Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The...

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Constellations & Stars

Transcript of Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The...

Page 2: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

I. Constellations

• Group of stars that appear to form a pattern in the sky.

• 88 recognized by International Astronomy Union

Page 4: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Ecliptic

• – the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun

• The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Page 5: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Ecliptic

Page 6: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

C. Circumpolar Constellations

• Can be seen all year long

• Never fully set below the horizon

• Appear to move counter clockwise around Polaris

• Caused by Earth’s Rotation

Page 7: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Circumpolar Constellations

Page 8: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Star Trails

Page 9: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Examples of Circumpolar Constellations

1. Ursa Major – The Big Bear

2. Ursa Minor – The Little Bear

3. Cassiopeia – Queen on Her Throne

4. Draco- The Dragon

5. Cepheus- The King

Page 10: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

• # of stars seen as circumpolar depends on the observers latitude

• Further North the observer lives, the more stars will appear circumpolar

• Earth turns west to east

• Sky appears to turn east to west

Page 11: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

D. Ursa Major

• Best known constellation

• Common name is Big Dipper

• Pointer stars- front 2 stars of the Big Dipper which point to Polaris (North Star)

Page 12: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

II. Seasonal Changes in Constellations

• Big Dipper

– In Fall: Low over northern horizon

– Spring: High overhead

• Cassiopeia

– In Fall: Straight overhead

– Spring: Low over northern horizon

Page 13: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Seasonal Change & Nightly change of the Dippers

Page 14: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

III. Summer Constellations

• 1st 3 bright stars that rise form the Summer Triangle

1. Vega- in Lyra the Harp

2. Altair- in Aquilla the Eagle

3. Deneb – in Cygnus the Swan (Northern Cross)

Page 15: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Summer Triangle

Page 16: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

IV. Most Famous Winter Contellation

• Orion Contains:

1. Betelgeuse (Bet el jooz) a bright red super giant star found forming Orion’s right shoulder

2. Rigel – a blue super giant: 7th brightest star in the nighttime sky

Page 17: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.
Page 18: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

3 Stars of Orion’s Belt

• Can be used to find 2 other constellations & a star cluster

1. Canis Major- (Big Dog) follow the line made by the 3 stars of Orion’s belt down to the left

–Sirius- the brightest star in the

nighttime sky is found in Canis Major

Page 19: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

2. Taurus (the Bull)

• Follow the line made by Orion’s belt up & to the right

• Aldebaran- Red star that is the eye of the bull is the 13th brightest in the nighttime sky

Page 20: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

3. Pleiades Star Cluster (7 sisters)

• Follow the line made by Orion’s belt up to the right, go through Taurus to a clump of stars to the right.

• Called Subaru in Japan – means “Unite”

Page 21: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

A. Red Giant - large red star at least 10x diameter of the sun

• Old Stars

• Ex. Aldebaran

• The sun will swell into a Red Giant when it is old

V. Kinds of Stars

Page 22: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Super Giant

• Largest of all stars 100x more luminous

• Explode as a Super Nova

• Can form Black Holes

• Ex. Betelgeuse, Rigel, Polaris

Page 23: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

C. Dwarf Stars

1. Less luminous

2. Very dense, mostly carbon

3. Tightly packed nuclei

4. Remains of a red giant that ran out of fuel

5. 1 cup full of star =20 tons or 5 elephants.

6. Most are red/orange/yellow

7. White dwarf is the exception to the color

8. Sun is a yellow dwarf

Page 24: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.
Page 25: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.
Page 26: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Size Comparison of Various Stars

Page 27: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

VI. Variable Stars

• Change in brightness over regular periods of time

• Ex. Cepheid Variables/Pulsating Stars Binary Stars & Eclipsing Binary Stars

Page 28: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

A. Cepheid Variables/Pulsating Stars

• Change in brightness as they expand & contract

• Unequal balance between gravity & nuclear fusion

• Ex. Polaris, Betelgeuse

Page 29: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Binary Star Systems

• Two stars of unequal brightness revolving around a center point

• Ex. Algol & its companion star in Perseus

Page 30: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

C. Eclipsing Binary Stars

• Two close stars that appear to be a single star varying in brightness.

• The variation in brightness is due to one star moving in front of or behind the other star.

