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If Earth is tilted, why is Polaris always above the same spot?
Why does this graph for sunlight intensity on land has a steeper slope during sunrise as compared to sunset?Where exactly does the Moon flip, given that it appears the other way up in the other hemisphere?How can one explain the apparent motion of the Sun from a heliocentric point of view?Is the Earth Really Spinning? (honest question)Which constellation would appear to revolve around Denab,Vega or Thuban when axis of the earth would point toward them?Altitude of Midnight Satellite?Does Polaris have a trail in the sky timelapse?Why does earth's north pole roughly point in the same direction throughout the year?What is the highest angle the moon ever makes above the horizon at the North Pole?Did the Moon ever approximate a geosynchronous orbit above the early Earth?
$begingroup$
Why is Polaris, the North Star, always above (or near) the North Pole? If Earth is tilted, Polaris' path should be in winter 23 degrees away from its path in summer, or not?
observational-astronomy earth amateur-observing fundamental-astronomy
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$begingroup$
Why is Polaris, the North Star, always above (or near) the North Pole? If Earth is tilted, Polaris' path should be in winter 23 degrees away from its path in summer, or not?
observational-astronomy earth amateur-observing fundamental-astronomy
New contributor
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Why is Polaris, the North Star, always above (or near) the North Pole? If Earth is tilted, Polaris' path should be in winter 23 degrees away from its path in summer, or not?
observational-astronomy earth amateur-observing fundamental-astronomy
New contributor
$endgroup$
Why is Polaris, the North Star, always above (or near) the North Pole? If Earth is tilted, Polaris' path should be in winter 23 degrees away from its path in summer, or not?
observational-astronomy earth amateur-observing fundamental-astronomy
observational-astronomy earth amateur-observing fundamental-astronomy
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New contributor
edited 9 hours ago
Guest55
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asked 9 hours ago
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You are correct that the axis of the Earth's rotation is tilted with respect to the plane of its orbit by 23 degrees. But it is incorrect that the direction that the axis points changes by a large amount (it should be 2*23 degrees) over a 6 month time span.
Your assumption. If axis it pointed at Polaris at (1), then it should be pointed at a different star at (2).
The axis remains pointed in the same direction throughout the entire year because the laws of physics are that the axis of a spinning object remains pointed in the same direction unless a torque acts on the body to change its orientation. There are torques acting on the Earth (namely the Sun and Moon), but it takes 13000 years to change the direction from "one way to the opposite way", not 6 months.
Correct. The orientation of the Earth's spin axis remains pointed at the same star throughout the year (ignoring the slow, 26000 year precession cycle).
$endgroup$
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Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
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– Guest55
8 hours ago
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$begingroup$
You are correct that the axis of the Earth's rotation is tilted with respect to the plane of its orbit by 23 degrees. But it is incorrect that the direction that the axis points changes by a large amount (it should be 2*23 degrees) over a 6 month time span.
Your assumption. If axis it pointed at Polaris at (1), then it should be pointed at a different star at (2).
The axis remains pointed in the same direction throughout the entire year because the laws of physics are that the axis of a spinning object remains pointed in the same direction unless a torque acts on the body to change its orientation. There are torques acting on the Earth (namely the Sun and Moon), but it takes 13000 years to change the direction from "one way to the opposite way", not 6 months.
Correct. The orientation of the Earth's spin axis remains pointed at the same star throughout the year (ignoring the slow, 26000 year precession cycle).
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You are correct that the axis of the Earth's rotation is tilted with respect to the plane of its orbit by 23 degrees. But it is incorrect that the direction that the axis points changes by a large amount (it should be 2*23 degrees) over a 6 month time span.
Your assumption. If axis it pointed at Polaris at (1), then it should be pointed at a different star at (2).
The axis remains pointed in the same direction throughout the entire year because the laws of physics are that the axis of a spinning object remains pointed in the same direction unless a torque acts on the body to change its orientation. There are torques acting on the Earth (namely the Sun and Moon), but it takes 13000 years to change the direction from "one way to the opposite way", not 6 months.
Correct. The orientation of the Earth's spin axis remains pointed at the same star throughout the year (ignoring the slow, 26000 year precession cycle).
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You are correct that the axis of the Earth's rotation is tilted with respect to the plane of its orbit by 23 degrees. But it is incorrect that the direction that the axis points changes by a large amount (it should be 2*23 degrees) over a 6 month time span.
Your assumption. If axis it pointed at Polaris at (1), then it should be pointed at a different star at (2).
The axis remains pointed in the same direction throughout the entire year because the laws of physics are that the axis of a spinning object remains pointed in the same direction unless a torque acts on the body to change its orientation. There are torques acting on the Earth (namely the Sun and Moon), but it takes 13000 years to change the direction from "one way to the opposite way", not 6 months.
Correct. The orientation of the Earth's spin axis remains pointed at the same star throughout the year (ignoring the slow, 26000 year precession cycle).
$endgroup$
You are correct that the axis of the Earth's rotation is tilted with respect to the plane of its orbit by 23 degrees. But it is incorrect that the direction that the axis points changes by a large amount (it should be 2*23 degrees) over a 6 month time span.
Your assumption. If axis it pointed at Polaris at (1), then it should be pointed at a different star at (2).
The axis remains pointed in the same direction throughout the entire year because the laws of physics are that the axis of a spinning object remains pointed in the same direction unless a torque acts on the body to change its orientation. There are torques acting on the Earth (namely the Sun and Moon), but it takes 13000 years to change the direction from "one way to the opposite way", not 6 months.
Correct. The orientation of the Earth's spin axis remains pointed at the same star throughout the year (ignoring the slow, 26000 year precession cycle).
answered 8 hours ago
JohnHoltzJohnHoltz
3,0821612
3,0821612
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
$begingroup$
Thank you so much! Now I understand why the stars are seen on the same paths.
$endgroup$
– Guest55
8 hours ago
add a comment |
Guest55 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Guest55 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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