RIT Observatory Public Night

Sep 11, 2004

You can find this page on the Internet at

http://spiff.rit.edu/richmond/ritobs/public/sep11_2004/sep11_2004.html

Tonight is one of the rare dark, clear nights in Rochester. We will take advantage of the good conditions to ask you three questions:

  1. Can you see the Milky Way?
  2. How FAINT can you see?
  3. How FAR can you see?


Can you see the Milky Way?

Here is a chart showing the location of the brightest stars (down to magnitude 3) in the sky tonight at 9:00 PM.

The set of 3 bright stars nearly overhead is called the "Summer Triangle". Near the horizon in the northwest sky (in the direction of the RIT campus) is the Big Dipper. Use these asterisms to orient yourself. Go outside onto the concrete pad and give your eyes at least 10 minutes to adjust to the dark. Can you make out the Milky Way? Mark its location on this chart.


How FAINT can you see?

Astronomers measure the brightness of stars in magnitudes, which are a strange sort of unit: the brighter a star is, the SMALLER its magnitude.


   magnitude 0 stars are very bright:    Vega, Arcturus
 
   magnitude 2 stars are intermediate:   most stars in the Big Dipper

   magnitude 4 stars are pretty faint:   handle of the Little Dipper

   magnitude 6 stars are really faint:   (see chart below)

How faint can YOU see? Test yourself three ways.

Test 1: The Little Dipper

Can you see all the stars in the handle of the Little Dipper? All the stars in the bowl? Mark the faintest star you can see on the diagram.

Test 2: Cygnus and Lyra

These two constellations should be nearly overhead. Mark the faintest star you can see on the diagram.

Test 3: The Great Square of Pegasus

Look over the trees to the northeast. You should see a large diamond defined by four bright stars: this is the Great Square of Pegasus, rising up on one corner. How many stars can you see which fall INSIDE the square? Count them, and then use this table to determine the magnitude of the faintest one.

      If you can see this many stars     the faintest one is 
      ------------------------------    ---------------------
                1                         mag  4.5
              2 - 4                            5.0
              5 - 7                            5.5
              8 - 13                           6.0
             18 - 37                           6.5

The number counts were taken from the web site

http://www.astrosurf.com/universia/Nuit2Anglais.htm
which provides additional tests of limiting magnitude.


How FAR can you see?

Stars are really, really far away from Earth. Even the nearest star is so far that its distance is hard to write in ordinary units: Alpha Centauri (which we can't see from Rochester) is about 38,000,000,000,000 kilometers away. Yikes!

A more convenient unit for the distance to celestial objects is the LIGHT-YEAR: the distance a light ray would travel during a year. The bright star Vega (nearly overhead right now) is about 27 light years away. That means that the light we are seeing now must have left the star 27 years ago.

Here are distances to some of the stars you can see tonight, if you know where to look. Please ask one of the astronomers for help if you can't find one.


      Star                Distance (light years)
    ----------------------------------------------
      Altair                       17  
      Vega                         27
      Arcturus                     36

      Dubhe                       120
      Antares                     190
      Deneb                      1600
    ----------------------------------------------

You can see even farther if you consider groups and clusters of stars all together. The following objects are easily visible in a telescope, and may be glimpsed with binoculars or (in the case of M31) even your naked eye. Can you find them? We'll have telescopes pointed to them at various times tonight. Again, ask an astronomer to show you where they are....


      Object              Distance (light years)
    ----------------------------------------------
   Dumbbell Nebula    M27       1,300

   globular cluster   M13      25,000
   globular cluster   M15      34,000

   Andromeda Galaxy   M31   2,900,000
   Triangulum Galaxy  M33   3,000,000
    ----------------------------------------------


Satellites visible tonight

There are some satellites of Earth for us to view tonight, too. I took the following information from the Heavens Above satellite prediction site.


For more information