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Astronomy

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Title: Astronomy


1
Astronomy
Space the final frontier These are the voyages of
the fifth grade class. Our year-long mission is
to seek out new life and new civilizations to
boldly go were no class has gone before.
2
Terms you MUST know and spell correctly
  • Astronomy
  • Constellation
  • Axis
  • Rotation
  • Revolution
  • Star
  • Planet
  • Refraction telescope
  • Reflecting telescope
  • asteroid
  • Comet
  • Meteor
  • meteorite
  • Solar system
  • Geocentric model
  • Heliocentric model
  • Ptolemy
  • Copernicus
  • The Big Bang Theory
  • Terrestrial planets
  • Moon
  • Satellite
  • Gas giants
  • Eccentric
  • Circumpolar constellations
  • Star Trails

3
What is Astronomy?
  • Astronomy is the study of objects and matter
    outside the earth's atmosphere and their
    properties.
  • You can study lots of things through astronomy
    like how the earth and sun were created, and if
    there is life on other planets!

4
What is a star?
  • Stars are huge balls of gas , which burn brightly
    in the darkness of space.
  • Just like people, stars have a life cycle. They
    grow up just like we do!

Did you know that our Sun is A STAR?
5
Stars From Our Perspective
  • Stars look differently from planets because STARS
    APPEAR TO BE TWINKING, since it flickers much
    like a candle.
  • Some stars form constellations which look like
    patterns or designs in the sky.
  • Some examples of constellations are Orion (best
    seen in Winter), Cassiopeia and Draco (not Draco
    Malfoy)!
  • Stars that help people find other constellations
    are called POINTER STARS.

6
Our Sun
  • Our sun is the center of our Solar System, which
    is part of the MILKY WAY GALAXY.
  • The surface of the sun is very, very HOT! About
    10,000 degrees Fahrenheit!
  • The sun is really big! It takes the Earth about
    365 DAYS to revolve around the sun!
  • Did you know that the Earth is closest to the sun
    during our WINTER? And furthest during our summer?

7
Planets
  • Each of the planets revolve around the sun in
    their own ORBIT. These orbits are not perfectly
    round. Instead, they are oval or ECCENTRIC.
  • There are EIGHT major planets in our solar
    system Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter,
    Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune and THREE dwarf
    planets Ceres, Pluto, and Xena.
  • The largest planet is JUPITER, and the smallest
    is PLUTO.

8
Our Earth
  • The Earth is the THIRD planet
  • of the solar system.
  • It rotates on an axis that is tilted
  • 23.5 DEGREES.
  • VENUS and Earth are almost the same according to
    size.

9
Moons
  • Moons are satellites they revolve around the
    planets, just like the planets revolve around the
    sun!
  • Almost every planet in our solar system has at
    least one moon only MERCURY and VENUS do not.
    Jupiter has 63 moons!
  • Our MOON is the closest celestial object to our
    Earth

10
Asteroids and Comets
  • Asteroids are rocky, metallic objects that orbit
    the sun, and are too small to be considered
    planets.
  • They are the leftover particles from the creation
    of the solar system.
  • Comets are small (10 km across) irregular masses
    that consist of rock, gases, dust and ice. They
    also have a tail made up of dust and gases

11
Constellations
  • A constellation is a shape created by the stars
    when seen from Earth .
  • The constellations were created as a memory aid
    for understanding the stars. (i.e. In the winter
    parts of Orions belt can help locate other stars
    around it)
  • There are a total of 88 ACCEPTED CONSTELLATIONS
    in the night sky.
  • Due to the fact that the stars dont move in the
    same way as the earth and moon, we see a
    different set of constellations for each season
    in our hemisphere. Some constellations we cant
    see because we dont live in the SOUTHERN
    HEMISPHERE

12
Constellations
  • Constellations - groupings of stars named after
    mythical heroes, gods, and mystical beasts
  • - made up over at least the last 6000 years -
    maybe more
  • - used to identify seasons
  • - farmers know that for most crops, you plant
    in the spring and harvest in the fall.
  • - in some regions, not much differentiation
    between the seasons.
  • - different constellations visible at different
    times of the year - can use them to tell what
    month it is. For example, Scorpius is only
    visible in the northern hemisphere's evening
    sky in the summer.
  • - many of the myths (stories) associated with
    the constellations thought to have been
    invented to help the farmers remember them.

