YOU FOCUS YOUR ATTENTION ON THE STARS that are contained within or very close to THE CONSTELLATIO...
YOU FOCUS YOUR ATTENTION ON THE STARS that are contained within or very close to THE CONSTELLATIONS OF THE ZODIAC groups such as Taurus the Bulland Gemini the Twins (etc). Page 20 of 34 and stars very close to the zodiac constellations such as Sirius (the Dog Star) & Betelgeuse (the Hunter's Shoulder) From here on in this exam, the word STAR will always be used to refer to such objects- to constellations. Even ifyou have learned somewhere that our sun turns out to be a star no question about stars'is ever here meant to refer to the sun. E. Compared to reference objects fixed to Earth, such as buildings or trees i. Does a typical zodiac constellation or star sit at a constant sky position throughout agiven night? ii. Ifso, which zodiac constellations are always visible at night in New York? (f not, skip this question.) If not, in which direction do zodiac constellations move- East to West or West to East? iii. F. Once it's dark, is it possible to see a starrise? G. If not, why not? If so, in which direction should you look? H. A constellation is a group of stars. Over the course of human history, no known constellation has ever changed its shape by any observable amount: Whatever arrangement of stars the ancient Greeks saw when they identified some arrangement as a'crab' we see: It remains a crab to the same extent it ever was Assumerise" means, for a star, whatever you take it to mean for the sun. That is, in this course and in this exam and in regular life, we DO accept statements like I woke p so early,I saw the sun rise. We accept such usage of the term 'rise as meaningful, possible and often truc. The question here is: Whatever that usage/meaning is, does it apply to the stars of zodiac constellations? Page 21 of 34
YOU FOCUS YOUR ATTENTION ON THE STARS that are contained within or very close to THE CONSTELLATIONS OF THE ZODIAC groups such as Taurus the Bulland Gemini the Twins (etc). Page 20 of 34 and stars very close to the zodiac constellations such as Sirius (the Dog Star) & Betelgeuse (the Hunter's Shoulder) From here on in this exam, the word STAR will always be used to refer to such objects- to constellations. Even ifyou have learned somewhere that our sun turns out to be a star no question about stars'is ever here meant to refer to the sun. E. Compared to reference objects fixed to Earth, such as buildings or trees i. Does a typical zodiac constellation or star sit at a constant sky position throughout agiven night? ii. Ifso, which zodiac constellations are always visible at night in New York? (f not, skip this question.) If not, in which direction do zodiac constellations move- East to West or West to East? iii. F. Once it's dark, is it possible to see a starrise? G. If not, why not? If so, in which direction should you look? H. A constellation is a group of stars. Over the course of human history, no known constellation has ever changed its shape by any observable amount: Whatever arrangement of stars the ancient Greeks saw when they identified some arrangement as a'crab' we see: It remains a crab to the same extent it ever was Assumerise" means, for a star, whatever you take it to mean for the sun. That is, in this course and in this exam and in regular life, we DO accept statements like I woke p so early,I saw the sun rise. We accept such usage of the term 'rise as meaningful, possible and often truc. The question here is: Whatever that usage/meaning is, does it apply to the stars of zodiac constellations? Page 21 of 34