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Title: Introduction to Constellations


1
Introduction to Constellations
  • Backyard Astronomy

2
(No Transcript)
3
Motion of planets and stars
  • http//www.lightandmatter.com/area2planet.shtml

4
Zodiacs
  • Aries Pisces
  • Aquarius Sagittarius
  • Cancer Taurus
  • Capricornus Virgo
  • Gemini Scorpius
  • Leo
  • Libra

5
Circumpolar Constellations
  1. Ursa Major
  2. Ursa Minor
  3. Cepheus
  4. Andromeda
  5. Draco
  6. Cassiopeia

6
Warm Up
  1. What is the name of the main character?
  2. What is the location where the movie takes place?
  3. What historical event occured that changed the
    lives of the main characters?
  4. What happens to the schools science teacher?
  5. What is the result of the national science fair?
  6. What ultimately happens to the main character?

7
Warm Up
  1. According to the Elegant Universe, what did
    Newton say about the force of gravity.
  2. How did Newton describe gravity?
  3. According to the Elegant Universe, what did
    Einstein say about the force of gravity?
  4. How did Einstein describe gravity?
  5. What do most modern physicists believe to be the
    nature of matter?
  6. What is quantum mechanics say about subatomic
    particles?

8
Warm Up
  1. What is a constellation?
  2. What is a circumpolar constellation?
  3. Around what point do all the stars rotate?
  4. How do you locate Polaris?
  5. Name four things that make stargazing more
    comfortable?

9
The Night Sky
  • People have watched the night skies for millions
    of years. Some just out of curiosity. Some out
    of boredom. Some looking for portents, either
    good or bad.
  • However, the one thing that they all saw was
    that there was a pattern in the way the stars
    revolved around the heavens.

10
The Night Sky
  • You need only to look up for a few hours to
    begin to see these same patterns yourself. Like
    the Sun, stars rise in the east and set later in
    the west. Planets follow this same pattern
    unless they are in a retrograde period, though
    these periods are not especially common.

11
What You Need for Stargazing
  • You dont really need anything, but some things
    are handy, like
  • Complete darkness-Dont laugh, its not that
    easy to find. Rural area are slowly being
    urbanized, bringing their lights with them.
    Light pollution is a real problem.

12
What You Need Darkness
  • Darkness means getting away from the city when
    you can. Crowders Mountain, South Mountain, The
    Blue Ridge Parkway and several rural spots
    outside Matthews and Huntersville are still
    fairly dark. I recommend the Parkway in the Fall
    and Winter. The quantity of stars you see will
    take your breath.

13
What You Need Darkness
  • Darkness means keeping up with the phases of the
    moon, too. When the moon is waxing past half
    full, its quite hard to see.

14
What You Need Star Map/ Planesphere
  • It is handy to have a star map to help get you
    oriented. We will make one in here, so you get
    the idea, but laminated ones are nice and they
    are protected from dew and spilled drinks when
    your tripping around in the dark. Star Maps are
    also called planespheres. You can find them in
    hobby stores for a couple of bucks.

15
What You Need Flashlight
  • Well, you dont have to trip around in the dark.
    You can bring a flashlight! Theres one problem
    here though. It takes your eyes about 20-30
    minutes to get acclimated to the dark. Your
    pupils arent fully dilated until then, so a
    regular flashlight will never do. Your eyes will
    have to get acclimated every time you turn it on.
    To prevent this, your flashlight should have a
    red gel to protect your eyes. Red saran wrap
    with a rubber band works great . It works great
    for catching night crawlers too.

16
What You Need Binoculars
  • Binoculars dont have to be very strong to give
    you a much better, brighter view of the stars.
    Binoculars have the ability to gather light even
    at low magnifications. Even 4X ones will make a
    marked difference in the detail you can see.

17
What You Need Telescope?
  • No, you dont need a telescope, though they are
    fun. Telescopes require a certain amount of
    sophistication to set up and operate and they are
    not for everybody. There are some nice models
    available at affordable costs. The optics are
    available alone also if you want to build your
    own.

