Math, Math, Math!
Ancient Astronomers
Telescopes
The Night Sky
Stars & Galaxies
100

a) What does AU stand for?

b) How many kilometres are in one AU?

-astronomical unit

-150 million

100

Explain the main difference between the geocentric and heliocentric models and name the astronomer who coined each term.

geocentric- earth at the centre of universe (Ptolemy)

heliocentric- sun at the centre of the universe (Copernicus)

100

What are the two types of telescopes and what do they each use?

Refracting- uses lenses to focus light

Reflecting- uses mirrors to focus light

100

Briefly explain what the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram shows and patterns within the chart.

top left- hot, bright

top right- cool, bright

bottom left- hot, dim

bottom right- cool, dim

100

Name the 3 types of galaxies AND briefly explain the shape of each (include sub category explanations)

Elliptical (round, football shaped, scale of 0-7, 0 being round, 7 being flattened)

Irregular (characteristics do not fall under elliptical or spiral)

Spiral (subcategories- spiral or barred-spiral, a-b-c, a being arms tightly wound to centre/bar, c being arms loosely wound)


200

Orbital velocity is shown with the formula:

2πR/T

What does the R stand for in this formula?

R- average radius of the orbit

200

Differentiate between aphelion and perihelion.

Aphelion- farthest from the sun

Perihelion- closest to the sun

200

What are the 3 powers of a telescope?

-light gathering power

-resolving power

-magnifying power

200

Differentiate between an asterism and a constellation. Give one example of each. 

asterism- a named group of stars (Big dipper, great square of pegasus)

constellation- an area of the sky that contains groups of stars (ursa major, sagitarius, pegasus, taurus)

200

Explain the difference between a globular cluster and an open cluster. Give 3 differences.

Globular- 10,000-1 million stars, spherical area, 75 light years across, older stars

Open- 100-1000 stars, younger stars, located in disk of galaxy

300

Differentiate between Azimuth and Altitude. How would you calculate each? What two instruments are necessary to measure both?

Azimuth- measure from true north to object (horizontal) (0-360)

Altitude- measure from horizon to object (0-90)

You would need a compass and astrolabe to accurately measure both altitude and azimuth. 

300

Kepler came up with 3 laws of motion. What did his second law (equal area law) explain?

As a planet moves around its orbit, it sweeps out equal areas in equal times.

300

What is interferometry and what can it achieve (what is the advantage?)

-connecting multiple telescopes together to work as if they were a single telescope

-can achieve higher resolution

300

differentiate between apparent visual magnitude and absolute magnitude. Explain the number system for apparent visual magnitude and what it means. 

apparent- how bright an object looks from Earth

-higher number= dimmer

-lower number= brighter


-absolute- how bright an object actually is 


300

a) what is a variable star?

b)What are the 2 types of variable stars and differentiate between the pulsation periods of each

-stars that pulsate in brightness because of the expansion and contraction of their outer layers


-RR Lyrae (1.5 hours and a day) & Cepheid variable stars (1 and 100 days)


400

If Star A has a magnitude of 4.0, and star B has a magnitude of 10.32, what is the intensity ratio? Which is the brighter star?

(mB – mA) = (10.32 – 4.0) = 6.32

2.512 6.32 = 337

Thus Star A is 337 times brighter than Star B

400

Which astronomer saw sunspots, phases of Venus and developed the concept of inertia?

Galileo

400

What is the magnification of a microscope whose primary mirror has a focal length of 80 cm if it is used with an eyepiece whose focal length is 0.5 cm?

M = Fp/Fe                               

= 80/0.5                              

= 160 times

400

Explain Right Ascension and Declination.

RA- analagous to longitude (vertical), measured from 0-24 hours from east or west of the vernal equinox

Dec-analagous to latitude on earth, measured from 0-90 degrees north or south of the celestial equator

400

Differentiate between population I and II stars and where they are found within the galaxy

I- young sequence stars, small amounts of heavy elements, spiral and irregular, found in disk arms and open clusters


II- old main sequence stars, elliptical and spiral halos, found in bulge and halo

500

Mars and Earth are 55.8 million km apart.

The angular diameter of Mars is observed to be 25.1 arc seconds.

Find the diameter of the red planet.

θ = 25.1”

D =55.8 x 106 km  or 5.58 x 107 km

d = ?

θD / 206 265"     =     d

25.1” x  5.58 x 107 km     =    6,790 km

         206,265”

Thus the diameter of Mars is ~ 6,790 km  

500

State Sir Isaac Newton's 3 Laws of Motion.

-an object will remain at rest or in uniform motion in a straight line unless acted upon by an external force. 

-the relationship between an object's mass, its acceleration, and the applied force is F=ma

-For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.

500

                                                                       

Compare a 4 cm telescope with a 24 cm telescope. How much more light will the larger telescope gather?

                                                       


    

LGPA/LGPB= (24/4)2

=62
36 times more light


                                                       


    

500
Differentiate between the horizon coordinate system and the equatorial system.

H-based on what an observer sees in the sky, altitude and azimuth, fixed to earth not the stars, same object will have different coordinate numbers depending on observation point and time.

E- object has a fixed position on celestial sphere, always same coordinate numbers, apparent positions change over time as earth rotates, not all stars visible to observer.

500

List AND describe the 3 theories of the future of the universe

Open- keep expanding

Flat- expand to a point and then stop

Closed- expand to a point and then contract