Understanding the Sky



Image: "Observation of the Sky." Colored engraving published in 1647 in the book entitled "Selenografia sive Lunae Descriptio" by Johannes Hevelius.
Click on image for full size (211K JPEG)
Image credit: Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Paris, France.
People have been wondering about what they see in the sky for a long time. Because of our curiosity about the sky, we tell stories and myths about what we see there. Astronomers try to explain what we see in the sky in the simplest way possible.

By carefully watching the sky, astronomers learn about how the universe works. By studying eclipses and the motions of the planets, astronomers eventually realized that gravity controls the way things move, and that gravity was responsible for the motion of the Sun, the Moon, and the stars in our sky as well. We now know that the Earth's motion is responsible for seasons.

Galileo's drawings of the phases of the Moon

Understanding the Sky



Image: "Observation of the Sky." Colored engraving published in 1647 in the book entitled "Selenografia sive Lunae Descriptio" by Johannes Hevelius.
Click on image for full size (211K JPEG)
Image credit: Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Paris, France.
People have been wondering about what they see in the sky for a long time. Because of our curiosity about the sky, we tell stories and myths about what we see there. The desire to explain what we see around us in the simplest way using science has driven astronomers for centuries.

By carefully watching the sky, astronomers learn about how the universe works. By studying eclipses and the motions of the planets, astronomers eventually realized that gravity controls the way things move, and that gravity was responsible for the motion of the Sun, the Moon, and the stars in our sky as well. We now know that the Earth's motion is responsible for seasons.

Telescopes allow us to "see" further away. With them, we can study stars and galaxies, as well as many of the more mysterious objects in our Universe.

Galileo's drawings of the phases of the Moon

Understanding the Sky



Image: "Observation of the Sky." Colored engraving published in 1647 in the book entitled "Selenografia sive Lunae Descriptio" by Johannes Hevelius.
Click on image for full size (211K JPEG)
Image credit: Bibliotheque Nationale de France, Paris, France.
People have been wondering about what they see in the sky for a long time. We interpret what we see in a cultural context through mythology and in the context of science through the laws of the physical universe. The desire to explain what we see around us in the simplest way has driven astronomers for centuries.

By carefully watching the sky, astronomers learn about how the universe works. By studying eclipses and the motions of the planets, astronomers eventually realized that gravity controls the way things move, and that gravity was responsible for the motion of the Sun, the Moon, and the stars in our sky as well. We now know that the Earth's motion is responsible for seasons.

Ever more powerful telescopes allow us to "see" further away and thus farther into the history of our Universe. With them, we can study stars and galaxies, as well as many of the more mysterious objects in our Universe. Someday, we may even be able to predict the ultimate fate of the Universe.

Galileo's drawings of the phases of the Moon


Last modified prior to September, 2000 by the Windows Team

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