Space Vocabulary Topics 1 & 2

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Across
  1. 2. The ocular lens part of a telescope.
  2. 4. The large lens at the very front of a telescope.
  3. 5. A set of axes of any kind that is used to describe the positions or motions of things.
  4. 9. A model of the universe that puts the Earth at the centre with the Sun, Moon, and the other planets revolving around it.
  5. 11. Is the angle measured clockwise from the north when measuring altitude-azimuth coordinates.
  6. 12. Used to locate a celestial body relative to a fixed earth (as though the celestial bodies are circling the earth).
  7. 15. Is the angle measured above the horizon in degrees when measuring altitude-azimuth coordinates.
  8. 16. A device used to measure an object’s azimuth.
  9. 17. Celestial bodies in our solar system, including Earth, that orbit the Sun.
  10. 19. A telescope that has a mirror for the objective.
  11. 22. A model of the universe with the Sun at the centre.
  12. 23. To cast back -light, heat, or sound..etc- from a surface.
Down
  1. 1. Determines the fineness/quality of detail a telescope can produce of an object in view.
  2. 3. Newton’s law states that all objects attract all other objects and provides a logical explanation for the planets’ elliptical orbits.
  3. 6. The groupings of stars that form patterns, which appear like objects and are given names; there are currently 88 (ex. Orion, the hunter).
  4. 7. The lens you look through to view a magnified object using a telescope.
  5. 8. A telescope that has a lens for the objective.
  6. 10. All the objects seen in the sky (Sun, Moon, Stars, Planet).
  7. 13. A device used to measure the altitude of an object.
  8. 14. The change of direction by a ray of light, sound, and heat, in passing diagonally from one medium into another.
  9. 18. A model of the universe that places the Sun at the centre with the Earth, the planets, and moons revolving around it.
  10. 20. A model of the universe with the Earth at the centre.
  11. 21. A figure that looks like a squashed circle; planets in the solar system more in elliptical orbits around the sun.