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Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy
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Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Our Place in the Cosmosand

Introduction to Astrophysics

Jon LovedayAstronomy Centre

Department of Physics & Astronomy

Page 2: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Course Aims

To explain primarily at a descriptive level the contents, dimensions and history of the Universe, and our place within it. This will include a survey of the basic astronomical tools, and will seek to explain the way in which some basic physical laws can be applied in order to understand the observed phenomena.

Page 3: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Class organisation

Lectures Monday 9am Arts A5 Friday 9am Pev1 1A6

Workshops Friday 10am Our Place in the Cosmos: Pev1-2A2

Informal discussion, quizzes, student presentations

Intro to Astrophysics: Arundel 1B Mathematical background, problem sheets Taken by Peter Thomas

Page 4: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Assessment

Our Place in the Cosmos 15 minute presentation (weeks 5-10; 20%)

In-class quiz (week 10; 20%)

2000-word essay (week 10; 60%)

Introduction to Astrophysics 4 x problem sheets (10% each)

In-class quiz (week 9; 40%)

Briefing paper (week 9; 20%)

Page 5: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Lecturer

Jon Loveday Pev2 5A5 x 7719 [email protected] Office hour: Tuesday 1.30-2.30

Page 6: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Web Resources

Sussex Direct has links to the official course document (click on the course code: F3095 or F3156)

Study Direct includes copies of these slides and other useful resources

Page 7: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Course textbooks

21st Century Astronomy by Hester et al. is very good, though expensive at £42

Introductory Astronomy by Holliday is cheaper

Other useful books you should find in the library include: Universe Freedman & Kaufmann In Quest of the Universe Kuhn & Koupelis

Page 8: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Student Feedback

Please feel free to stop me and ask for clarification at any time during classes if anything I have said is unclear

Feedback on any aspect of the course is welcome during the Friday seminar

Formal feedback will be requested via the Study Direct website during weeks 8-9. Please note that feedback provided in this way is completely anonymous

Page 9: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

What is Astronomy?

Literally means “naming the stars” The earliest astronomers simply tracked the motions of the heavenly bodies

Modern astronomers use observations to help understand the Universe and our place within it via scientific reasoning

Astrology is not astronomy, but a pseudo-science

Page 10: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Why Astrology is not a Science

The constellations are only imaginary, not physical associations of stars

Constellations have shifted relative to our calendar due to precession of equinoxes since founding of astrology

Rigorous tests of astrological “predictions” have shown they do not work

Page 11: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 12: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

The Scientific Method

Guided by observations, posit a theory that explains them

A good theory makes testable predictions about future observations, and thus is falsifiable

Scientific theories can never be definitively proved, they can only be ruled out by contrary observations

A theory that stands the test of time becomes generally accepted and possibly modified

Page 13: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Why Study Astronomy?

Early astronomers used positions of the stars to track the seasons and later as a vital navigational aid

Help understand phenomena such as tides and eclipses

Understand and appreciate even more the beauty of the night sky

Learn about the origin and fate of the Universe

Page 14: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Course Outline

Brief tour - scales in the Universe Historical overview Earth, Moon and Sun Orbits and Gravity Solar System Stars Galaxies The Milky Way The Universe

Page 15: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

A brief tour

Page 16: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 17: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 18: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 19: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 20: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 21: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 22: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Sun Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto

Solar System

Page 23: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Milky Way

Page 24: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Milky Way as Viewed from Earth

NGC 891

Page 25: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Milky Way in the near-IR

Page 26: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

NGC 4414

Page 27: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

A cluster of galaxiesVirgo Galaxy Cluster

Page 28: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Infrared Universe

Page 29: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

The Deep Universe Hubble Ultra-Deep Field

Page 30: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

CMB Temperature Map

Page 31: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Scales in the Universe

Astronomical distances are commonly given in terms of light travel time, ie. distance light will travel in that time at its speed of 300,000 km/s

Page 32: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (LZW) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Distances as light travel times - not to scale!

Page 33: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Prehistoric astronomy

Since prehistoric times, man has observed the changing phases of the moon during the lunar month, and the changing passage of the Sun during the year

One can understand how, as well as indicating the change of the seasons, man might well have thought of the stars as causing the change

Hence religious significance of the heavenly bodies, and birth of astrology

Page 34: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Dots below horses thought to represent changing phasesof the Moon

Earliest depictions of the skies are found in the Cave paintings in Lascaux, SW France (c15,000 BC)

Page 35: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

The Great Bull: An Ice Age Star Map?

Pleiades

Hyades

Orion

Page 36: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Prehistoric astronomy

Observations of the changing passage of the Sun and the star patterns in the night sky enabled tracking of the seasons, and hence the best times to plant and harvest crops

Observations of the Moon’s phase allowed fishermen to predict the tides

Observatories were built to track the positions of the heavenly bodies, most famously Stonehenge, 3000-1500 BC

Page 37: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.
Page 38: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Stonehenge

An early astronomical calculator? On summer solstice, Sun rises exactly above the Heelstone

In Stonehenge Decoded (1965), Gerald Hawkins claimed large number of alignments with Lunar and Solar phenomena, and hence that eclipses could be predicted

These claims are still controversial

Page 39: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

At sunset close to the spring and autumn equinoxes, shadows give the effect of a snake slithering down the stairway.

El Castillo, Chichen Itza (Mayan, c1000 AD)

Page 40: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

The Planets

It must have been noticed very early that some bodies moved faster in the night sky than the surrounding stars.

The word "planet" comes from the Greek word "planetes," which means "nomad” or “wanderer”.

To the Babylonians and Sumerians before them, the planets were "stray sheep”.

Page 41: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

The Ancient Greeks

By far the most famous early astronomers are the ancient Greeks. Between about 500BC and 100BC, they built a picture of the Universe which dominated for over 1000 years.

Page 42: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Thales (624 - 545 BC)

Realised that celestial objects were at different distances, that the Earth was spherical, and that the light of the moon was reflected sunlight.Pythagoras (582 - 500 BC)

Produced the first geocentric model of the Universe, with everything making perfectly circular orbits around the Earth.

Page 43: Our Place in the Cosmos and Introduction to Astrophysics Jon Loveday Astronomy Centre Department of Physics & Astronomy.

Geocentric Model