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 From Stargazers to Starships
 You have reached the homepage of a tutorial exposition focused on 3 topics:
   
 For easier reading, view this site with size 14 font (but print out with size 10 or 12). The material is self-contained, at the high-school level, rich in history and is best studied in the order listed below."Stargazers" files are also available 
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 You will find here: Astronomy of the Earth's motion in space:1. The Sky Above Us2. The Path of the Sun, the Ecliptic
 2a.    Building a Sundial
 3. Seasons of the Year
 4. The Angle of the Sun's Rays
 5. Maps of the Heavens
 6. The Calendar
 7. Precession
 8. The Round Earth and Christopher Columbus
 8a.      Distance to the Horizon
 8b.      How Distant is the Moon?--1
 8c.      How Distant is the Moon?--2
 8d.      Parallax
 9. Discovery of the Solar System
 10. Kepler and his Laws
 11. Kepler's First Law of Planetary Motion
 12. Kepler's Second Law
 12a.   How Orbital Motion is Calculated
 .
 Newtonian mechanics13. The Way Things Fall14. Vectors
 15. Energy
 16. Newton and his Laws
 17. Mass
 17a.    Mass Measurements aboard Space Station Skylab
 18. Newton's Second Law
 19. Motion in a Circle
 20. Newton's theory of "Universal Gravitation"
 21. Kepler's Third Law
 21a.    Applying Kepler's Third Law
 22. Frames of Reference: The Basics
 22a     Airplane Flight
 23. Frames of Reference: The Centrifugal Force
 24. Rotating Frames of Reference in Space and on Earth
 .
 Spaceflight and Spacecraft25. The Principle of the Rocket26. Robert Goddard and his Rockets
 27.  The Evolution of the Rocket
 28. Spaceflight
 29. Spacecraft
 29a.  Satellites observing the Sun, solar system and the universe
 29b.   Satellites observing Earth from above
 29c.   Satellites which observe the local space environment
 29d.   Satellites for commercial benefits
 29e.   Missions to planets and distant space
 30. Far-out Pathways to Space: Great Guns?
 30a.    Project HARP and the Martlet
 31. Far-out Pathways to Space: Nuclear Power
 32. Far-out pathways to Space: Solar Sails
 32a.    Early Warning of Interplanetary Disturbances
 33. Ion Rockets
 34. Orbits in Space
 34a.    The Distance to the L1 Point
 34b.    The L4 and L5 Lagrangian Points
 35. To the Planets, To the Stars
 35a.    Planetary Swing-by and the Pelton Turbine
 
 A Math RefresherHome pageElements of algebra
(M-1) Basic ideas(M-2) How it all started
 (M-3) Formulas
 (M-4) Identities
 (M-5) Deriving Approximate Results
 (M-6) The Theorem of Pythagoras Elements of trigonometry
(M-7) What is it good for?(M-8) How to tell sines from cosines
 (M-9) Deriving sines and cosines
 (M-10) Going past 90 degrees
 (M-11) Deriving sin(a+b),  cos(a+b)
 
 Helpful MaterialHints to users.A Glossary of Terms     (Cross-linked, keyed to the text)
 Timeline          (A chronology).
 Annotated Timeline   (With added dates from history).
 Of special interest to teachers:
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