18
What You Need Warm Clothes
  • Youll be happy to know that the best time to
    look at stars is the least popular time of year
    to be outside, the winter. So, dress warmly.
    Remember that the nights are longer in the winter.

19
Leonid An Aside
  • I remember the 2002 Leonid meteor shower very
    well. The Leonid comes in November and that year
    it was really cold. I got up about 330 a.m.
    (yes, thats right) to have a look. It was
    incredible. Meteors were streaking across the
    sky every few seconds. Sometimes several at
    once. It was the best Leonid for over 35 years.
    I even woke my wife up to join me. We sat on the
    deck in sleeping bags and drank coffee. Its one
    of my happiest memories. Another Leonid of that
    magnitude is not expected again until 2098 or
    2131.

20
Finding Polaris and Why
  • Polaris (or the North Star) is where you want to
    start. Because Polaris is aligned with the
    Earths axis of rotation, it remains fixed, with
    all the other planets and stars appearing to move
    around it. It is the one star that remains fixed
    at all times.

21
Getting Oriented or Where the Hell is North?
  • Yea, you have to find north. Its where Polaris
    (or North Star) is. Youll need a compass or
    major highway to orient yourself. I-77 is good
    because it runs due north and south. You can
    make a compass with a needle, magnet and a cup of
    water. Just rub the needle across a magnet (see
    your refrigerator) or leave it attached
    overnight. Then rub the needle across your nose
    and place it in the cup very gently. It will
    float. It will turn north.

22
Figuring the Angle
  • Once youve decided where north is (right
    ascension), face in that direction. Next you
    have to figure declination (up and down). Extend
    your arm and make a fist. Put the bottom of your
    fist on the horizon. The top of your fist is
    about 80 higher. Place your other fist on top of
    your first. Youve now measured 160 up from the
    horizon. Polaris is located between 250 and 300
    above the horizon. Polaris is faint, so look
    carefully!

23
Another Way to Find Polaris
  • If all that compass making and angle crap is
    just too complicated, there is another way to
    find Polaris. Find the Big Dipper (not a
    constellation). Most people recognize this
    asterism. The two stars that form the front of
    the cup of the dipper define a line pointing to
    Polaris.

24
The Big Dipper
25
The Stars Circling Polaris
26
Now That Youre Oriented, Its Time to Explore.
  • Youre pointed in the right direction, but what
    now. Stars and constellations move constantly
    and seasonally. What am I looking for? What you
    need is a star map.

27
Now That Youre Oriented, Its Time to Explore.
  • You also have access to software that provides
    you with the same information.

28
Circumpolar Constellations
  • Circum means around (i.e. circumcise,
    circumnavigate, circumference). Polar refers to
    the North Pole. Therefore, circumpolar
    constellations circle Polaris. This makes the 5
    circumpolar constellations visible throughout the
    entire year. Lets look at each!

29
Ursa Minor
  • Once youve located Polaris, youre ready to
    identify your first constellation. Polaris is
    the last star located in the handle of the
    asterism, the Little Dipper. The name of the
    constellation that contains the Little Dipper is
    Ursa Minor or Little Bear.

30
Ursa Minor
  • Ursa Minor, also called the Little Dipper, is a
    circumpolar constellation. This means it never
    sets in the northern sky. The true figure
    represented by the stars is the Little Bear.
  • There are several mythological stories behind
    these famous constellations. In Greek myth, Zeus
    was having an affair with the lovely Callisto.
    When his wife, Hera, found out she changed
    Callisto into a bear. Zeus put the bear in the
    sky along with the Little Bear, which is
    Callisto's son, Arcas.

31
Ursa Minor
32
Ursa Major
  • Ursa Major is probably the most famous
    constellation, with the exception of Orion. Also
    known as the Great Bear, it has a companion
    called Ursa Minor, or Little Bear. Everyone
    living in the Northern Hemisphere has probably
    spotted the easily recognized portion of this
    huge constellation. The body and tail of the bear
    make up what is known as the Big Dipper.
  • Several different cultures saw a big bear in the
    sky. The ancient Greeks had a few different
    stories to explain how the animal ended up there.
    In one story, Hera discovered Zeus was having an
    affair with Callisto and turned her into a bear.
    Zeus put her in the sky along with her son,
    Arcas, who became the Little Bear.

