The Sky At Night
The first time that you gaze up into the night sky and feel the marvel of the universe is the time when most people, even the most revered professional astronomers, think back to if they think about their initial interest in the stars. It is usually a very extraordinary moment, when an adult led you by the hand, pointed at the stars and said: ‘Look, that is the North Star’.
Country people will probably discover the night sky earlier than city dwellers because the atmosphere above a city is normally so polluted that you cannot see the stars from below. There are two types of pollutants that prevent you from seeing the stars in a city, smoke and light. Street lights give off a corona that stops you from seeing the weaker light from the stars behind.
If you would like to evoke that moment in your life, why not take a child out into the country to look at the stars one night? If you have a pair of binoculars, so much the better, but they are not necessary. If you have forgotten which stars are which, take a book on the topic or a map of the night sky. These days you can download a map of the night’s sky for the day that you would like.
The night sky actually changes each night. The stars and the constellations do not move far, so you should not have too much difficulty finding them, but if a planet is passing by, it will be in another part of the sky every night, which is why it is helpful to have an up-to-date map of the night sky for the date you would like to go star gazing.
One of the hardest concepts for a child (or anyone else for that matter to comprehend is the scale of the universe – the sheer size of it. Here are a couple of facts that will amaze most individuals:
1] Our Sun is a star in the galaxy known as the Milky Way and it has its own planets revolving around it. However, there are estimated to be 100,000,000,000 (one hundred billion) stars like our Sun in the Milky Way.
2] The Milky Way is one of roughly tens of billions of galaxies in the universe and the Milky Way is one of the lesser galaxies.
3] It would take over 100,000 years to get from one edge of the Milky Way to the other, if you were travelling at more than five trillion miles per year or more than 570 billion miles per hour.
4] It has been worked out that our Milky Way is 14,000,000,000 (fourteen billion) years old
It is very difficult to comprehend astronomical numbers like this but this may help:
1 billion seconds ago, it was 1980
1 billion minutes ago, Jesus had recently passed away
1 billion hours ago, mankind was not yet on the planet
Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a number of topics, but is now involved with the kids building set. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Smart Toys for Kids.