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Announcements

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Announcements Bachelor of Fine Arts with Emphasis in Art Education Program (BFAAE) Deadline for application is March 1 Dave Snyder, math tutor (email: dsnyde) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Announcements


1
Announcements
  • Bachelor of Fine Arts with Emphasis in Art
    Education Program (BFAAE)
  • Deadline for application is March 1
  • Dave Snyder, math tutor (email dsnyde)
  • Wed 1100 200 MI B1-05
  • Thurs 200-500 MI B1-05

2
Summary of Last Class Science
  • Science is a process
  • Observations
  • Theories to unify/explain observations
  • Tests of theories against observations...
  • Etc
  • Testing theories is the only way to weed out
    falsehoods!
  • All theories that survive so far are current best
    explanations, backed by evidence
  • But any theory could be disproven with the next
    observation

3
Summary of Last Class Life
  • Life is complex compared to not-life
  • Reproduces
  • Adapts
  • Stays alive
  • BEHAVES
  • Nothing is ruled out, but life we can interact
    with likely requires
  • Carbon (but carbon's everywhere!)
  • Liquid solvent like water (Narrow temperature
    range!)

4
Feedback
  • Most unclear item from last week's readings?

5
Feedback
  • How much time was spent on readings?
  • How much time was spent on homework?

6
Projects/Presentations
  • Only a few interested in presentations good
  • If interested in Mar 12 presentation, sign up now
    (can change mind later)
  • Presentation, Report, Art project, same goal
  • Demonstrate an understanding of some significant
    amount of course-related material.
  • Topics need to be checked with me
  • (jdursi _at_ artic.edu)

7
Possible Topics
  • NASA Terrestrial Planet Finder
  • Sattelite intended to go up in next decade to
    search for Earth-like planets
  • The Formation of Stars
  • The Formation of Planets
  • History of thought on extraterrestrial life
  • Extremophiles
  • Earth organisms that live in extreme conditions
  • Life on gas giants how?
  • ....

8
What we're going to cover today
  • What's in the Universe and where it is The
    Distance Ladder
  • Objects
  • The distance scale from the moon to distant
    galaxies
  • The Drake Equation
  • Estimating the number of civilizations in the
    Galaxy

9
The Universe and How Big it isThe Contents
  • At end of this lecture/reading, should be able
    to
  • Explain what major sorts of objects are seen (by
    eye!) in night sky, and how to distinguish them
  • Stars
  • Planets
  • Galaxies
  • Clusters
  • Nebulae

10
The Night Sky
11
Objects
  • Point objects
  • Stars
  • Big point' objects
  • Overexposed stars
  • Extended objects
  • Some fuzzy, some not
  • ??

12
Other Objects
  • Planets
  • Like stars fairly bright, move around on paths
  • Transient events
  • Comets
  • Meteors
  • Novae' (rare)

13
Nature of fuzzy objects unclear for centuries
  • 1610 Orion nebula discovered with new
    telescope' by de Peiresc
  • 1656 Huygens examined more carefully
  • 1700s astronomers looking for comets these
    nebulous' objects were irritating distractions
  • Messier catlogued 103 so that comet hunters
    wouldn't confuse them for comets.

14
Nature of fuzzy objects unclear for centuries
  • Herschels composed more detailed catalogue (NGC)
    until 1802
  • 2500 objects
  • Suplemented by Index Catalogues (IC) up to 1905
  • 5,386 additional objects
  • Astrophotography couldn't take decent pictures
    until 1883
  • Long exposures much better images

15
Large numbers of types
  • Some were clearly nearby gas clouds lit up by
    central star
  • Others were fairly clearly more distant clusters
    of stars
  • Spiral nebulae remained a mystery.

16
What are they?
  • 1920 Shapley-Curtis Debate
  • Shapley
  • Spiral Nebulae' were just near by gas clouds
    the universe consisted of only one galaxy
  • Curtis
  • Spiral Nebulae are very very far away
  • To be seen at this distance, must be huge --- as
    big as our own galaxy
  • We live in just one of many galaxies!!

17
Importance of Distance
  • Nature and scale of the universe hinged on
    argument of how distant things are
  • Determines their size
  • Astronomers can't see' distances!

