User:Marshallsumter/Radiation astronomy2/Radios/Lessons

Radio astronomy encompasses microwave astronomy, submillimeter astronomy, and those bands with longer wavelengths than microwaves. Radar astronomy is a technological use of microwaves to locate rocky objects.

There are 89 unique areas of the celestial sphere from which radio waves can irradiate the Earth. Ideally, there would be a first source from each of these areas.

As radio astronomy has been in use since the early twentieth century, a radio source has a good chance of also being a first source for any constellation.

The first radio source in any region of the sky is usually unknown. The discoverer often notes the source in passing.

These are lessons in map reading, coordinate matching, and researching looking for the first astronomical radio source discovered in the constellation of interest.

First steps
The first step is to succeed in finding a radio source in the constellation. This is usually not easy. One way is to search Google images, or Commons.

Traveling radio sources
Many radio sources do not remain in a constellation for lengthy periods. Some of these are the Sun and sources apparently in orbit around the Sun. The Sun travels through the 13 constellations along the ecliptic (the plane of the Earth's orbit around the Sun): the 12 of the Zodiac and the constellation Ophiuchus. These are described in source astronomy.

Backgrounds
To introduce yourself to some aspects of the challenge may I suggest reading the highlighted links mentioned above, and if you're curious, those listed under the section See also below. Sources of interest can occur in the background of other sources.

Radio waves are a form of radiation that is currently part of electromagnetic radiation intersecting the Earth. More information about radiation is in radiation astronomy.

Constellations
Constellations of the past can be found in astrohistory.

Searching catalogs
In the lecture/article radio astronomy in its science section is a list of older catalogs of radio sources. Using the constellation description in the previous section and the range of coordinates for the constellation in source astronomy, scan through the coordinates for these radio sources to see if any may be within the constellation. An example is "A Catalog of 1.4 GHz Radio Sources from the FIRST Survey", a catalog of 138,665 radio sources.

Radio lessons

 * First radio source in Canis Minor
 * First radio source in Grus
 * First radio source in Pisces

Microwave lessons

 * First microwave source in Canis Major
 * First microwave source in Cepheus
 * First microwave source in Hercules
 * First microwave source in Piscis Austrinus

Submillimeter lessons

 * First submillimeter source in Carina
 * First submillimeter source in Hydrus
 * First submillimeter source in Reticulum

Hypotheses

 * 1) The first radio source was detected in a northern hemisphere constellation.