1. On a dear night locate and observe any constellation in the sky. Note its position in relation to a tree or any tall object nearby. In the box below, draw the constellation's position relative to your reference.
2.Locate and observe the same constellation later that night. Draw its position relative to your reference.
illustrations:
position 1 position 2
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Answer:
If you factor out the daily arcing motion of the stars across the sky due to the earth's rotation, you end up with a pattern of stars that seems to never change. The stars seem so fixed that ancient sky-gazers mentally connected the stars into figures (constellations) that we can still make out today.
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First we have to multiply both sides of the equation by 10,
Then, we get,
= (3p/10) × 10 = 6 × 10
= 3p = 60
Now,
We have to divide both sides of the equation by 3,
Then, we get,
= 3p/3 = 60/3
= p = 20
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