Understanding How the Sky MovesTo locate, understand, and appreciate the astronomical objects you look at, you need a basic understanding of how the sky moves. This is especially true if you have a tripod with an equatorial mount, since these are specifically designed to match the motion of the sky. Note: this article is written from the perspective of an observer in the Northern hemisphere. The same concepts apply in the Southern hemisphere, except for the absence of a stationary pole star.
What's the Problem?The beginner in our fictional article was disturbed by the fact that objects he was looking at kept drifting out of his field of view, always in the same direction. He assumed there was something loose on his telescope. There probably was something loose, but that was not why things were moving out of his field of view; it was because the rotation of the Earth makes objects in the sky appear to move. Beginners will also notice that objects aren't in the same place each night. The stars move slowly, causing certain constellations to move around in the North, while others are visible only during certain seasons. Other objects, like the Moon, appear to have yet another schedule, moving around the sky at their own pace. What You've Probably NoticedEven if you haven't been studying astronomy, you have probably noticed certain things through your life:
What's Going On?It's fairly simple geometry. Which we're not going to into here -- there are many excellent books on planetary mechanics. All the motions and changes you see are a result of four simple facts:
What You See When You Look UpThe above facts are sufficient to explain all the motions you see when you look at the sky. Standing on the ground, we do not perceive the motion of the Earth, either its rotation or its orbit around the Sun -- instead, it seems to us as though we are stationary and the sky is moving around us. Since the Earth is rotating around its axis, the stars directly above the axis don't seem to move much. The North Star is almost directly above the axis and seems completely stationary. As we move away from due North, the stars appear to move, tracing circular paths around the North Star, with one time around the circle taking 24 hours. The North Star itself would appear directly overhead if you were standing on the North Pole. If you are South of the North Pole, the North Star will appear somewhere between the horizon and directly overhead. The angle above the horizon is equal to your latitude, so in Ottawa, I see it as about 45 degrees above the horizon.
Because the planets all lie in roughly the same plane, the Sun and Planets all follow approximately the same path through the sky. This path, called the Ecliptic, is the projection onto the sky of the plane of the solar system. The easily visible planets like Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter are always on or very close to this line. What You See In Your Telescope
Timing and MovementIt's interesting (or so I think anyway) to do some simple math and think about the effects of some of the movements we see. Movement in One NightSince the Earth rotates every 24 hours, any given star must move completely around the sky in 24 hours. A complete circle around the sky is 360 degrees. 360 degrees in 24 hours is 360/24 = 15 degrees per hour, or 0.25 degrees per minute. You can do a lot with those figures. Some examples:
Movement Between NightsThe Earth orbits the Sun once every 365.25 days. So, at some fixed time of night (say, midnight) any given star will be in a given position one day, slightly moved from that position the next day, and so on, returning to the same position 365.25 days later. So, at the same time of night, a star moves its apparent position 360 / 365.25 = 0.99 degrees each day. Let's call it 1 degree. So if a star - say, Sirius - is just at the horizon at 9:00 PM on a given day, it will be about 30 degrees higher at 9:00 PM about 30 days later. If the Big Dipper is sitting flat in the sky at midnight on a given day (i.e. horizontal and able to hold water), at midnight 180 days later it will be upside down, on the other side of the North Star. The PlanetsThe planets appear to move across the sky, following the Ecliptic, at almost the same rate at which the stars move. However, since the planets are also orbiting the Sun at their own rates, they do not appear completely stationary against the background stars. Instead, they will move slowly between the stars and constellations. The planets closest to the Sun move quickly, so Mercury and Venus will appear to change their position in the sky, relative to the stars, quite quickly - noticebly moving in only a few days. The outer planets move slowly, so Jupiter and Saturn will appear to very slowly drift between the stars, leaving one constellation and entering the next every year or two. It was this motion across the background of stars that first drew the attention of early observers to the planets, making it obvious that something different was going on with those points of light. The planets can even appear to move backward against the stars for brief periods, because of the line of sight effects of the Earth and the other planet's position in their orbits. Explaining this occasional backward motion was one of the biggest challenges for early astronomers trying to work out an accurate model of the sky. The MoonThe Moon orbits the Earth every 27.3 days. 360 degrees / 27.3 days = approximately 13 degrees per day. So at any given time of night, the moon will appear to have move 13 degrees in the sky from one day to the next.
A full moon is when the Sun and Moon are on opposite sides of the Earth. We are directly between them, so the light of the Sun is reflected straight back at us. This is why a full moon always rises exactly at sunset, and sets exactly at sunrise. (You'll sometimes read stories or see movies involving a full moon rising late at night. That's an error, it can't happen that way.) After the full moon, the shrinking crescent (called waning) rises later and later in the evening, until it actually rises during daylight and is visible in the early morning. Eventually the moon is completely invisible when it is between the Earth and the Sun, reflecting no light toward us. Then the crescent starts to grow (waxing), visible early in the evening. ConclusionThe sky is an active place, with stars whirling around the North pole, and the Sun and planets tracing an invisible path through the sky at varying speeds. While everything appears stationary to a casual glance upward, your telescope will magnify the motion enough to actually see it. Understanding the motion of the sky is important to help you plan your observing sessions, know where to find interesting objects, and understand the changes you'll encounter throughout the year. Comments?Polite comments welcome at this article's blog entry. |
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Copyright ©
2008
Richard McDonald |