Occurs because we see

the system on edge

instead of from above or

below

Page 31: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

VII. Pulsars or Neutron stars

A. Discovered in 1967 (LGM)

B. A distant heavenly object that emits rapid pulses of light & radio waves

C. Formed when a Super Giant collapses; Protons & Electrons are forced so close together that they fuse and form only neutrons

Page 32: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star

"Twinkling Stars" are due to Earth's atmosphere

Page 33: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

VIII. Life Cycle of a Medium Mass Star

1. Nebula

2. Protostar

3. New/Stable State Star

4. Red Giant

5. Planetary Nebula

6. White Dwarf

7. Black Dwarf

Page 34: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

1. Nebulae (Plural of Nebula)

• Space gas seen as faint glowing clouds

• Mostly hydrogen

• Star dust is extremely small, smaller than a particle of smoke & widely separated, with more than 300 ft. between individual particles.

• Nebulae still hinder star gazing because they absorb light which passes through them.

Page 35: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Types of Nebulae

• Diffuse Nebula - gases glow from stars w/in them

Ex. Nebula found in

Sagittarius

Page 36: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Types of Nebulae

• Dark Nebula -nebula not near a bright star

• Ex. Horse Head Nebula in Orion

Page 37: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

2. Protostar

• Shrinking gas balls, caused by a swirl of gas forming dense areas.

• The gravity of the dense swirl in turn attracts nearby gases so a ball forms.

• Nuclear fusion occurs & Helium is formed from Hydrogen

• A new star is born in our galaxy every 18 days

Page 38: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

3. Stable State Star

• Star that releases energy in enough force to counter balance gravity

• Star stops contracting

• Also known as a main sequence star

• Ex. Sun

Page 39: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

4. Planetary Nebula

• The outer layers of the Red Giant puff out more and more.

• The star loses gravitational hold on its outer layers and they get pushed away by the pressure exerted from solar winds

Page 40: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Planetary Nebula

Page 41: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

5. White Dwarf

• Fuel is used up

• No nuclear fusion occurring

• Remaining heat radiates into space

Page 42: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.
Page 43: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

IX. Life Cycle of a Massive Star

1. 1st three steps are similar

2. Super Giant

3. Super Nova

4. Neutron Star / Pulsar

5. Black Hole

Page 44: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

1. Super Giant

• Rare stars, largest of all

• 100x more luminous

• Only stars with a lot of mass can become super giants

• Some are almost as large as our entire solar system

• Ex. Betelgeuse & Rigel

Page 45: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

2. Super Nova

• Explosion from a massive Super Giant

• Outer layer blasts away at end of Life Cycle

• Emits light, heat, X-rays, & neutrinos

• Leaves behind a neutronstar or black hole

Page 46: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

3. Neutron Star/ Pulsar

• The remains of a super nova

• Very small, super-dense star which is composed mostly of tightly-packed neutrons

• Rapidly spinning leftovers of a star

• Emits energy in pulses

Page 47: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

4. Black Hole

• Occurs when a star'sremaining mass is greater than three times the mass of the Sun

• Star contracts tremendously

• Incredibly dense with a gravitational field so strong that even light cannot escape.

Page 49: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

X. Distance to stars

A. The Sun is closest star to Earth

B. Takes light 8 minutes to reach Earth

C. Avg. distance:150,000,000Km = 1 AU distance from Earth to the Sun

D. Next nearest star is Proxima Centauri 4.2 light years away; it can only be seen in the southern hemisphere

Page 50: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

E. Light year

• The distance light has traveled in a year

• 9.5 x 1012 Km/yr

• Speed of light 300,000 Km /sec

Page 51: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XI. Physical Properties of Stars

A. Nuclear fusion supplies the energy for stars– Huge size & mass of a star means

outer layers press inward w/ tremendous pressure

– Hydrogen ignites

– Star becomes a huge nuclear bomb

– Hydrogen nuclei combine to form Helium

Page 52: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Color of star depends on surface temp.

1. Blue - hottest stars Ex. Rigel in Orion; Vega in Lyra; Sirius in Canis Major

2. Yellow - medium stars ex. Sun

3. Red - coolest stars Ex. Betelgeuse in Orion, Antares the heart of Scorpio, Aldebaran in Taurus

Page 53: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

C. Star size

-Varies, large range

Smallest can be smaller than Earth

Largest may be 600,000,000 x Earth.

