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chapter01 - California State University, Long Beach
chapter01 - California State University, Long Beach

... methods they used, and approximately when they lived. Contribution of Kepler, Copernicus, Galileo and Newton and about when they lived. Kepler's laws and their use. The Kelvin Temperature scale. This chapter introduces some important ideas that will be needed later, such as parallax (also described ...
stars - Chatt
stars - Chatt

... • As the star gets older, it swells in size. • Our Sun will become a Red Giant as it runs out of fuel. • When it “dies” it will become a white dwarf. • Our Sun is bigger than 95% of the stars in the Universe. • The Size Of Our World ...
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... Just  risen  –  Star  Wheel   Just  set  –  Star  Wheel   ...
Astr 1 010 Spring2Ol2 Quiz 1 Name: (Your score
Astr 1 010 Spring2Ol2 Quiz 1 Name: (Your score

... 5) Suppose a total solar eclipse takes place on June 1. No eclipse took place in May. What will happen on June 15th or 16th? lunar eclipse. B) An annular solar eclipse. C) No eclipse at all. D) The Sun will pass between the Earth and the Moon. ...
Corresponding Angles and Distances forvJarded expressly for
Corresponding Angles and Distances forvJarded expressly for

Motion of the Celestial Bodies
Motion of the Celestial Bodies

... Annular Eclipse – A solar eclipse that occurs when the apparent size of the Moon is not great enough to completely cover the Sun. A thin ring of sunlight can be seen around the black disk of the Moon. Lunar eclipse - The passage of the Moon into the shadow of the Earth, always occurring at a full M ...
Common Misconceptions in Astronomy and History
Common Misconceptions in Astronomy and History

... masses, but not so for anyone who had received a formal education and who could read. Columbus could read, and he was familiar with Greek texts which spoke of a spherical Earth as well as the circumference of the Earth. It was the Earth's circumference that was in disagreement among European scholar ...
Astronomy Teaching that Focuses on Learning Subtitled
Astronomy Teaching that Focuses on Learning Subtitled

... • The North Star is the brightest star in the sky • Astronauts on the Space Shuttle float because there is no gravity in space • The Space Shuttle goes to the Moon every week • Black holes fly around and vacuum up stars • The Solar System contains hundreds of stars • The Big Bang was an organization ...
December 2014 - Coconino Astronomical Society
December 2014 - Coconino Astronomical Society

... noticed by the Greek astronomer Hipparchus (c. 129 BCE) who observed that star positions had shifted in a systematic way from earlier Babylonian catalogues. Because the Earth's precession occurs in the opposite direction to the Earth's orbit, the Ecliptic and Celestial Equator move in opposite direc ...
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... Equinox for North America. Make sure to point Axis towards the North Star. ...
What are stars?
What are stars?

... - We know now that the stars in a constellation are not necessarily very close together, but appear to be due to our line of sight - Examples – Orion, Ursa Major (Big Dipper) ...
s*t*a*r chart - Ontario Science Centre
s*t*a*r chart - Ontario Science Centre

changing constellations
changing constellations

January 2012 - Powerhouse Museum
January 2012 - Powerhouse Museum

... www.sydneyobservatory.com.au Ph (02) 9921 3485 ...
Exploring Our Solar System
Exploring Our Solar System

... Moon Phases Activity Why do we see only one side of the moon? Click below for activity to find out! ...
Announcements
Announcements

Mountain Skies - Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute
Mountain Skies - Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute

... and casual viewers of the sky. Try exploring this area of the sky with a pair of binoculars. The planets: The stage is being set for the late-July appearance of all five visible or naked-eye planets in the evening skies. We’re not quite there yet but it is fun to see how soon this month we can see t ...
Locating Objects in Space
Locating Objects in Space

... (where the celestial equator and ecliptic cross one another) *like longitude on Earth ...
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ppt file

... This Week & Next: Astronomy in Motion Today: Historical Background & Basic Refresher ...
Deep Space Mystery Note Form 3
Deep Space Mystery Note Form 3

...  First was in 185 AD  Chinese Astronomers saw it.  Up in the sky for 8 months.  Brightest- SN 1006 recorded by Chinese and Islamic astronomers  SN 1054 produced the Crab Nebula.  Latest observed in the milky way with the naked eye was SN 1572 and SN 1604  Telescope has allowed us to look fart ...
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... the night sky that didn’t stay fixed like stars • We named them planets from the Greek word for “wanderers” • Planets seemed to move independently, so they were named after gods ...
downloadable pdf - University of Florida
downloadable pdf - University of Florida

... astronomers may have discovered the brightest star yet observed in the universe, a fiery behemoth that could be as much as seven times brighter than the current record holder. But don’t expect to find the star — which is at least 5 million times brighter than the sun — in the night sky. Dust particl ...
Distance Lab: The Astronomical Unit
Distance Lab: The Astronomical Unit

... 1. Define Astronomical Unit, Parallax, and light year in your notebook. Use page 104 in the textbook to help you out. 2. Parallax: Look up at the balloon globe hanging above the teachers’ desk. Behind the globe are some pictures of mountains and glaciers that are numbered 1-10. Which number do you s ...
PH109 Exploring the Universe
PH109 Exploring the Universe

... d) Jupiter was not perfect but had moving clouds of gas. 2) When Galileo viewed the Moon, what discovery helped change our view of the solar system? a) Because the Moon rises in the East and sets in the West, its orbit must be opposite that of the planets. b) The Moon went through phases like Jupite ...
January 2007 - Western Nevada Astronomical Society
January 2007 - Western Nevada Astronomical Society

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Chinese astronomy



Astronomy in China has a very long history, with historians indicating that the Chinese were the most persistent and accurate observers of celestial phenomena anywhere in the world before the Arabs. Star names later categorized in the twenty-eight mansions have been found on oracle bones unearthed at Anyang, dating back to the middle Shang Dynasty (Chinese Bronze Age), and the mansion (xiù:宿) system's nucleus seems to have taken shape by the time of the ruler Wu Ding (1339-1281 BC).Detailed records of astronomical observations began during the Warring States period (fourth century BC) and flourished from the Han period onward. Chinese astronomy was equatorial, centered as it was on close observation of circumpolar stars, and was based on different principles from those prevailing in traditional Western astronomy, where heliacal risings and settings of zodiac constellations formed the basic ecliptic framework.Some elements of Indian astronomy reached China with the expansion of Buddhism after the Eastern Han Dynasty (25–220 AD), but the most detailed incorporation of Indian astronomical thought occurred during the Tang Dynasty (618-907), when numerous Indian astronomers took up residence in the Chinese capital, and Chinese scholars, such as the great Tantric Buddhist monk and mathematician Yi Xing, mastered its system. Islamic astronomers collaborated closely with their Chinese colleagues during the Yuan Dynasty, and, after a period of relative decline during the Ming Dynasty, astronomy was revitalized under the stimulus of Western cosmology and technology after the Jesuits established their missions. The telescope was introduced in the seventeenth century. In 1669, the Peking observatory was completely redesigned and refitted under the direction of Ferdinand Verbiest. Today, China continues to be active in astronomy, with many observatories and its own space program.
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