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Chapter 2: The Sky Common Units we will use Common Conversions Standard Prefixes Review Notation • • • • • • • 1,000,000,000 = 109 1,000,000 = 106 1,000 = 103 1 = 100 .001 = 10-3 .000001 = 10-6 .000000001 = 10-9 Celestial Sphere • When we look at the sky, we see stars but have no actual clue as to how far away they are. Therefore it is as if they were all on a sphere out a long distance from us. This conceptual device is known as the celestial sphere. • Distances between objects then are measured in angles since all objects appear to be at the same distance. • This is an example of the use of a model. Celestial Sphere Attributes • • • • North and South Celestial Poles. Zenith (point directly overhead. Nadir (point directly below – through earth) Celestial equator (extension of plane through the earth at equator and extended to sphere. The Celestial Sphere • • • • Zenith = Point on the celestial sphere directly overhead Nadir = Point on the c. s. directly underneath (not visible!) Celestial equator = projection of the Earth’s equator onto the c. s. North celestial pole = projection of the Earth’s north pole onto the c.s. Discussion • If the Earth did not rotate about its axis, could we define a celestial sphere as we do now? • Could we even define a set of poles and equator? • What is the difference between a constellation and an asterism? Examples? • What does the word apparent mean in the context of “apparent visual magnitude”? More discussion • Where on Earth can you see both the North and South Celestial poles simultaneously? Orion Constellations Betelgeuse Rigel Stars are named by a Greek letter (a, b, g) according to their relative brightness within a given constellation + the possessive form of the name of the constellation: Betelgeuse = a Orionis, Rigel = b Orionis The Magnitude Scale First introduced by Hipparchus (160 - 127 B.C.) • Brightest stars: ~1st magnitude • Faintest stars (unaided eye): 6th magnitude More quantitative: Now that we have instrumentation: • 1st mag. stars appear 100 times brighter than 6th mag. stars • 1 mag. difference gives a factor of 2.512 in apparent brightness (larger magnitude => fainter object!) Where did 2.512 come from? • There are 5 magnitudes difference between magnitude 1 and magnitude 6 stars. • The magnitude 1 star is defined to be 100 times as bright as a magnitude 6 star. • The steps are equal brightness factor. • Therefore each one of the steps is equal to (100) 1/5 = 2.512 (fifth root of 100) Example: Magn. Diff. Intensity Ratio 1 2.512 2 2.512*2.512 = (2.512)2 = 6.31 … … 5 (2.512)5 = 100 For a magnitude difference of 0.41 – 0.14 = 0.27, we find an intensity ratio of (2.512)0.27 = 1.28 Betelgeuse Magnitude = 0.41 mag Rigel Magnitude = 0.14 mag The Magnitude Scale The magnitude scale system can be extended towards negative numbers (very bright) and numbers > 6 (faint objects): Sirius (brightest star in the sky): mv = -1.42 Full moon: mv = -12.5 Sun: mv = -26.5 More standard values The Celestial Sphere On the sky, we measure distances between objects as angles: The full circle has 360o (degrees) 1o has 60’ (arc minutes) 1’ has 60” (arc seconds).