33
Ursa Major
34
Cassiopeia
  • Cassiopeia was the wife of King Cepheus. She was
    very pretty, and would often boast that she and
    her daughter were more beautiful than the sea
    nymphs, the Nereids. They complained to Poseidon,
    who unleashed a monster onto Cepheus' land. In
    order to save their country, the king and queen
    sacrificed their daughter, Andromeda. Just before
    the monster, named Cetus, ate the princess,
    Perseus saved her. All five figures are
    represented in the sky as constellations.
  • Cassiopeia has a very distinct shape. She looks
    like a "W" or "M" in the sky, depending on where
    she is. Some legends say that Cassiopeia was
    chained into the sky and sometimes hangs
    upside-down to remind others not to be so
    boastful.

35
Cassiopeia
36
Cepheus
  • Cepheus is one of the oldest constellations in
    the night sky. This house-shaped constellation is
    named after an ancient king of a land called
    Ethiopia (different from the current country,
    Ethiopia). He was married to the beautiful
    Cassiopeia and had a daughter, Andromeda.
  • In Greek mythology, Cassiopeia boasted that she
    and her daughter were more beautiful than the
    Nereids. They complained to the sea god Poseidon,
    who sent a monster to destroy Cepheus' land. The
    king and queen offered their daughter to the
    monster, but she was saved by Perseus.

37
Cepheus
38
Draco
  • Draco the dragon, is only present in the Northern
    Hemisphere, so those living in the Southern
    Hemisphere will never see this long
    constellation.
  • The easiest way to spot Draco is by finding his
    head. It consists of four stars in a trapezoid,
    burning brightly just north of Hercules. From
    there, the tail slithers through the sky,
    eventually ending between the Big and Little
    Dippers. It can be difficult to trace Draco in
    the night sky. From the head, follow the body
    north towards Cepheus. It suddenly shifts south
    and west, ending up between the two dippers. The
    end of the constellation is held by Thuban, which
    was the pole star over 4,000 years ago.

39
Draco
40
Signs of the Zodiac
  • Common Constellations

41
Aquarius The Water Bearer
  • In Greek mythology Aquarius was Ganymede,
    "cup-bearer to the gods". Alpha Aquarii
    ("Sadalmelik") and beta Aquarii ("Sadalsuud") are
    twin supergiants with nearly identical names. The
    names mean, respectively, "The Lucky One of the
    King" and "The Luckiest of the Lucky". Gamma
    Aquarii shares in the good fortune "Sadachbia"
    "The Lucky Star of Hidden Things" Incidentally,
    if the "Age of Aquarius" was celebrated in the
    1960s, the real event is still some 600 years
    off at that time Aquarius will contain the
    vernal equinox, marking the return of the Sun
    into the northern celestial hemisphere.

42
Aquarius The Water Bearer
43
Aries the Ram
  • Aries, "The Ram", is an ancient constellation
    which was of considerable importance since the
    sun passed through it at the vernal equinox.
  • This point has now moved into Pisces, but the
    vernal equinox is still known as the First Point
    of Aries. In another six hundred years the point
    will have moved into Aquarius.
  • The Ram in question may have been the one whose
    golden fleece was the object of Jason's quest.
  • There is some reason to believe that the Greeks
    just took over a much older horned animal at this
    time of the year the horn being a symbol for
    fecundity, renewal, and so on. As the Sun came
    into this constellation, at the vernal equinox,
    the year itself was being renewed.

44
Aries the Ram
45
Cancer The Crab
  • The name comes from the Latin cancer means
    crab. The crab in question is the one sent by
    Hydra to attack Heracles. It was only a bit part,
    but one which secured its immortality.

