Transcript Document

Welcome to
Starry Monday at Otterbein
Astronomy Lecture Series
-every first Monday of the monthFebruary 7, 2005
Dr. Uwe Trittmann
Today’s Topics
• Famous Telescopes
• Objects worthy to be observed
• The Night Sky in February
Feedback!
• Please write down suggestions/your interests on the
note pads provided
• If you would like to hear from us, please leave your
email / address
• To learn more about astronomy and physics at
Otterbein, please visit
– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/weitkamp.asp (Obs.)
– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/ (Physics Dept.)
Telescopes
• From Galileo to Hubble
Telescopes
• Light
collectors
• Two types:
– Reflectors
(Mirrors)
– Refractors
(Lenses)
Famous Telescopes - Galileo
• Galileo’s first telescope was 3x magnifying
• his last one 32 x
Famous Telescopes -Newton
• First Reflector ever
• Built around 1670
• After this: gargantuan
Telescopes!
Famous Telescopes - Hevelius
Rooftop observatory of Johannes Hevelius (1670)
Famous Telescopes - Hevelius
60 inch ^
140 inch 
Famous Telescopes - Herschel
Herschel detected Uranus (1781)
Famous Telescopes – Lord Ross
• 72 inch Reflector
• built during potato famine in Ireland
• Largest Telescope until Mt Wilson
(1917)
Famous Telescopes – Yerkes
• Largest Refractor
Telescope ever
• 40 inch lens
• Built 1897
Famous Telescopes – Mt Palomar
• 5 Meter Telescope – Huge and heavy mirror
• On Mt. Palomar in California
Famous
Telescopes –
Hubble Space
Telescope
• In orbit around earth
• No limitations due
to earth’s
atmosphere
• Brilliant pictures
Famous Telescopes – Arecibo Radio
Telescope
• Located in
Puerto Rico
• 300m
diameter
• Receives
Radio waves
• Built 1963
• SETI
Famous People
Hubble in prime focus of
Mt Palomar.
Einstein visits Mt Wilson
Hubble detected the Expansion of the Universe
 Proof of Einstein’s General Relativity Theory
Largest Earth-Based Telescopes
• Keck I and II,
Mauna Kea,
Hawai’i
– 36  1.8 m
hexagonal mirrors;
equivalent to 10 m
– Above most of
atmosphere
(almost 14,000 ft
ASL)
– Operating since
1993
Visiting Mauna Kea
Mauna Kea
• Elevation: 14,000 ft.
• Oxygen: 60%
• Freezing on top,
snorkeling at sea level
• Road: strictly 4 wheels!
Mauna Kea
Maui
• 325 observing
days per year!
• Darkest skies on
the planet!
The biggest Telescopes in the World
Sunset on
Mauna Kea
Classifying Objects
• Sun and Moon
• Planets and their moons
• Stars and Constellations
– Variable stars
• The Milky Way
• Deep Sky Objects
– Star Clusters (Open and Globular)
– Bright and Dark Nebulae
– Galaxies (used to be called nebulae also)
When to observe which Objects
• The surface features on the Moon are best
seen when the Moon is not full (nor new )
• Observe Jupiter’s four Galilean moons with
binoculars whenever Jupiter’s up
• Small telescope will show Saturn’s rings
• Milky Way can be seen under dark skies
(…but already in Madison county)
Deep Sky Objects
• Usually faint and/or small
• Best observed under dark skies/ moonless
nights
• Some are binocular objects, some require
sizeable telescopes
Deep Sky Objects: Open Clusters
•Classic example: Plejades (M45)
•Few hundred stars
•Young: “just born”
Still parts of matter
around the stars
Deep Sky Objects: Globular Clusters
• Classic example: Great Hercules Cluster (M13)
• Spherical clusters
• may contain
millions of stars
• Old stars
• Great tool to study
stellar life cycle
Observing Stellar Evolution: Example
From the Rooftop
Plejades in Taurus,
Open Cluster
M92 in Hercules,
Globular Cluster 
Deep Sky Objects: Nebulae
Classic example: Orion Nebula (M 42)
• hot glowing gas
Temperatures ~ 8000K
• Made to glow by
ultraviolet radiation
emitted by young
O- or B-type (hot)
stars located inside
• Color predominantly
red, the color of a
particular hydrogen
emission line (“H”)
Friday
Night
• 27 seconds
exposure
Friday
Night
• 87 seconds
exposure
Dark Nebulae
• Classic Example: Horsehead Nebula in Orion
Trifid Nebula (M20)
Good example for
dark dust lanes in
front of an emission
nebula
Deep Sky Objects: Planetary Nebulae
• Classic Example: Ring nebula in Lyra (M57)
(Here: “Eye of God” Nebula)
• Dead, exploded stars
• We see gas expanding
in a sphere
• In the middle is the
dead star, a
“White Dwarf”
Friday Night: Eskimo Nebula
Eskimo Nebula:close up
Deep Sky Objects: Galaxies
• Classic example: Andromeda Galaxy (M31)
• “Island universes”
• Made out of billions
of stars and dust
• Very far away
(millions of ly’s)
• Different types:
– Spiral, elliptic, irr.
Deep Sky Catalogues
• Some of the best deep sky objects can be found in the
Messier Catalogue (e.g. M 31)
• Messier (around 1770) catalogued the objects not to
confuse them with comets
• There are 110 Messier Objects
• Other catalogues:
– NGC: new general catalogue (1880) lists 7800 objects
– Caldwell list: 109 best non-messier objects
– Herschel 400: from Herschel’s famous list, early 1800’s
The Night Sky in February
• The sun is still very low in the sky -> long nights!
• Winter constellations (Orion, Gemini, Taurus,…)
contain many bright stars and objects
• Saturn was in Opposition last month (i.e. at its
brightest)
Moon Phases
• Today (Waning crescent, 2%)
• 2 / 8 (New Moon)
• 2 / 15 (First Quarter Moon)
• 2 / 28 (Full Moon)
• 3 / 3 (Last Quarter Moon)
Today
at
Noon
Sun at
meridian,
i.e.
exactly
south
10 PM
Typical
observing
hour, early
January
no Moon
Saturn!
Midnight
Jupiter
Zenith
High in the
sky:
Perseus and
Auriga
with Plejades and
the Double
Cluster
NorthEast
Big Dipper
points to the
north pole
Due
South
The Winter
Constellations
–
–
–
–
–
Orion
Taurus
Canis Major
Gemini
Canis Minor
East
Spring
Constellations
- Cancer
- Leo
- Hydra
Deep Sky
Objects:
- Beehive
Cluster (M44)
Mark your Calendars!
• Next Starry Monday at Otterbein: March 7, 2005, 7 pm
(this is a Monday
• We’ll talk about Mars Missions and more…
• Web pages:
– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/weitkamp.asp (Obs.)
– http://www.otterbein.edu/dept/PHYS/ (Physics Dept.)
)