18
The Universe and How Big it isThe Distance
Ladder
  • At end of this lecture/reading, should be able
    to
  • Describe relative scales of
  • stars/planets
  • Stellar systems
  • Interstellar distances
  • Galactic Distances
  • Intergalactic Distances
  • And explain how those distances are measured

19
The Distance Ladder
  • Need to measure nearby distances
  • Use those to measure distance to more remote
    objects
  • Build our way up from solar system to entire
    observable universe
  • Excellent website
  • http//heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/cosmic/

20
Begin with most nearby object
http//www.rathergood.com/moon_song
21
Lessons from Educational Video
  • Some confusion about distance to moon
  • Difficulty comparing it with other distances
  • Zeppelin
  • Dirigible
  • Light bulbs
  • Puffins

22
Relative Size of Earth, Moon
  • Aristarchus of Samos (310-230 BC)
  • Lunar Eclipse Moon in Earths Shadow
  • 1.25 hour

23
Relative Size of Earth, Moon
  • Takes moon about 28 days to circle the earth
  • 360 degrees
  • Travels a bit over a degree an hour
  • Moon size is 0.5 degrees
  • Travels a bit over 2 of its own sizes an hour
  • Travels about 3 of its sizes during an eclipse
  • Earth's shadow size 3 moon sizes
  • Earth 3x size of moon

24
Another eclipse way to measure relative size
25
Another eclipse way to measure relative size
26
Can also determine Distance to moon relative to
Distance to sun
  • Very tricky to measure!
  • Moon has to be exactly at full moon angle to sun
    is very nearly 90 degrees (89.85)

27
Radius of Earth
  • Eratosthenes (276-196 BC)
  • Difference in angles cast by shadows from the
    distant sun
  • Found an earth radius of 40,000 miles within a
    few percent of accepted value today.

28
Suddenly
  • Know actual size of moon
  • Since know its size and how big it seems, know
    distance to moon
  • Know distance to sun
  • Today, can verify/improve these distances
  • Radar
  • Space probes
  • Orbit modeling
  • Get us accurate measurements of entire solar
    system

29
New length unit Astronomical Unit (AU)
  • Earth-Sun distance so handy for measuring solar
    system distances that new unit created
  • 1 AU mean distance between Earth and Sun
  • 1 AU 92,955,807 miles

30
Distances to stars
  • Activity building a constellation

31
Paralax
  • 01234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
    01234

32
Paralaxes can be observed in stars
33
Paralaxes can be observed in stars
34
What Is Science Not Good At?
35
(No Transcript)
36
The displacement is measured as an angle on the
sky
  • 0.5 degree about your thumb at arms length
  • 1 arc minute 1/60th of a degree
  • 1 arc second 1/60th of an arc minute
  • A distance at which the parallax (from Jan to
    June) is 1 arc second is a parsec (PARallax
    SECond)
  • Can find it from 1 AU with some trig
  • 1 pc 206265 AU

37
Concept Test
  • Would a parmin'' (PARallax MINute) be a LARGER
    unit of distance, or a SMALLER unit of distance
    than a parsec?

38
Concept Test
  • Would a parmin'' (PARallax MINute) be a LARGER
    unit of distance, or a SMALLER unit of distance
    than a parsec?
  • Smaller.
  • An arc minute is a BIGGER displacement
  • CLOSER stars would have bigger displacements
    something that had a paralax of an arc minute
    would be closer.
  • (60 times closer!)

39
Distances to nearby clusters of stars
  • Many techniques
  • Simplest is Spectroscopic parallax (not really a
    parallax measure)
  • Cluster will contain lots of stars like ones
    nearby
  • Know their distance, brightness well
  • Can calibrate distance to cluster by inferring
    distance to individual stars

40
Distances to nearby clusters of stars
  • Other techniques
  • Globular clusters tend to have similar sizes can
    infer distance from apparent size
  • Use motions of stars within cluster as yardstick

41
Distances to distant clusters of stars
  • Clusters also contain stars such as RR Lyrae or
    Cephieds
  • Variable stars
  • Pulse over days
  • Pulsation period tells you their brightness
  • Bright enough to be seen in quite distant clusters

42
Distances to nearby galaxies
  • Cepheids can even be seen in our galactic
    neighbors, so can measure distances to galaxies
    directly!

43
Stringing together a Universe
  • Activity putting relative distances in
    perspective

44
Stringing together a Universe
  • 1 tic 1 AU (earth-sun distance)

45
Stringing together a Universe
  • 10 tic 1 pc (typical inter-stellar distance)
  • (1 tic 1/10 pc 20,600 AU)

46
Stringing together a Universe
  • 4 tic 1 kpc (typical inter-stellar distance)
  • (1 tic 1/4 kpc 250 pc 51 million AU)

47
The Drake Equation
  • Drake Equation will structure the rest of our
    class
  • Astronomy
  • Number of stars in galaxy
  • Number of suitable stars
  • Number of stars that form planets
  • Geophysics
  • Number of planets suitable for life
  • Biology
  • Where and low life forms on those planets
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