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Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/ astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links to lecture notes, textbook reading assignments and suggested problems from the text.)
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Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Jan 01, 2016

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Abraham Walton
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Page 1: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks!

panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html

Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links to lecture notes, textbook reading assignments and suggested problems from the text.)

Page 2: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Astronomy Picture of the Day

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What properties of physical objects would you expect to be important in Astronomy?

Page 4: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

What properties of physical objects would you expect to be important in

Astronomy? Mass Size Distance from Earth Temperature Speed and Velocity Brightness (Luminosity) Age Chemical composition

Page 5: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Properties of Matter

Mass (How much “stuff” there is)

1 kilogram (kg) = 1000 grams (g) = 2.2 lbs

We tend to use mass and weight interchangeably, but weight depends on gravity.

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“Massive”

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Difference between Mass and Weight:

Mass of cat on Earth = Mass of cat on Moon

BUT,

Weight of cat on Earth = 18lbs

Weight of cat on Moon = 18/6 lbs = 3lbs

Page 8: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Distance

1 meter (m) = 100 centimeters (cm) = 39.4 inches (slightly longer than a yard)

A way to measure the distance to far astronomical objects is using ANGULAR measures – parallax

Page 9: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Volume (How much space something takes up)

1 cm3 = 0.06 cubic inches(about the size of a sugar cube)

2 cm1 cm

2 cm

2 cm x 1cm x 2 cm = 4 cm3

Page 10: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Density (How much stuff is concentrated in an object)

Density = Mass (g / cm3) Volume

Densities of Common Substances

Balsa Wood 0.13 g / cm3

Gasoline 0.7Water 1.0Polystyrene 1.05Average Rock 2.4Glass 2.6Ceramic 4.6Iron 7.9Lead 11.3Gold 19.3

Page 11: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Temperature (How hot something is)

The Kelvin Scale:

T(K) = T(oC) + 273 oC

"Absolute zero" 0 K = -273 oC

At what temperature (in Kelvin) does water freeze? Boil?

Page 12: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Speed and Velocity

Speed – how fast something is moving

Velocity – speed + direction = a vector quantity - an object can have the same speed but by changing its direction have a different velocity.

Page 13: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Angular Measures

90o

20o

360o, or 360 degrees, or 360 "arc degrees" in a circle.

1o = 60' or arcminutes1' = 60" or arcseconds

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Angular Measure

Page 15: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Scientific Notation

(A shorthand way of writing large numbers, which occur often in astronomy).

We use powers, or exponents, of 10:

100 = 102 (= 10 x 10) 1000 = 103 (= 10 x 10 x 10)1,000,000 = 106 10 = 101 1 = 100 0.1 = 10 -1 0.0001 = 10 -4 0.007 = 7 x 10 -3

4000 x 0.002 = (4 x 103) x (2 x 10 -3)= 8 x 100 = 8

Add the exponents

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Powers of Ten Video

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Question

Why is looking at a distant astronomical object like looking into its past?

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Scale of the Universe

• Speed of light– 186,000 miles/sec– 300,000 km/sec

• Light-year (LY)– Distance light travels

in one year• ~ 63,200 AU• ~ 6 trillion miles!

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The Constellations

Northern constellations named for figures in Greek myth

Attempt to understand heavens

Astronomical Landmarks

Are the stars in a constellation all at about the same distance from the Earth?

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The Constellation Orion

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The Celestial Sphere

An ancient concept, as if all objects at same distance.

But to find things on sky, don't need to know distance, so still useful today.

Page 22: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

The "Solar Day" and the "Sidereal Day"

Solar Day

How long it takes for the Sun to return to the same position in the sky (24 hours).

Sidereal Day

How long it takes for the Earth to rotate 360o on its axis.

These are not the same! Which is longer? Why?

(Demo)

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One solar day later, the Earth has rotated slightly more than 360o .A solar day is longer than a sidereal day by 3.9 minutes(24 hours vs. 23 hours 56 minutes 4.091 seconds).

Difference due to rotation and revolution of Earth!

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What causes the seasons?

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Seasons

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Summer Winter

In winter, sunlight is spread out more thinly across the ground => each bit of ground receives less radiation => cooler

Seasons caused by tilt of Earth’s axis of rotation.

Earth is farthest from sun during summer!

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Precession

What causes precession? How long does one cycle take?

Page 28: Please turn off cell phones & laptops - thanks! panda.unm.edu/courses/sanfratello/SP09/astro101.html Remember - Read syllabus and schedule (contains links.

Precession

The Earth has a bulge. The Moon "pulls down" on the side of the bulge closest to it, causing the Earth to wobble on its axis.

Earth

Moon

Spin axis

**Vega Polaris

Precession Period 26,000 years!