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Lecture 3 - The Sky: Constellations, Star Names, and Magnitudes

The document discusses constellations, star names, and the magnitude scale used to describe the brightness of stars. It describes how constellations originated in ancient civilizations as patterns of stars named after mythological figures. There are now 88 official constellations. Brighter stars have proper names and are assigned Greek letters within their constellations based on brightness. The magnitude scale, from 1st to 6th magnitude, describes apparent brightness, with each step representing a star being 2.512 times brighter.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
102 views30 pages

Lecture 3 - The Sky: Constellations, Star Names, and Magnitudes

The document discusses constellations, star names, and the magnitude scale used to describe the brightness of stars. It describes how constellations originated in ancient civilizations as patterns of stars named after mythological figures. There are now 88 official constellations. Brighter stars have proper names and are assigned Greek letters within their constellations based on brightness. The magnitude scale, from 1st to 6th magnitude, describes apparent brightness, with each step representing a star being 2.512 times brighter.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Lecture 3 – The Sky

Constellations, Star Names, and Magnitudes


The Constellations

•Origins
• Star patterns named by
ancient peoples after gods,
goddesses, animals,
monsters, and mythic
heroes.
• The constellations used by
Western Culture today
originated in Mesopotamia
around 3,000 B.C.
The Constellations
• Only certain stars were part
of the pattern and belonged
to the constellation. Faint
stars were not part of any
constellations.
• Frequently constellations
were named for their
brightest star.
• Of the constellations defined
by the Babylonians,
Egyptians, and Greeks, 48
are still used today.
The Constellations

• The ancient civilizations


we got the 48 classical
constellations from
couldn’t see the entire
southern sky.
• During the Age of Sail,
European explorers
added 40 modern
constellations in the
“uncharted” areas of the
sky.
The Constellations

• The 48 classical and the 40 modern


constellations make up the 88 official
constellations used by astronomers today.
• The term constellation also now has a new
meaning:
• No longer refers to the pattern of stars itself.
• Now refers to a well defined region of the sky that
contains the traditional star pattern.
• Everything inside that region of the sky is now part
of the constellation, like a “celestial state”.
The Constellations
What Is An Asterism?
• In addition to the 88
official constellations
there are several
unofficial but popular
star patterns.
• Called asterisms.
• Examples:
• The Big Dipper
• The Little Dipper
• The Northern Cross
• The Great Square
3D Constellations
• The stars of a
constellation only
appear to be close
to one another
• Usually, this is only
a projection effect.
• The stars of a
constellation may
be located at very
different distances
from us.
The Celestial Sphere
• Many ancient cultures,
including the Greeks and
Romans, assumed that the
Earth was stationary in the
center of the Universe.
• Given this assumption, they
concluded that the Sun,
Moon, planets, and stars were
attached to gigantic crystalline
spheres that surrounded the
Earth.
• Today we call this imaginary
globe the Celestial Sphere.
Celestial Sphere Concepts
THE CELESTIAL SPHERE REPRESENTS THE APPARENT VIEW
OF THE UNIVERSE AS SEEN FROM THE EARTH.
• A huge globe of stars surrounding the Earth.
• An ancient concept of the Cosmos.
IT IS A USEFUL CONCEPT TODAY BECAUSE:
• it is understandable in terms of spherical geometry.
• it can be used to extend map concepts for the Earth to the
sky.
• it is useful in navigation.
RELATIONSHIP TO THE VISIBLE SKY
• The visible sky is 1/2 the celestial sphere.
• Half of the celestial sphere is above the horizon, while the
other half is below the horizon.
The Celestial Sphere
Zenith = Point on
the celestial sphere
directly overhead
Nadir = Point on the
c.s. directly
underneath (not
visible!)

Celestial equator =

projection of Earth’s
equator onto the c. s.

North celestial
Angular Measure In The Sky

• 360o = A COMPLETE
CIRCLE
• 1o = 60’ (minutes)
• 1’ = 60” (seconds)
Latitude Affects Visible Sky

• What we see in the sky depends on our latitude.


