Slide - Fort Lewis College

Download Report

Transcript Slide - Fort Lewis College

Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
1
Introduction
The Celestial Sphere
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
2
Outline
•
•
•
•
•
•
Lab notes
Review
Observing the Sun
Unit Conversions
RA/Dec
SETI
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
3
Notes
• Homework 1 due on Friday.
• Sun lab(s) due in “box”:
• Noontime Sun by next Friday 5:00
• Sunset part1 by next Friday 5:00
• Lab Resources Part B next week.
• Binocular lab next Mon,Thur (?)
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
4
Observing the Sun
• http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/SEhelp/safety2.html
• http://www.mreclipse.com/Special/filters.html
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
5
Measuring Angles
•
•
•
•
•
A fist at arms length is about 10°
Fingers spread wide are about 15°
Three fingers together are about 5°
One pinky width is about 1°
The full moon is almost exactly 0.5°
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
6
Dimensional Analysis
• Dimensional Analysis is VERY helpful in problem
solving.
• Check your equations with specific units.
• Velocity example - how do distance (x), time (t),
and Velocity (V) relate?
V = x/t
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
7
Dimensional Analysis Example Which equation is correct?
A) velocity = distance * time
B) time = velocity * distance
C) time = distance / velocity
D) time = velocity / distance
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
8
Which equation is correct?
A) velocity = distance * time
B) time = velocity * distance
C) time = distance / velocity
D) time = velocity / distance
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
9
Velocity Exercise
• The laser travels 9.6m across the
room. How many seconds does it
take?
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
10
Light Travel Time Across the Room
(9.6 meters)
A) 2.9x106 sec
B) 2.9x10-6 sec
C) 3.2x10-5 sec
D) 3.2x10-8 sec
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
11
Light Travel Time Across the Room
(9.6 meters)
A) 2.9x106 sec
B) 2.9x10-6 sec
C) 3.2x10-5 sec
D) 3.2x10-8 sec
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
12
Conversion Factors
• Conversion factors are equivalence
statements expressed in the form of
ratios
• Example: 1 in = 2.54 cm
• Conversion factors let you express a
quantity in terms of other units without
changing its physical value.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
13
Conversion Exercise
• Convert 0.61 m to inches.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
14
How many inches is 0.61m?
A) 0.24 inches
B) 1.56 inches
C) 24.0 inches
D) 156 inches
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
15
How many inches is 0.61m?
A) 0.24 inches
B) 1.56 inches
C) 24.0 inches
D) 156 inches
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
16
How many light years was that 9.6 m?
A) 9.1x1012 ly
B) 1.0x10-15 ly
C) 2.9x109 ly
D) 1.1x10-14 ly
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
17
How many light years was that 9.6 m?
A) 9.1x1012 ly
B) 1.0x10-15 ly
C) 2.9x109 ly
D) 1.1x10-14 ly
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
18
Significant Figures
• Example
• 4.56 has three significant figures.
• 4.56x106 also has three significant figures.
• .000456 also has three significant figures.
• A calculation output can not have more significant
figures than the input.
• If an equation has a whole number (for example 2) it is
considered to be 2.00000 etc.
• Calculation hint - it is often best to keep all available
figures until the last step, and then round your answer.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
19
Scientific Notation
• What does 1.0x106 mean?
• Positive exponents mean shift the decimal place to the
right (bigger numbers).
• Negative exponents mean shift the decimal place to the
left (smaller numbers).
• Usually only have one digit to the left of the decimal.
• Most calculators have a single key to add the (x10^)
term. (EXP, EE)
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
20
Measurements
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
Multiple
109
Prefix
giga-
106
103
10-2
10-3
10-6
10-9
megakilocentimillimicronano21
Algebra Hint
• The following relationship will be
useful to remember:
A
B
C
D
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
A*D
=
B*C
22
Introduction
The Celestial Sphere
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
23
Oslo, Norway is 60°N latitude. What
declination line passes through the zenith in
Oslo?
A)
B)
C)
D)
0°
30° N
60° N
90° N
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
24
Oslo, Norway is 60°N latitude. What
declination line passes through the zenith in
Oslo?
A)
B)
C)
D)
0°
30° N
60° N
90° N
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
25
Astronomy Picture of the Day
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080922.html
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
26
The Celestial Sphere
• Locations to note
• North celestial pole
• Celestial equator
• Declination corresponds to latitude.
• Right ascension corresponds to
longitude.
• RA and Dec are “fixed” onto the
celestial sphere.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
27
Figure P.4
Right Ascension and Declination
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
28
Declination
• Declination corresponds to latitude.
• Units are degrees (and minutes and
seconds).
• Durango’s latitude is +37.275° N.
The declination line passing directly
overhead is also +37.275° N.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
29
Oslo, Norway is 60°N latitude. How high does
the star Polaris appear?
A)
B)
C)
D)
0°
30° N
60° N
90° N
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
30
Oslo, Norway is 60°N latitude. How high does
the star Polaris appear?
A)
B)
C)
D)
0°
30° N
60° N
90° N
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
31
What is the southernmost declination line
visible from Oslo (at 60° N)?
A)
B)
C)
D)
60° N
30° N
0°
30° S
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
32
What is the southernmost declination line
visible from Oslo (at 60° N)?
A)
B)
C)
D)
60° N
30° N
0°
30° S
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
33
Standing on the equator, you can see…
A) the celestial equator directly overhead
B) entire celestial sphere during a 24 hour day
C) both celestial poles on your horizon
D) all of the above
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
34
Standing on the equator, you can see…
A) the celestial equator directly overhead
B) entire celestial sphere during a 24 hour day
C) both celestial poles on your horizon
D) all of the above
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
35
Durango’s latitude is 37.275° N. What
is the southernmost declination line
visible?
A) 0°
B) 37.275° S
C) 52.725° S
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
36
Durango’s latitude is 37.275° N. What
is the southernmost declination line
visible?
A) 0°
B) 37.275° S
C) 52.725° S
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
37
Right Ascension
• Right Ascension corresponds to longitude.
• Units are Hours (and minutes and
seconds).
• The trick (as with longitude) is to decide on
the zero point.
• Longitude zero is at the observatory in
Greenwich England.
• RA zero is where the sun crosses the
celestial equator going north.
• RA is always moving w.r.t. longitude.
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
38
PRS question
• How long is the following exposure?
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
39
Figure P.3
The Northern Sky
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
40
How long is the exposure? Enter the
correct number of hours.
A) 4
B) 5
C) 6
D) 7
E) 8
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
41
Three Minute Paper
• Write 1-3 sentences.
• What was the most important thing
you learned today?
• What questions do you still have
about today’s topics?
Charles Hakes
Fort Lewis College
42