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Observation Observation • One of the best-known objects on the sky is the Big Dipper, part of the constellation Ursa Major (the Great Bear). • It can be seen around the North Star on a nightly stroll. Observation Observation • The form of the asterism remains the same throughout the day and the year. Observation Exploration • Why does the position of the stars remain the same, although the position of the Earth in relation to them changes throughout the year? The positions of trees in a forest change, too, when they are observed from different angles – in proportion to the vicinity of the trees to each other and to the extent the angle is changed. Exploration Exploration • The answer is hard to find in results obtained by simple tools of observation. That is why objects on the sky have historically been divided into four categories: the Sun, the Moon, the planets, all of which move in relation to other objects, and the fixed stars, which stay still in relation to each other. Concept introduction • There are at least two logical explanations for fixed stars. 1.The position of the stars does not change in relation to each other. This conception was the prevalent one for a very long time. It was usually thought that the stars were fixed in the celestial sphere. Concept introduction Concept introduction 2. The stars are so far away that the change of their positions in relation to the Earth is very hard to notice in the extremes of the Earth’s orbit. What is more, for a long time it was thought that the Earth is the center of the universe, so this way of checking the intervariance of the stars’ position wasn’t even thought of before the structure of the Solar System and Earth’s position in it was found out in the 16th century. Concept introduction • This phenomenon, known as parallax, is so imperceptible even for the nearest fixed stars that it wasn’t until 1836 that it was observed with precise optical instruments. The annual parallax of the star closest to the Earth is equivalent to the aberration of 5 mm in a journey of 1 km. The measurements revealing this phenomenon were first made by Friedrich Bessel. Concept introduction Generalization of the concept • There is a model in the Science Centrum Heureka with the positions of the stars of the Big Dipper shown in the scale of 1:60 000 000 000 000 000. • 1 centimetre in Heureka is equivalent to 600 000 millions kilometres. • Thus we can observe what the asterism would look like from some other angle than the Earth. Generalization of the concept Generalization of the concept • By moving around in Heureka we can observe the Big Dipper from different directions, and notice that it doesn’t always retain its familiar form. • Here is a video about watching the Big Dipper in Heureka