Stellar Aberration 2D DocumentsThis material has 2 associated documents. Select a document title to view a document's information. Main DocumentStellar Aberration 2D
written by
Todd Timberlake The Stellar Aberration 2D Model illustrates the phenomenon known as the aberration of starlight, first reported by James Bradley in 1729. Aberration occurs because light has a finite speed, and thus light from a star takes a finite amount of time to travel through the tube of a telescope. During this time, the telescope moves as a result of Earth's rotational and orbital motions (in this case, the orbital motion is more important because it is faster). Therefore, if the telescope is pointed directly at the star the starlight will hit the sides of the tube before reaching the eyepiece. To see the star the telescope must be pointed forward (ie in the direction of Earth's motion) very slightly.
Last Modified June 12, 2014
This file is included in the full-text index. Source Code DocumentsStellar Aberration 2D Source CodeThe source code zip archive contains an XML representation of the EJS Stellar Aberration 2D Model. Unzip this archive in your EJS workspace to compile and run this model using EJS.
Published May 17, 2011
This file has previous versions. |