: summer solstice wintersolstice spring (vernal) equinox fall(autumnal) equinox Wecanrecognizesolsticesandequinoxesby Sun’spathacrosssky Summersolstice: Highestpath, riseandsetatmostextreme north ofdueeast. Wintersolstice: Lowestpath,rise andsetatmostextremesouth of dueeast. Equinoxes: Sunrisesprecisely dueeastandsetspreciselydue west. HowdoestheorientationofEarth’saxis changewithtime? •Althoughtheaxisseemsfixedonhumantime scales,itactuallyprecesses overabout26,000years. Þ Polariswon’talwaysbetheNorthStar. Þ Positionsofequinoxesshiftaroundorbit;e.g., springequinox,onceinAries,isnowinPisces! Earth’saxis precesseslikethe axisof aspinning top TheMoon, OurConstantCompanion Ourgoalsforlearning: • WhydoweseephasesoftheMoon? • Whatcauseseclipses? PhasesofMoon • HalfofMoonis illuminatedbySun andhalfisdark. • NOTcausedby Earth’sshadow! • Weseeachanging combinationof thebrightand darkfacesas Moonorbits WeseeonlyonesideofMoon Synchronousrotation: theMoonrotates exactlyoncewitheach orbitof~28days Thatiswhyonlyone sideisvisiblefromEarth Whatcauseseclipses? • TheEarthandMooncastshadows. • Wheneitherpassesthroughtheother’sshadow, wehaveaneclipse. Whencaneclipsesoccur? • Lunareclipses canoccuronly atfullmoon. • Lunareclipses canbe penumbral, partial,ortotal. • August21st, 2017 Whencaneclipsesoccur? • Solareclipses can occuronlyatnew moon. • Solareclipsescan bepartial,total, or annular. Whydon’twehaveaneclipseateverynewandfullmoon? – TheMoon’sorbitistilted5° toeclipticplane… – Sowehaveabouttwoeclipseseasons eachyear,withalunar eclipseatnewmoonandsolareclipseatfullmoon. LengthofaDay • Siderealday: Earthrotatesonce onitsaxisrelative tothedistantstars in23hrs,56min, and4.07sec. LengthofaDay • Solarday:TheSun makesonecircuit aroundtheskyin 24hours(by definition) Whyarethetwodifferent? • Solardayislongerthanasiderealdaybyabout1/360 becauseEarthmoves about1° inorbiteachday LengthofaMonth • Siderealmonth:Moon orbitsEarthin27.3days. • Earth&Moontravel30° aroundSunduringthat time(30°/360° =1/12) • Synodicmonth:Acycle oflunarphases; thereforetakesabout 29.5days,1/12longer thanasiderealmonth • Synodicmeans“meeting” LengthofaYear • Siderealyear:Timefor Earthtocompleteone orbitofSun • Tropicalyear:Timefor Earthtocompleteone cycleofseasons • Tropicalyearisabout20 minutes(1/26,000) shorterthanasidereal yearbecauseofEarth’s precession. Howdowetellthetimeofday? • Apparentsolartime dependsonthe positionoftheSunin thelocalsky • Asundialgives apparentsolartime UniversalTime • Universaltime(UT) isdefinedtobethemean solartimeat0° longitude. • ItisalsoknownasGreenwichMeanTime(GMT) because0° longitudeisdefinedtopassthrough Greenwich,England • Itisthestandardtimeusedforastronomyand navigationaroundtheworld StandardTime&TimeZones • Rapidtraintravelrequiredtimetobestandardized intotimezones(timenolongerlocal) Whenandwhydowehaveleap years? • Thelengthofatropicalyearisabout365.25days. • Inordertokeepthecalendaryearsynchronized withtheseasons,wemustaddonedayeveryfour years(February29). • Forprecisesynchronization,yearsdivisibleby100 (e.g.,1900)arenotleapyearsunlesstheyare divisibleby400(e.g.,2000). CelestialCoordinates • Rightascension:Likelongitudeoncelestialsphere (measuredinhourswithrespecttospringequinox). • Declination:Likelatitudeoncelestialsphere(measured indegreesabovecelestialequator) TimebytheStars • Siderealtime isequaltorightascensionthatis passingthroughthemeridian • Thus,thelocalsiderialtimeis0h0m whenthe springequinoxpassesthroughthemeridian • Astar’shourangle isthetimesinceitlast passedthroughthemeridian LocalSiderealTime=RA+HourAngle Howcanyoudetermineyourlatitude? • • Latitudeequalsaltitudeofcelestialpole Altitudeanddeclinationofstarcrossing meridianalsogiveslatitude. • YoucandetermineSun’sdeclination fromthedayoftheyear • MeasuringtheSun’saltitudewhenit crossesmeridiancantellyoulatitude Howcanyoudetermineyour longitude? • Inordertodetermineyourlongitude fromthesky,youneedtoknowtimeof daybecauseofEarth’srotation • Youalsoneedtoknowdayofyear becauseofEarth’sorbit • Accuratemeasurementoflongitude requiresanaccurateclock. GPSNavigation • TheGlobalPositioningSystem(GPS)usesasetof satellitesinEarthorbitasartificialstars • GPSdevicesuseradiosignalstodetermineyour positionrelativetothosesatellites • GPSsatellitescorrectforGeneralRelativity! • Ok,ontotheterrestrialplanets! PlanetsKnowninAncientTimes • Mercury – difficulttosee;alwaysclose toSuninsky • Venus – very brightwhenvisible; morningorevening“star” • Mars – noticeablyred • Jupiter – verybright • Saturn – moderatelybright Whatwasoncesomysterious aboutplanetarymotioninoursky? • Planetsusuallymoveslightlyeastward fromnightto nightrelativetothestars. • Butsometimestheygowestward relativetothestars forafewweeks:apparentretrogrademotion Weseeapparentretrogrademotionwhen wepassbyaplanetinitsorbit. ExplainingApparentRetrograde Motion • Easyforus toexplain:occurswhenwe“lap” anotherplanet(orwhenMercuryorVenus lapsus) • Butverydifficulttoexplainifyouthinkthat Earthisthecenteroftheuniverse! • Infact,ancientsconsideredbutrejectedthe correctexplanation WhydidtheancientGreeksrejectthereal explanationforplanetarymotion? Theirinabilitytoobservestellarparallax wasamajor factor. p tanp=1AU/d(AU) Forsmallangles: d p =1/d Iftheanglep=1second ofarcthendisdefinedas 1parsec(=206265 AU). 1AU Nottoscale TheGreeksknewthatthelackofobservable parallaxcouldmeanoneoftwothings: 1. Starsaresofarawaythatstellarparallaxis toosmalltonoticewiththenakedeye 2. EarthdoesnotorbittheSun;theEarthisthe centeroftheuniverse WithrareexceptionssuchasAristarchus,theGreeks rejectedthecorrectexplanation(1)becausethey didnotthinkthestarscouldbethat faraway Thussettingthestageforthelong,historicalshowdown between Earth-centered andSun-centered systems.