ASTRONOMY
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ASTRONOMY
Astronomy is a natural science that is the study of celestial objects (such as moons, planets, stars, nebulae, and galaxies), the physics, chemistry,
mathematics, and evolution of such objects, and phenomena that originate
outside the atmosphere of Earth, including supernovae explosions,
gamma ray bursts, and cosmic background radiation. A related but
distinct subject, cosmology, is concerned with studying the universe
as a whole.
Astronomy is not to be confused with astrology, the belief system which
claims that human affairs are correlated with the positions of celestial objects. Although the two fields share a
common origin they are now entirely distinct.
Examples of What Astronomy Studies:
A star-forming region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, an irregular galaxy.
A giant Hubble mosaic of the Crab Nebula, a supernova remnant
Observational astronomy
In astronomy, the main source of information about celestial bodies and other objects is the visible light or more generally electromagnetic radiation
Sub-Fields of Observational Astronomy:
Radio astronomyInfrared astronomyOptical astronomy
Ultraviolet astronomyX-ray astronomy
Gamma-ray astronomyFields not based on the
electromagnetic spectrumAstrometry and celestial
mechanics
Most Important
Astronomers:
Galileo-Galilei
The most important astronomer of all time turns out to be the Italian spearhead of the Scientific Revolution, Galileo. Galileo was, in a sense, a lucky astronomer. To put it simply, he
was fortunate to be alive when the telescope was invented (around 1607 AD). He caught wind of this amazing new device, and quickly made his own refracting telescope. This gave him absolutely unprecedented access to information on the heavens– and he was the first to
capitalize on it. While military leaders across Europe were using the spyglasses to watch their enemies at sea, Galileo turned his telescope to the sky and discovered secrets that had
lay waiting for millennia.
Because Galileo lived and worked at such an opportune time, he is considered by most to be the father of modern observational astronomy (not to mention the father of modern physics).
Many aspects of his life lend themselves to this title. He was the first to lay eyes on the Rings of Saturn (though they looked more like handles from his perspective), and he also discovered and named various moons of Jupiter. He was also the first to observe sunspots, which was rather significant, because it was then believed by the church that the sun was
perfect and without blemishes of any kind.
Hipparchus
Widely believed to be the greatest astronomer of antiquity, Hipparchus can easily be viewed as a sort of founding father of astronomy. His most important contribution to the field was the
first known star catalogue, which historians think he was inspired to construct after viewing a supernova. This star
catalogue was later used extensively by Ptolemy in his astronomical observations. His other contributions include
important findings on the positions and motions of the moon and Sun. Using trigonometry – a subject for which he is
basically credited for inventing – he was able to measure the distance to the moon during a solar eclipse. He is also known
for creating the method by which a star’s brightness is measured, a system still in use today.
Edwin Hubble
Hubble is credited with discovering galaxies outside of our own Milky Way. Although the race to solve this mystery had contributions from many different scientists, it was Hubble’s observations through the Hooker telescope, around the year 1923, that proved to the scientific community that there was more to outer space than the Milky Way. In essence, with one
finding, Hubble ballooned the Universe from a galaxy of about a hundred thousand light years across, with
approximately one hundred billion stars, to an indefinite expanse of intergalactic space, billions of light years across,
and with a seemingly infinite amount of stars.
Johannes Kepler
Kepler was a German astronomer and was the first to fully explain the
motion of the planets of our solar system.
William Herschel
A fascinating side-note to his astronomical career was the fact that Herschel built his own reflecting telescopes. He used his self-made telescopes to observe binary systems of stars, in which two stars orbit around a
common center of gravity in a bound system. Johannes KeplerKepler was a
German astronomer and was the first to fully explain the motion of the planets of
our solar system.
ASTRONOMY
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