Page 54: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

D. The Sun

• is an average star

• yellow in color

• 300,000 x the mass of Earth

Page 55: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XII. Luminosity

• Brightness of a star

• Depends on size & temperature

• Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram graphs Absolute Magnitude (or Luminosity) vs. Temperature of stars

– Shows the life cycle of stars

Page 56: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram

Page 57: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

A. Absolute Magnitude

• Measure of the amount of light it actually

gives off if all stars were placed a distance

of 32.6 light years away

• Lower # means brighter star

• Negative #’s are the brightest

• Ex. Sun = 4.75 Sirius = 1.4 Rigel = –7.0

Rigel’s the Brightest of the 3 listed if all were

lined up next to each other.

Page 58: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Apparent Magnitude

• A measure of the amount of light received on Earth

• Stars below 0 are brightest

• Each magnitude differs by 2.5

• 1st magnitude is 100 x brighter than 6th

magnitude

• Ex. Sun = – 26.8 Sirius = – 1.45

Full Moon –12 .6 Rigel = .11

• Sun is the brightest in our sky.

Page 59: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XIII. Galaxies

• Systems containing millions or billions of stars, gas, & dust held together by gravity

Ex. Milky Way

• There are great distances between galaxies

• The Milky Way belongs to a group or cluster of galaxies called the local group

Page 60: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Spiral Galaxy Like the Milky Way

Page 61: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Three major classes of galaxies:

1. Elliptical - shaped like large ovals or football shape

2. Spiral - pinwheel shaped; our sun is on a spiral arm of the Milky Way

3. Irregular - many different shapes that aren't like the other two

Page 62: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XIV. Quasar

• Quasi stellar radio source

• Galaxies, very far away, with bright centers

• Thought to have a super massive black hole at center

• Most luminous objects known to man

Page 63: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XV. Electromagnetic Spectrum

• The arrangement of electromagnetic radiation from Radio waves to Gamma waves

Page 64: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Stars Emit:

1. Visible light

2. X-rays

3. Radio waves

4. Infrared waves

5. Ultraviolet waves

Page 68: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

A. Electromagnetic waves:

• Differ in wavelength & frequency

• All electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light; 300,000 km/sec

Page 69: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Parts of a Wave

Page 70: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

• a has a longer wavelength (distance from one crest to another) but lower frequency ( # of waves that pass by a point in a second)

Page 71: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

• b has a shorter wavelength but a higher frequency

Page 72: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

B. Spectroscope

• Instrument that separates light into its colors.

• Contains:

Prism at one end

Slit at opposite end which

lines up with the light source

Page 73: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

C. 3 Types of Spectra

1. Continuous Spectrum

2. Brightline Spectrum

3. Darkline Spectrum

Page 74: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

How Spectra are Produced

Page 75: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

1. Continuous Spectrum

• Produced by a glowing solid

• Example a Tungsten white light bulb, & white sunlight.

Page 76: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Continuous Spectrum Cont’

• Continuous set of emission lines forming an unbroken band of colors from red to violet.

• Shows the source is sending out light of all visible wavelengths.

Page 77: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Visible Spectrum

• ROY G BIV

• All the colors of the rainbow

• A continuous spectrum

red orange yellow green blue indigo violet

Page 78: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

2. Dark-Line Spectrum / Absorption Spectrum

• Produced when a cooler gas lies between the observer and an object emitting a continuous spectrum

• Example:1. The atmosphere of planets

2.Outer layers of a star

Page 79: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Absorption Spectrum Cont’

• The cooler gas absorbs specific wavelengths of radiation passing through it.

• This spectrum appears as a continuous spectrum of all colors with a number of gaps or dark lines throughout it.

Page 80: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

3. Bright-Line Spectrum / Emission Spectrum

• Produced by a glowing gas which radiates energy at specific wavelengths characteristic of the element or elements composing the gas

• Example Neon signs, black lights, LED’s

Page 81: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Emission Spectrum Cont’

• This spectrum consists of a number of bright lines against a dark background.

• Each elements has its own distinctive spectra much like a fingerprint

http://jersey.uoregon.edu/vlab/elements/Elements.html

Page 82: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

XVI. The Doppler Effect

• as sound approaches the wavelength is compressed so the pitch is higher

• as sound leaves the wavelength is stretched out so the pitch is lower

• The same thing happens with light

Page 83: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Doppler Effect

http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~efortin/thesis/html/Doppler.shtml

Page 84: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Red Shift

• If a star is moving away from Earth there is a red shift, of its line spectra; if the star is moving toward the Earth there is a blue shift of its line spectra

Page 85: Constellations & Stars...B. Ecliptic •–the plane of the Earth’s orbit around the sun •The apparent path that the sun (and planets) appear to move along against the star background.

Red Shift

• Red shift is evidence the universe is expanding.