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Enjoying the Night Sky

Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

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Page 1: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Enjoying the Night Sky

Page 2: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Horizon and Zenith

Page 3: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Stars and constellations

Page 4: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations
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Zodiac Constellations

Page 12: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Astrophotography

All you need:•Single lens reflex camera on tripod•Cable shutter release•F-stop on smallest number•Focus to infinity•Fast film (at least 400 speed)•or set digital camera to 400

Aim the camera, and hold shutter open for •10-30 seconds for constellations•As long as you want for star-trails

Page 13: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Star-trails

Page 14: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Circumpolar star-trails

Page 15: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Why the trails?

Page 16: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Sagitarrius and Milky Way: 30 second exposure

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Wandering Stars: the planets• The ancients knew of seven objects

that wandered through the stars (the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn). They called these wanders the “planets” (from the Greek for wanderer).

• All of these objects are visible with the naked eye.

Page 18: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Sky at a Glance

skyandtelescope.com

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The Moon

Page 20: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Earth and MoonCompared

Distance? 30 Earths

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Phases of the Moon

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Eclipses of the Moon

• A lunar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes into the shadow of the Earth.

• The lunar eclipse is visible to everyone on the night side of the Earth.

• Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) used the apparent shape of the Earth’s shadow to show that the Earth is a sphere.

Page 23: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Lunar Eclipse

Page 24: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Lunar Eclipse

Page 25: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Lunar Eclipse Showing Earth’s Shadow

Page 26: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Next total lunar

eclipse: December 21, 2010

http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/

http://mreclipse.com

Page 27: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Meteors

Page 28: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Orionids,2009Predicted Maximum: October 21

Moon: Waxing Crescent (no interference)

WHEN TO WATCH: From about 1:00 am until twilight gets too bright, from October 20 - October 22.

20-25 meteors/hour

Leonids, 2009Predicted Maximum: November 17, ~21:00 UT (= Nov. 17, 4:00pm EST)

Moon: New Moon (no interference)

WHEN TO WATCH: North American observers should especially try to cover the morning of Tuesday, November 17.

100-500 Leonids per hour!

Page 29: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Spacecraft (satellites)

 

 

 

 

InternationalSpace Station

http://www.heavens-above.com

 

Page 30: Enjoying the Night Sky. Horizon and Zenith Stars and constellations

Armchair astronomy

• Podcasts• Blogs!• Websites/ News feeds:

– Astronomy Today– IYA

• Twitter

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National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Green Bank, WVNational Radio Astronomy Observatory, Green Bank, WV

www.gb.nrao.eduwww.gb.nrao.eduwww.gb.nrao.eduwww.gb.nrao.edu