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STARS AND GALAXIES

 

                Stars are formed from the matter which is supposed to have originated from the interstellar dust which was the by product of Big Bang. All of the stars that have names (about 2-300 of them) and were named between 500 and 2000+ years ago. Most of the star names in use today came from Arabic names. These days, all stars are named for their coordinates by the IAU (International Astronomical Union).

We are in the milky way Galaxy at about half way from the middle to the edge on one side. The illuminated strip we see in the sky as the Milky Way, is the light from many of the stars in our almost disk-shaped galaxy. The Milky Way virtually wraps around the whole sky because of the three dimensional shape. Cosmic dust and the dark matter in the Galaxies makes them opaque, so we can only see about 5-10% of the way across with visible-light telescopes. The radio and infrared telescopes penetrate farther.

 Right Ascension and Declination are coordinates which identify a star's location in the sky. RA is similar to longitude on the Earth while Dec is like latitude. However, while Dec is measured in degrees, arcminutes and arcseconds, RA is measured in hours minutes and seconds. To convert to degrees, multiply the RA by 15 (since 360 degrees divided by 24 hours is 15).

 B and V are measures of a star's brightness through a mostly blue and mostly green filter (respectively). The brightness is measured in magnitudes, which are a somewhat complex concept. Briefly, a lower (or more negative) magnitude is brighter and a larger magnitude is fainter. It's on a logarithmic scale though. B-V is an approximate measure of the color of a star (low means blue, high means red).

 Spectral type is a measure of the kind of star. They go in the following order: O, B, A, F, G, K, M. O stars are typically the brightest, bluest, most massive and shortest lived stars. M stars on the other hand are often the faintest, reddest, least massive and longest lived. The Sun is a G star, so it is somewhere in the middle.

The letters don't actually mean anything. They were chosen before astronomers really understood stars. The stars were classified as A, B, C, etc. Later, when star temperatures were figured out, they reordered them. The number following the letter is the subclass. For example, within G, stars are further classified from G0 to G1 through G9 from hottest to coolest. The Sun is a G2. The last letter is a Roman numeral indicating the type of star from I (supergiant) to III (giant) to V (normal, but called "dwarf") to VI (subdwarf).

 The flickering of the stars we see is due to turbulence in the atmosphere. It's just like how things look wavy when you look over a hot grill in the summer, only on a smaller scale. An even better analogy is that looking at stars from inside our atmosphere is like birdwatching from the bottom of a swimming pool: the ripples distort the picture. That's one of the main reasons why space telescopes, like Hubble, provide such sharp pictures.

In addition to contributing turbulence, the atmosphere also acts like a prism when you look at stars near the horizon. Since the star colors get split into a rainbow plus the turbulence makes the star move around, it can appear like the star is changing color.

 The Zodiac is the ring of constellations that the Sun seems to pass through each year as the Earth orbits around it. Contrary to popular belief, there are actually 13 zodiacal constellations, if you pay attention to the way astronomers define them. In addition to Capricornus, Aquarius, Pisces, Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpius, and Sagittarius; the Sun also passes through Ophiuchus.

 All the "Signs of the Zodiac" are off by about one month. (hint: astrology was invented more than 2000 years ago and the precession of the Earth's pole has caused changes in the positions of the stars since then).

The path the Sun follows is called the ecliptic. The ecliptic plane is the plane defined by the Earth's orbit around the Sun. All of the planets except Pluto orbit very near the ecliptic plane, so you will usually find all of them in zodiacal constellations.

 Common FAQ's about Stars Answered By Chris Dolan

 

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