Classes |
TuTh
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Instructor |
Ed
Loh, 3260 BMPS, 884-5612, Loh@msu.edu |
Office
hours |
TuTh
14:00- |
Teaching
Assistant |
Nicholas
Earl, EarlNich@msu.edu |
Textbook |
Essential Cosmic
Perspective,
4th ed., Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit, Pearson/Addison
Wesley. |
Web
page |
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Calendar |
Topic
& Reading (§3 means chapter 3) |
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Laws of physics—the Copernican Revolution and the
development of the laws of motion. Why does the sky change over the course of
a day, a month, a year? |
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Jan |
Overview.
Scientific discovery. §1, §2.1–2.3 |
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Birth
of astronomy & birth of science. Ptolemy & Copernicus. §2.4, §3 |
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Kepler’s
Laws of planetary motion. Newton’s Laws of motion §3, §4 |
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Radiation
and spectra. §5 |
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Feb |
Telescopes.
§5 |
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3 |
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5 |
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First
test. Study guide 1. Test1-2005
Answers to Test1-2005 |
Planets—Spaceship Earth. How did the solar system
form? |
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Earth.
Overview. §6.1–6.2 |
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Venus
§7 |
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Mars |
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Jovian
Planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, & Neptune). §8 |
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Rings
around Jovian Planets. Origin of the solar system. §9, §6.3–6.4 |
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2 |
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Mar |
Missouri
Club for Test 2: Mon., |
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3 |
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Second
test. Study guide 2. Test2-2005
Test2 2005wAnswers |
Stars—the Sun. What powers the sun? What is the
future sun? Where does oxygen come from? |
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Mar |
Planets
around other stars. §6.5 |
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The
sun. §10. |
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Hot-plate
model of stars. Properties of stars. §11 Hertzsprung-Russell diagram |
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H-R
diagram of star clusters. |
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The
dying sun. Life history of high-mass stars. §12. Creation of the elements. |
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White
dwarfs, neutron stars, & black holes. §13 |
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Apr |
Our
galaxy. §14. |
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2 |
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Missouri
Club for Test 3: Thurs., |
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Mass
of galaxies. Other galaxies. §15.1–15.3. |
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9 |
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Third
test. Study guide 3. Test3-2005
Test3-2005wAnswers |
Universe—How old? How big? What is its story? What
is the universe made of? |
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Hubble’s
Law, expansion of the universe. §15.2 |
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Quasars
& active galaxies. §15.4, 14.4. |
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Radiation
from the Big Bang. The young universe. §17 |
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Helium
production in the Big Bang—fossil from the 3-min old universe. |
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Weighing
the universe. What is the universe made of? §16 |
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Weighing
the universe with distant supernovae. Discovery of repulsive gravity. §16.4 |
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28 |
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Missouri
Club for Final Exam. Tues., 7:00-8:00pm, room 1415. |
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Final
exam, Wed., the 6th, 3:00-5:00, 1410 BPS. Study guide Final-05 Final-05wAns |
Doing science is a social
and cooperative venture. Find a 205 pal with whom you can work on
The
course grade will be based on in-class exercises and homework (14%), three
tests (17% each), and a final exam (35%). Your lowest 10% of the in-class
exercises will be dropped.
In-class
exercises, which are done with clickers, serve three purposes: 1) to help you
think about the class actively, 2) to check whether you have gotten the main
ideas in the assigned reading, 3) during the class, to adjust the class to
the students understanding. A class should ideally be a conversation between
each student and the instructor; the clickers enable every student to “speak”
to the instructor. The grading scale is 3 points for a correct answer and 2
points for trying. You must have an i-clicker to do the in-class exercises.
(The old infrared clickers will not work.) If you already have a clicker, you
do not need to purchase a new one. If you forget to bring your clicker, you may
borrow a clicker if one is available, or (this is limited to twice during the
term) you may turn in written answers. We start using clickers on Jan 20th.
The
Physics-Astronomy Department and Abrams Planetarium offer public observing at
the MSU Observatory (at College Rd. & Farm Lane) one weekend each month.
Public observing starts in late March. See www.pa.msu.edu/abrams/Programs/PublicObserving.html (It has not yet been updated for 2009.)
The
astrophysics faculty gives a series of lectures for the public on current
topics in astronomy. See Astronomical Horizons
for the schedule. The first talk is by Prof. Mark Voit on the “Milky Way’s
Biggest Black Hole,” on Thurs, Jan 22nd at