46
Cancer
47
Gemini The Twins
  • Gemini, the Twins, are really only
    half-brothers. They share the same mother (Leda)
    but have different fathers. Castor's father was a
    king of Sparta, Tyndareus - who would be chased
    from his throne but later rescued by Heracles
    (who nevertheless wound up killing him). The
    father of Pollux was none other than Zeus, or
    Jupiter. Zeus visited Leda on her wedding night
    in the guise of a swan. Thus the twins would be
    born. (In fact two twins came from this double
    union, but let's not complicate the matter even
    more...)

48
Gemini
49
Leo The Lion
  • The first on the list of Heracles' labors was
    the task of killing the Nemean Lion, a giant
    beast that roamed the hills and the streets of
    the Peloponnesian villages, devouring whomever it
    met. The animal's skin was impervious to iron,
    bronze, and stone. Heracles' arrows harmlessly
    bounced off the lion his sword bent in two his
    wooden club smashed to pieces. So Heracles
    wrestled with the beast, finally choking it to
    death. He then wrapped the lion's pelt about him
    it would protect him from the next labor killing
    the poisonous Hydra.

50
Leo
51
Libra The Scales
  • Libra means "The Scales" or "Balance", so named
    because when the zodiac was still in its infancy,
    some four thousand years ago, the sun passed
    through this constellation at the autumnal
    equinox (21 September). At the two equinoxes
    (Spring and Autumn) the hours of daylight and
    darkness are equal. As a symbol for equality, the
    constellation came to represent Justice in
    several middle Eastern cultures. However, the
    Greeks had a different perspective at one time
    Scorpius, which lies just to the east, was much
    larger, and the stars that make up Libra were
    then known as the Claws of the Scorpion.

52
Libra

53
Pisces The Fish
  • Pisces is an ancient constellation derived, some
    say, from the story of the terrible Greek god
    Typhon.
  • (This is not the Chinese word for "big wind",
    which - in English - is of course spelled
    "typhoon". The French, however, spell this word
    "typhon", which adds to the confusion. It is
    possible that the Chinese borrowed the word from
    the Greek. The modern Greek equivalent is spelled
    "tau upsilon phi omega nu" and means "cyclone".)

54
Pisces
55
Sagittarius
  • It was the Romans who named the constellation
    Sagittarius ("sagitta" is Latin for arrow'),
    although several stars carry Arabic names which
    identify just which portion of the constellation
    they represent. Sagittarius has a muddled
    history. In ancient times the asterism of three
    bright stars in a curved line was seen as a bow
    to some, leading both Greek and Roman writers to
    confuse the constellation with Centaurus.

56
Sagittarius
57
Scorpius The Scorpion
  • As mentioned regarding Orion, Gaia may have sent
    the scorpion to kill the mighty hunter, as he had
    vowed to rid the earth of all wild animals. Or
    Apollo might have told Gaia of Orion's boast,
    fearful that Orion had designs on Apollo's sister
    Artemis. In any case it was Gaia who sent the
    scorpion to kill Orion. Later the animal would
    chase Orion across the heavens, but it could
    never catch him, for the scorpion was so placed
    that it would rise in the east only after Orion
    had safely disappeared over the western horizon.

58
Scorpius

59
Taurus The Bull
  • Is Taurus attacking Orion, the Hunter, or are
    the Horns of the Bull the real story? The horn
    was a symbol of fertility and bountiful riches in
    many cultures for thousands of years, and it is
    probably the case here, for the constellation
    would have announced the Vernal Equinox at around
    4000 BC.

60
Taurus

61
Virgo The Virgin
  • Virgo is the second largest constellation (after
    Hydra). As a member of the Zodiac, Virgo has a
    number of ancient myths and tales. The Sun passes
    through Virgo in mid-September, and is therefore
    the constellation that announces the harvest.
    Virgo is often represented as a "maiden" (as its
    name indicates). In antiquity, she may have been
    Isis, the Egyptian protectress of the living and
    the dead and the principal mother goddess.

62
Virgo
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