CONSTELLATION
The light of the darklest space
Twinkle, twinkle little star, how I wonder what you are?......
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What is Constellation
When you go outside on a dark clear night, looke up into the night sky and see hundreds if not thousands of stars randomly spread across the sky. How do you tell one from another? The answers is you learn the Comstellation. At night, you can see many glittering objects in the sky. These objects are called star. A group of stars that form pattern is called a Constellation. We can see millioons of dots of light ib thr night sky. Most of these are stars. Observe the patterns formed by these are stars. Do you know how important they are?
Monday, November 12, 2012
Saturday, April 16, 2011
ZODIAC
A band around the sky about 18?wide, centered on the ecliptic, in which the Sun, Moon, and planets move.
The band is divided into 12 signs of the zodiac, each 30° long, that were named by the ancient Greeks after the constellations that used to occupy these positions; "zodiac" means "circle of animals," and only Libra is inanimate. Over the past 2,000 years, precession has moved the constellations eastward by over 30° so that they no longer coincide with the old signs.
The 12 constellations of the zodiac are:
FROM: http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/Z/zodiac.html
http://journals.jevon.org/zodiac.php
Monday, April 11, 2011
WHAT ARE THE IMPORTANCE OF CONSTELLATIONS
LAST TIME
1. Poets, farmers and astronomers created the named of various constellations over the past 6000 year.Traveller used constellations to map the sky and show direction.
2. Farmers cerated constellation to help them with their crops. They used them as a reminder of planting and harvesting season.
3. Constellations have been used to tell time for hundreds of years.
1. Poets, farmers and astronomers created the named of various constellations over the past 6000 year.Traveller used constellations to map the sky and show direction.
2. Farmers cerated constellation to help them with their crops. They used them as a reminder of planting and harvesting season.
3. Constellations have been used to tell time for hundreds of years.
NOWADAYS
4. The 12 zodiacal constellations are used to symbolize the 12 months in a yearly cycle.
5. It may lead a person to their position and to use this information in many ways like telling direction.
6. The constellations can be used to determine what month of the year it is as well as the time of night. For thousands of years the constellations of the stars have shown in the same place in the sky. This constant has lead many to learn their positions and to use this information in many ways.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
THE HISTORY OF CONSTELLATION
The current list of 88 constellations recognised by the International Astronomical Union[1] since 1922[2] is based on those listed by Claudius Ptolemy, Greek-speaking mathematician, geographer, astronomer, and astrologer who lived in the Hellenistic culture of Roman Egypt. He may have been a Hellenized Egyptian, but he was probably of Greek ancestry, although no description of his family background or physical appearance exists, though it is likely he was born in Egypt, probably in or near Alexandria.
The Bear, Orion and the Pleiades are mentioned in chapters 9 and 38 of the book of Job in the Bible.
Greek astronomy was built on Mesopotamian foundations. They defined the Zodiac and at least another 18 constellations taken over or adapted by the Greeks:
In more recent times, Ptolemy's list has been added to in order to fill gaps between Ptolemy's patterns. Most of the northern sky was filled in by Petrus Plancius and Johannes Hevelius.
The constellations around the South Pole were not observable by the Greeks. Twelve were observed by Dutch navigators Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de Houtman in the end of sixteenth century and depicted by Johann Bayer in his star atlas Uranometria of 1603. Several more were created by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in his star catalogue, published in 1756.
Other proposed constellations didn't make the cut, most notably Quadrans (now part of between Boötes and Draco) for which the Quadrantid meteors are named. Also the ancient constellation Argo Navis was so big that it was broken up into several different constellations, for the convenience of stellar cartographers.
FROM: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_constellations
The Bear, Orion and the Pleiades are mentioned in chapters 9 and 38 of the book of Job in the Bible.
Greek astronomy was built on Mesopotamian foundations. They defined the Zodiac and at least another 18 constellations taken over or adapted by the Greeks:
- The earliest direct evidence for the constellations comes from inscribed stones and clay writing tablets dug up in Mesopotamia (within modern Iraq)... It appears that the bulk of the Mesopotamian constellations were created within a relatively short interval from around 1300 to 1000 B.C [...]
- The Mesopotamian groupings turn up in many of the classical Greek constellations. The stars of the Greek Capricorn and Gemini, for example, were known to the Assyrians by similar names - the Goat-Fish and the Great Twins. A total of 20 constellations are straight copies. Another 10 have the same stars but different names. The Assyrian Hired Man and the Swallow, for instance, were renamed Aries and Pisces.[3]
In more recent times, Ptolemy's list has been added to in order to fill gaps between Ptolemy's patterns. Most of the northern sky was filled in by Petrus Plancius and Johannes Hevelius.
The constellations around the South Pole were not observable by the Greeks. Twelve were observed by Dutch navigators Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de Houtman in the end of sixteenth century and depicted by Johann Bayer in his star atlas Uranometria of 1603. Several more were created by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in his star catalogue, published in 1756.
Other proposed constellations didn't make the cut, most notably Quadrans (now part of between Boötes and Draco) for which the Quadrantid meteors are named. Also the ancient constellation Argo Navis was so big that it was broken up into several different constellations, for the convenience of stellar cartographers.
FROM: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_constellations
SUPER GIANT STAR
A super giant star is the exact same thing as a giant star only much bigger. Remember that as a star gets older it begins to run out of fuel. As the star runs out of fuel, it will start to burn out.
Just like the sun-sized stars, blue giant stars also begin to burn helium. As they do these stars get much hotter. This extra heat makes the outside of an old blue giant star stretch out further. Remember how hot air balloons stretch out as the air in them gets hotter?
The only difference between Giant Stars and Super Giant Stars is their size. Super Giant Stars are much bigger. If the Sun were replaced by a super giant star, it would extend from the center of our Solar System almost all the way out to Uranus.
GIANT STAR
Remember when we talked about sun-sized stars? We said that at the end of their lives these stars expand, taking up much more space than before. This is exactly what a Giant Star is.
As a sun-sized star gets old, it starts to run out of its hydrogen fuel. When the process of burning hydrogen in the star's core begins to slow down, the core gets more compact and dense. This means all the stuff in the middle of the star gets really close together. As the center gets smaller and smaller it starts to heat up again. When it gets hot enough it will start to burn a new fuel called helium.
Once ignited, helium burns much hotter than hydrogen. The additional heat pushes the outer layer of the star out much further than it used to be, making the star much larger. Imagine a hot air balloon. As the air inside the balloon gets hotter, it stretches the balloon out further and further. As the giant star gets hotter, its outside stretches out further and further. When our own sun begins to stretch into a giant star, it will engulf Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.
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