Astronomy-BSc 2022elective
Astronomy-BSc 2022elective
Astronomy-BSc 2022elective
– Importance of Astronomy
– Methods of Astronomy and Astrophysics
– Scope of Astronomy
The Constellations
• 88 constellations in the sky. Those in the northern celestial
hemisphere named by the Greeks. Constellations in the
extreme southern sky were named in modern times.
• The rotation of the Earth about its spin axis once every
24 hours causes diurnal effects including day and night
and the rising and setting of celestial objects.
• The revolution of the Earth about the sun once every
365.2422… days produces annual effects such as the
sun appearing to move with respect to the stars along a
path in the sky called the ecliptic. The twelve
constellations lying along the ecliptic comprise the
zodiac.
• The apparent motions of celestial objects on the sky are
the combined result of diurnal and annual motions
and, in the case of the planets their own orbital motions
around the sun.
Terrestrial Coordinates
* Greenwich
*
Bangalore
latitude Equator
longitude
For Bangalore:
latitude = 12° 58' N
longitude = 77° 38' E
Longitude and Latitude
• Latitude: Your north-south position on Earth.
The equator is defined to have a latitude of
0o. The north pole is at 90oN and the south
o
pole at 90 S.
• Longitude: Your east-west position on Earth.
An arbitrary point, the Prime Meridian in
Greenwich, England marks a longitude of 0o.
The Celestial Sphere
The celestial sphere is an imaginary sphere on which all the celestial objects are
located. However, the location of a celestial object on the celestial sphere only tells
us about the orientation of the objects, but not the distant. Two stars located very
close together in the sky may in fact very far apart because their distance to Earth
are very different.
Celestial sphere
The Celestial Sphere
The Celestial Sphere
The Celestial Sphere
• North Celestial Pole: The point directly over
the Earth’s true north pole.
– The north star, Polaris, is near the North Celestial
Pole, but not exactly at the pole. It is currently
about 1 degree away from the pole.
• South Celestial Pole: The point directly over
the Earth’s true south pole.
• Celestial Equator: The equator of the Earth
projected onto the celestial sphere.
• Meridian: A line from due north to due south
that passes straight overhead.
Ecliptic
• Ecliptic – “road of the sun”
– imaginary path that the Sun follows on the
celestial sphere over the course of a year
The Motion of the Stars
Just like the Sun and Moon the stars rise and set due to
the rotation of the Earth.
They rise in the east and set in the west because Earth
rotates from west to east.
Stars near the celestial poles do not rise or set. Instead
they circle the poles and are called circumpolar.In the
northern hemisphere, the stars circle the pole in a
counterclockwise direction.
North Celestial Pole
4. Galactic System
Horizontal Coordinate System (Alt/
Az coordinate system)
• The horizontal coordinates are:
• altitude (Alt), that is the angle between the object
and the observer's local horizon.
• azimuth (Az), that is the angle of the object
around the horizon (measured from the North
point, toward the East).
• The horizontal coordinate system is fixed to the
Earth, not the stars
• Used for determining the rise and set times of an
object in the sky.
• When an object's altitude is 0°, it is rising (if its
azimuth<180°) and setting (if its azimuth >180°)
Altitude and Azimuth
FGC is the local horizon
two vertical circles passing through the North and south poles define
the celestial meridian
Coordinates
Declination (dec): The north-south position of
a star on the celestial sphere. Declination is
measured in degrees, arc minutes, and arc
seconds. The celestial equator is defined to
o
have a declination of 0 .
Right Ascension (RA): The east-west
coordinates of an object on the celestial
sphere. R.A. is measured in hours, minutes,
and seconds of time. The vernal equinox is
h
defined to be 0 .
RA and Dec
Celestial Coordinates
Celestial Coordinates
Vega
RA 18h35m
o
DEC +38 44’
Summary of Celestial Coordinates for Positional
Astronomy
The reference plane of the galactic coordinate system is the disc of our
Galaxy (i.e. the Milky Way) and the intersection of this plane with the
celestial sphere is known as the galactic equator, which is inclined by
about 63° to the celestial equator.