13
Star Stories
  • Star stories were created to explain natural
    phenomena.
  • Many cultures including the Greeks and
    Egyptians - created their own stories based on
    their interpretation of the pattern of stars.
  • The stories combine the traditional culture with
    the shapes seen in the constellations.
  • Other cultures that have star stories are the
    Chinese, Native American, Indian cultures and
    many, many more!

14
What are the 88 Constellations?
  • 14 men and women
  • 9 birds
  • 19 land animals
  • 2 insects
  • 10 water creatures
  • 2 centaurs
  • 1 head of hair
  • 1 serpent
  • 1 dragon
  • 1 flying horse
  • 1 river
  • 29 inanimate objects, include scientific
    instruments (Microscopium, Telescopium)


15
Polaris
  • The Earths axis runs from the north pole to the
    south pole.
  • If you continue the axis line through the north
    pole you would run into Polaris, the North Star.
  • Because it is in line with the Earths axis,
    Polaris does not appear to move in the sky.

16
The axis remains at the same tilt angle - pointed
at Polaris - throughout the orbit because of
conservation of angular momentum. The ecliptic
plane is the plane of the Earths orbit. Looking
from the Earth, it is the apparent path of the
Sun (and planets) in the sky.
17
Northern Circumpolar Constellations
  • Depending on where you live, some constellations
    are visible all year round and some
    constellations are seasonal. If you live in the
    Northern Hemisphere, the constellations that
    circle around the North Star are visible all
    year. They are called circumpolar constellation
    because they travel in circles around the North
    Star.
  • The main circumpolar constellations are
  • Ursa Major, the Great Bear
  • Ursa Minor, the Little Bear
  • Draco, the Dragon
  • Cepheus, the King
  • Cassiopeia, the Queen.

18
Circumpolar Constellations
The circumpolar constellations travel in circles
around the North Star, Polaris. If you take long
exposure photographs of the North sky, you can
see these star swirls
19
Star Trail
  • Earth rotates about an axis that is pointed very
    close to the star Polaris
  • Stars rise in the east and set in the west
    everyday.
  • The circumpolar constellations travel in circles
    around the North Star, Polaris. If you take long
    exposure photographs of the North sky, you can
    see these star swirls

20
Ursa Major
  • Three important stars in Ursa Major are Mizar,
    Dubhe and Merak. Dubhe and Merak are also known
    as the pointer stars because they point to the
    North Star.
  • Mizar was the first binary star that was ever
    discovered. A binary star is a star that orbits
    another star.
  • In 1650, an Italian astronomer named Riccioli
    using a simple telescope discovered that there
    were indeed two stars orbiting each other, a fact
    which could not be seen by the naked eye. Since
    then many binary stars have been discovered.

21
Ursa Major
  • The Big Dipper is the easiest grouping of stars
    to recognize because five of the seven stars are
    very bright and can even be seen by people living
    in cities.
  • However, the Big Dipper is not a true
    constellation. It is part of a larger
    constellation called Ursa Major, the Great Bear.
  • Third largest constellation
  • Great Bear
  • Next to Orion, it is the most famous constellation

The two stars at the end of the spoon are called
the pointer stars and if you follow a straight
line through the two pointer stars upward, the
next bright star you come across will be the
North Star.
22
Ursa Major
  • Artemis, the moon goddess and goddess of the
    hunt, always had hunting companions with her when
    she went on the hunt. One such companion was
    Callisto, a beautiful young maiden.
  • One day Zeus passed by a woodland cove and spied
    the sleeping Callisto. Zeus made Callisto his
    lover. They had a child named Arcas. Of course
    Zeus knew that both Hera, his wife, and Artemis
    would be angry with Callisto so to protect her he
    turned her into a bear to keep her hidden from
    Artemis and Hera.
  • One day, Arcas was hunting and he came across a
    great bear. He was just about to shoot his arrow
    when Zeus intervened and changed him into a
    little bear so that Arcas could know who the
    great bear really was. Zeus then transported the
    two bears to the heavens so that they would be
    protected from the wrath of the angry goddesses.
  • However, Hera was unhappy that Callisto and her
    son were shining so brightly in the heavens so
    she asked the ocean god to prevent them from ever
    bathing in the ocean waters. And so, according to
    this story, that is why the two bears are forced
    to circle the heavens while the other
    constellations are allowed to dip below the
    horizon and bathe in the immortal waters every
    night.