• At the north pole, the north celestial pole is at the
zenith.
• At the equator, the north celestial pole is at the
horizon.
• The altitude of the north celestial pole = latitude.
The Sky From Abilene – 32.4o N

• North Celestial Pole is 32.4o above the northern


horizon.
• Celestial Equator is 57.6o above the southern
horizon.
• Circumpolar stars lie within 32.4o of the North
Celestial Pole.
• Rising & Setting stars are visible from 32.4o away
from the South Celestial Pole.
• Stars within 32.4o of the South Celestial Pole are
never visible from Abilene.
Looking North
• The stars appear to circle around the North Celestial Pole
(near Polaris) once in 24 hours.
• Stars within the angle of the observer's latitude away from
the North Celestial Pole never rise or set.
• They are always above the horizon (circumpolar stars).
Circumpolar Constellations
• Never Rise Or Set
• Are Always Above The Horizon
• Circumpolar Region Depends On Latitude
Naming The Stars

•The brightest stars have had proper


names for thousands of years.
• Typically from Arabic
• Islamic astronomers produced many detailed star
charts during the middle ages.
• Also many stars have names that are from
the Greek
• Greek astronomers also produced many star charts.
Naming the Stars

• Proper names are often a literal description of the


star’s location in the constellation:
• Betelgeuse – “Shoulder of the giant”
• Rigel – “Foot”
• Deneb – “Tail”
• Procyon – “Before the dog”
• Algol – “Eye of the ghoul”
• Star proper names also sometimes describe the
star.
• Sirius – “Scorching”
• Antares – “Rival of Mars”
• Kochab – “Star”
Scam Alert!

• NO organization has been


given official legal power to
name the stars.
• Astronomers consider the
names designated by the
International Astronomical
Union official, but the IAU has
no true legal authority to
name stars (or demote
planets, for that matter).
• Companies that sell star
names as gifts are a SCAM!
Bayer Letter Names
•Johann Bayer
• Bavararian lawyer
• Published a sky atlas: Uranometria.
• Assigned lower case greek letters to brighter
stars in each constellation.
• Usually assigned in rough order of brightness.
• Alpha = brightest star.
• Beta = second brightest
• Gamma = third brightest
• And so on…
• Astronomers continue to use these “Bayer
letters”
Bayer Letter Names
• A star’s Bayer Letter Name is:
• It’s greek letter first…
• …followed by the possessive form of the constellation name.
• Example: The star Rigel Kentarus is the brightest star in the
constellation Centarus:
• Alpha Centauri
The Magnitude Scale

• Invented by the Greek


Astronomer Hipparchus in
the 2nd century B.C.
• Called the brightest stars
in the night sky “stars of
the first magnitude.”
• Second brightest were
“stars of the second
magnitude.”
• All the way down to “stars
of the sixth magnitude.”
The Magnitude Scale

•Very useful system, but not perfect


• Technically, it refers to Apparent Visual
Magnitude
• Brightness in visible wavelengths as seen from Earth
• Does NOT tell how bright the star actually is
(absolute magnitude) because it does not take
into account how far away the star is from us.
• Still useful because it is related to the
brightness that you “see” (even through a
telescope).
The Magnitude Scale
•Used for centuries, and then refined by modern
astronomers.
• 1st magnitude stars are 100 times brighter than 6th
magnitude stars.
• So 5 “steps” in the magnitude scale corresponds to a 100×
difference in brightness.
• What brightness difference corresponds to 1 step in magnitude?
• Need to know what number you have to multiply by itself five
times to get 100.
• That number is 2.5118864315095…. (usually rounded to 2.512
when used in calculations).
• So 1 step in magnitude corresponds to a 2.512× difference in
brightness.
The Magnitude Scale

If Star A is has a …then Star A is this


magnitude this much many times brighter
less than Star B… than Star B.
1 2.512×
2 6.310×
3 15.85×
4 39.82×
5 100×
The Magnitude Scale
The magnitude scale system can be extended towards
negative numbers (very bright) and numbers > 6 (faint
objects):

Sirius (brightest star in the sky): mv = -1.42


Full moon: mv = -12.5
Sun: mv = -26.5
The Magnitude Scale This thing in
parentheses
• Here’s the actual equation: here is an
exponent. So
I /I = (2.512) (mB-mA) say mB – mA is a
A B number we’ll
call X. You
would read
this equation
This number right here is “how asbright
“2.512star A
is compared to star B” raised to the X
power.” than
If it is >1, then star A is brighter
star B.

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