phy134 introductory astronomy the sun and the moon 1

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  • Slide 1
  • PHY134 Introductory Astronomy The Sun and the Moon 1
  • Slide 2
  • So Far Stars fixed on a large celestial sphere that rotates daily East to West about an axis through Earths poles Declination is celestial longitude. Observers zenith is at Declination = Latitude Right Ascension is celestial longitude. Observers zenith is at RA = Sidereal Time Sidereal time changes by about 1h/h Sun moves to East relative to stars once a year 2
  • Slide 3
  • Sky Charts N WE S Zenith Fixed Azimuth Horizon Fixed Altitude Pole Fixed RA Equator Fixed Decl.
  • Slide 4
  • Clocks Time from noon to noon is a bit (1/365 of a day or about 4min) longer than time it takes Earth to turn 360 A (mean) solar day is longer than a sidereal day Our clocks (LT) keep solar time so run slower than sidereal clock (ST) 24 sidereal hours = 23h 56m 4s 4
  • Slide 5
  • Finding Sidereal Time By convention ST LT on September 21 D days later (earlier) ST LT +/- D4m This is approximate. In any event ignores time zones and Daylight Savings Time On December/March/June 21 ST LT + 6/12/18 h 5
  • Slide 6
  • It Tilts Earths axis is tilted 23.5 from perpendicular to orbit Celestial equator tilted 23.5 from plane of orbit ecliptic Suns orbit along Celestial sphere ecliptic - tilted 23.5 from Celestial equator Suns Declination changes between 23.5 and -23.5 Ecliptic meets equator at Vernal/Autumnal equinox at 0h/12h RA 6
  • Slide 7
  • Seasons When Sun North/South of equator Days longer in North/South Sun higher in the sky in North/South Climate warming in North/South cooling in South/North Inside Arctic circle Sun becomes circumpolar/never rises (reverse for Antarctic circle) At equinox day/night equal everywhere Between tropics Sun is at Zenith once a year 7
  • Slide 8
  • How High is Sun at Noon? We are at Latitude 36N At equinox At summer solstice At winter solstice 8
  • Slide 9
  • Why Mean? 24h is an average Solar day Suns RA increases over the year but not uniformly Sun moves around ecliptic almost uniformly but ecliptic is tilted near equinoxes and parallel to equator near solstices. So Eastward motion fastest near solstices. Almost Earth very slightly nearer Sun in January 9
  • Slide 10
  • It Also Wobbles The Earths axis wobbles like a spinning top precession Celestial axis wobbles. North pole moves to the West in a circle of radius 23.5 every 26,000 years relative to stars So does celestial equator hence precession of the equinoxes Coordinates of stars change too epoch J2000 Age of Pisces gives way to age of Aquarius ca. 2600 10
  • Slide 11
  • Moon Moves Too Like Sun, Moon moves around celestial sphere as it orbits Earth West to East Moon is faster: orbits in a sidereal month (27.32 days) RA increases by 48min per day Spin locked to orbit same side always faces Earth Moon moves relative to Sun by 44min per day Full rotation relative to Sun in synodic month (29.53 days) Position relative to Sun controls rise/set times as well as phases 11
  • Slide 12
  • Moons Declination Moons orbit inclined 5 to ecliptic about line of nodes Like Sun, Moon higher in Summer Twice a year line of nodes aligns with Sun: Eclipse Season Tilt precesses to the West every 18.6 years so twice an eclipse year of 346.6 days At New/Full Moon during eclipse season have Solar/Lunar eclipse 12
  • Slide 13
  • Solar Eclipse Moon almost same angular size as Sun With near perfect alignment can completely obscure Sun from up to 250km shadow total eclipse More common partial eclipse When Moon farthest from Earth annular eclipse 13
  • Slide 14
  • 14
  • Slide 15
  • 15
  • Slide 16
  • Lunar Eclipse Moon enters Earth shadow from West Eclipse can be total or partial. Penumbral eclipse when Moon in partial shadow dims slightly During totality Moon illuminated through atmosphere looks red 16
  • Slide 17
  • Fun with the Moon Moon appears larger near horizon This is a psychological illusion not shared by optical instruments Various theories as to mechanism Can see dark part of crescent Moon old moon in new moons arms This is physical viewing dark part by reflected Earthlight 17
  • Slide 18
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  • Slide 19
  • Signs of the Times Astronomy and timekeeping are always closely related we want our time to match what happens. Our 24-hour days are adjusted to mean solar day. Our months are approximately lunar. Our years match orbit 365.2564 days is a sidereal orbit. Tropical orbit is 365.2422 days (precession). Julius Caesar got 365.25 so invented leap years. Pope Gregory XIII (1582) corrected for the.0078 19
  • Slide 20
  • Summary Our cosmos now has moving parts Sun moves around Celestial Sphere to the East, completes one revolution in a year. The ecliptic tilted relative to celestial equator by 23.5 about equinoxes and precesses West every 26,000 years Moon moves around Celestial Sphere to the East, completes one revolution in a month. Moons orbit tilted relative to ecliptic by 5 about line of nodes and precesses West every 18.6 years The model now explains day/night, lunar phases, eclipses What else moves? 20