23
Ursa Minor - little bear
  • Ursa Minor is much harder to find than Ursa
    Major. Usually, its easier to find Ursa Major
    first and follow the pointer stars to Polaris and
    then find the other stars of Ursa Minor.

24
Ursa Minor
  • Ursa Minor, the Little Bear, is visible in the
    Northern Hemisphere all year long.
  • Ursa Minor is mostly known for Polaris, the
    North Star which may be found at the end of the
    handle.
  • Looks like a spoon whose handle has been bent
    back by a playful child
  • Polaris is an important star for navigators
    because it stays relatively fixed in the heavens
    while all of the other stars move in circular
    arcs throughout the night. In the past, it has
    been called the ship star, the leading star,
    star of the sea and the steering star.

25
Draco
  • The titans were giants with serpentine feet. They
    were almost invincible. When they revolted
    against the gods, they caused great destruction.
    During the battle, Athena grabbed the feet of one
    of these dragon-like giants and flung it into the
    heavens where it got tangled among the stars.

26
Draco
  • One interesting star is Thuban. Around 2700 BC,
    at the height of the ancient Egyptian
    civilizations, Thuban, not Polaris, was at the
    celestial north pole and was therefore the pole
    star. The pole star changes slowly because the
    Earths rotational axis wobbles (spins around
    like a top).

27
Cassiopeia
  • Cepheus and Cassiopeia were the king and queen of
    Joppa, a city in the land of Ethiopia. They had
    many children including a daughter named
    Andromeda.
  • Andromeda was very beautiful and when the sea
    nymphs overheard Cassiopeia boasting about her
    beauty, they complained to Poseidon.
  • Poseidon got angry and sent a sea monster to
    destroy the city. When the monster was coming,
    Cepheus consulted an oracle. The oracle gave
    Cepheus a choice Sacrifice his daughter
    Andromeda, or face the destruction of the
    monster. Cepheus agreed to sacrifice his daughter
    to save the people of his kingdom and so he
    chained Andromeda to a cliff.

28
Cepheus
  • As it happened, Perseus was flying past on his
    flying horse Pegasus. Perseus agreed to save the
    daughter in return for her hand in marriage.
    Perseus and Andromeda lived a long life. When
    they died they were transformed into the stars as
    constellations along with the King and Queen,
    Cepheus and Cassiopeia. Cassiopeia is sitting in
    her throne and Cepheus has his arms stretched
    out. However, as punishment, Poseidon made sure
    that Cassiopeias throne was dumped upside down
    every night (when the constellation forms and M
    instead of a W.

29
Orion
  • Orion was an ancient Greek hunter and warrior
    and the constellation resembles this figure, with
    a club and a shield, and a sword dangling from
    his belt.
  • The belt is usually the easiest part of Orion to
    spot, with three bright stars in a row.
  • Orion has more bright stars than any other
    constellation the two brightest are Betelguese
    (shoulder) and Rigel (foot).
  • Not circumpolar, only seen from Dec. to April.

Orion is the largest constellation in the sky.
This giant figure dominates the sky in the early
mornings in late summer and fall, and in the
evenings during the first part of winter.
30
Orion
In Greek mythology, Orion was a great hunter.
Artemus, the goddess of the moon and of the hunt,
fell in love him and neglected her job of
lighting the night sky. Her twin brother,
Apollo, saw Orion swimming in the sea and
challenged his sister to hit what looked like a
dot among the waves. Artemus shot an arrow and
killed Orion. When she saw what she had done,
Artemus placed Orions body in the sky with his
hunting dogs. Her grief explains why the moon
looks so sad and cold.
31
Andromeda - Queen of the Winter Sky
  • Andromeda was the daughter of Cepheus and
    Casseopeia and was one of the most beautiful of
    all the goddesses.
  • Andromeda Galaxy is located in the constellation
    Andromeda.
  • Closest major galaxy to us.
  • This galaxy is over 250,000 light years across,
    which makes it more than twice as large as our
    own Milky Way galaxy.
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