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A105 Stars and Galaxies Essential Facts Worksheet due today First News Quiz on Sept. 5 Read units 5, 6, 10 for next week Course Organization Syllabus/Oncourse Text Assigned Reading Lecture Notes Written Assignments Projects Quizzes Observing Office Hours Caty P.: Thursday, 11-noon SW 315 Tara Angle: Tues. 11-noon Weds. 2-3 PM SW 313 How will the class work? News Quiz every Tuesday best 10 of 13 Homework every Thursday best 10 of 13 Project due Nov. 30 4 observing activities (required) Exams Sept. 28 and Nov. 2 Final exam Dec. 12 First News Quiz • In Class QUIZ - Sept. 5 • Astronomy Magazine article on Pluto: • Use the “News Quiz” link on Oncourse to find the article A copy of the textbook is on 2-hour reserve in the Swain West Library (2nd floor of this bldg.) The Sun Today Solar Orbiting Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) Orbits between the Sun and Earth, about a million miles away – a constant view of the Sun Another view from Soho • View of Mercury from the Solar Orbiting Heliospheric Observatory satellite Mercury Regulus Review Scientific Notation Write and work with very large or small numbers without so many digits. Only one digit should be in front of the decimal. The exponent positive when the number is greater than one, negative when the number is less than one. 43,000,000. = 4.3 x 107 0.000043 = 4.3 x 10-5 Use the worksheet with the first homework for practice Powers of 10 Power of 10 billion million thousand hundredth thousandth millionth billionth Notation Prefix Abbr. 109 106 103 10-2 10-3 10-6 10-9 “giga” “mega” “kilo” “centi” “milli” “micro” “nano” G M k c m m n Basic Definitions Mass Earth masses Solar masses Distances Solar Radius (700,000 km) Astronomical Unit (AU) Light year Speed Speed of light (300,000 km per second) What is an Astronomical Unit? • The average distance between the Earth and Sun – 150,000,000 km = 1.5 x 108 km – 93,000,000 miles = 9.3 x 107 miles – 8 LIGHT MINUTES Approximation • Some numbers are know very accurately, but some are NOT • Use an appropriate number of digits • We will use approximate numbers What is a Light Year? The speed of light is 300,000 km/second a light year is a distance! a light year is the distance that light can travel in one year light can travel about 10 trillion km (10,000,000,000,000 km) in one year Basic Definitions Objects • Star • Planet • moon, satellite, asteroid, comet • Nebula Collections • Solar system • Star System • Galaxy • Cluster or group of galaxies • Supercluster • Universe • Observable universe The star Betelgeuse is about 500 light years away from us in the constellation Orion. If this star exploded right now, how long would it be until we found out about it? a) b) c) d) e) almost immediately 8 minutes 10 years 500 years 500 light years Size and Scale know those essential facts! Beyond the Milky Way Using those essential facts! Which of the following diagrams most closely depicts the relative sizes and distance between Earth and the Moon? Modern science relies on observations and experiments! Understanding Science Purpose – to understand the universe well enough to figure out the basic relationships that govern it A process for understanding and predicting What about facts? will it rain tomorrow? what will be on the quiz? what will happen if…? new discoveries better data new theories facts change! The Science of Astronomy Refine the model Learn what is known and what is NOT known… Develop a model to explain or describe what is known Use the model to predict what is not known TEST the predictions But science rarely proceeds in this idealized way… For example: • Sometimes we start by “just looking” then coming up with possible explanations. • Sometimes we follow our intuition rather than a particular line of evidence. Testing the Predictions Experiments and Observations repeatable quantitative well defined fair Statistics evaluate the reliability of observations Examples What time is it? Heads or tails? Laws and Theories (and models) A law is a set of hypotheses that explains WHAT is happening – usually mathematical Kepler’s laws of planetary motion A theory is a well-developed set of hypotheses that explains why many related natural phenomena happen Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity Laws and theories are both based on detailed and repeatable observations and measurements Laws and theories both yield testable predictions What is a scientific theory? • The word theory has a different meaning in science than in everyday life. • In science, a theory is NOT the same as a hypothesis, rather: • A scientific theory must: —Explain a wide variety of observations with a few simple principles, AND —Must be supported by a large, compelling body of evidence. —Must NOT have failed any crucial test of its validity. Is a Theory Right? Can’t ever “prove” a theory right Does the theory make correct predictions? If it doesn’t, then it’s wrong If it’s not tested or testable, it’s NOT a scientific theory Burden of proof is on the person making the claim “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof” (Sagan) Understanding Science Purpose – to understand the universe well enough to figure out the basic relationships that govern it A process for understanding and predicting What about facts? will it rain tomorrow? what will be on the quiz? what will happen if…? new discoveries better data new theories facts change! An Ongoing Process The process of science has been so successful because results are widely shared and evaluated experiments are reproduced and checked value of ideas based on observation and usefulness, not authority Criteria of Science • • • • • • Consistent Observable Natural Predictable Testable Tentative Tentative: Consistent: Observable: Natural: Predictable: Testable: A Science The results event natural is The Predictions subject natural under of caused to repeated must study observations can must revision cause be testable bebe can observed and used be or to or experiment natural explain correction used towhy through evidence make based are or more must how on specific observations new the be or less event available. the or same. happens observations predictions. experiments. Debating Scientific Issues How do we tell who is correct? Majority vs. minority opinions Majority isn’t always right Debate is a poor technique for deciding EVIDENCE and DATA How was the experiment done? Was it repeated by others Is a new theory TESTABLE? How can we distinguish science from non-science? • Defining science can be surprisingly difficult • Science from the Latin scientia, meaning “knowledge” • But not all knowledge comes from science… Warning Signs of Bad Science How is it announced? Is the source reliable? How good is the evidence? is it anecdotal? does it appeal to authority? does it fit what you already know? does it violate widely-accepted laws or theories? is contrary evidence ignored? What kind of reasoning is used? Can the claim be tested? The Baloney Detection Collection Phil Plait's Bad Astronomy: Home Page PLANET-DISSOLVING DUST CLOUD IS HEADED TOWARD EARTH! September 12, 2005, by Yahoo! News • By MIKE FOSTER CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- Scared-stiff astronomers have detected a mysterious mass they've dubbed a "chaos cloud" that dissolves everything in its path, including comets, asteroids, planets and entire stars -- and it's headed directly toward Earth! Discovered April 6 by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, the swirling, 10 million-mile- wide cosmic dust cloud has been likened to an "acid nebula" and is hurtling toward us at close to the speed of light -- making its estimated time of arrival 9:15 a.m. EDT on June 1, 2014. The bad news is that the total annihilation of our solar system is imminent. To avoid widespread panic, NASA has declined to make the alarming discovery public. But Dr. Sherwinski's contacts at the agency's Chandra X-ray Observatory leaked to him striking images of the newly discovered chaos cloud obliterating a large asteroid. “If it continues unchecked, the chaos cloud will eventually reduce our galaxy to the state of absolute chaos that existed before the birth of the universe,” the astrophysicist warned. Assignments for next week: Read units 5, 6, 10 News Quiz on Tues., Sept. 5 Moon worksheet due next Thursday