Classes |
MF
11:30-12:20, 1420 BPS. Tu 8:00-10:00 pm, N012 BCC. |
Instructor |
Mr.
Ed Loh, 3260 BPS, 884-5612, Loh@msu.edu |
Office
hours |
MF10:00-11:00; M 12:30-1:30. |
Teaching
assistant |
Mr.
Kraig Andrews, andre220@msu.edu |
Textbook |
Cosmic Perspective, 6th ed., Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit, 2010.
(Older editions are OK. The sections numbers for the reading assignments are
based on the 6th edition.) |
Reference |
Introduction to Modern
Astrophysics,
Carroll & Ostlie, 2007 or 1997. |
Web |
Classes |
Topic &
Reading |
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Jan |
Physics of the Solar System. |
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Inventory
of the Solar System¾Terrestrial planets. §9 |
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Jovian
planets. §11 |
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Moons
& Rings, Roche’s condition. |
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Roche’s
condition. |
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Feb |
Asteroids.
§12 |
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Asteroids
families. |
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Formation
of the solar system. §8 |
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Comet
tails. Magnetic fields, p. 482-483. |
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Comet
tails. Pluto. §12.3. Kuiper belt & Oort Cloud.
p. 232, §12.2-12.3 |
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2-body
orbits. §4.4 |
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2-body
orbits. |
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Mar
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Formation
of the Oort Cloud. Fernandez |
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Formation
of Jovian planets. Formation of the Kuiper belt. Levinson et al., “origins” in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuiper_belt |
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Apr |
Formation
of the Kuiper Belt . |
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Discovery
of extra-solar planets. §13. |
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19T12 |
H13A13 |
Population
of exo-planets Remarkable exo-planetary
systems. PlanetsOrbitingHD10180.
3SuperEarths. HARPS |
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Kepler Mission Kepler11 |
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Mission
Stardust, Comet Wild 2 |
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Final
exam, Tues., 30 April, 08:00-10:00pm, BPS1420 (old
time) |
Labs |
Topic |
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Jan |
Lab notebook. Tools of research. Lab notebook checklist. |
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Preparation for first observations on the MSU
24-in Telescope. Coordinate systems. |
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Naked-eye
observations. No meeting. Notebooks due in 3260 by 4:00pm |
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Speed of light. (CLEA) |
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Feb |
Star
spectra. (CLEA). |
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Telescopes
(Meet in 1420) |
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Charge-coupled
detectors. (Meet in 1420) Lab exercise |
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Hubble’s
Law (CLEA) Lab exercise |
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Mar |
Color-magnitude
diagram (CLEA) Lab exercise Spreadsheet |
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Errors (CLEA) Lab exercise Spreadsheet |
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26 |
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No
meeting. Spend the time doing observations of the moon, which are due 4/16. |
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Apr |
Imaging surveys and software for displaying images. N012 BCC. Bring clickers. Lab Exercise |
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Telescopes
in space. N012 BCC. Bring clickers. Lab exercise |
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Prepare
paper on the period of the moon. Meet in 1420. Description
of project |
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23 |
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Moon
paper due in 3260 by 4:00. No meeting. |
·
Learning goals
o
What is a science? Astronomy is not a book of
facts to be learned. Besides the facts of the astronomical phenomena and the scientific
explanations, astronomy is also a practice having certain skills. The key
skills of science are interpreting data, making arguments, and devising tests.
To “do science,” we will retrace a few discoveries by examining the data and
interpreting the evidence.
o
Astronomy content. Characteristics of planets and minor bodies.
Formation of the solar system. Planets outside of the solar system.
o
Observing. This part of AST 208 is an
introduction to making, reducing, and understanding
astronomical observations. We will keep a lab notebook as professional
scientists do. We will also discuss basic astronomical web resources, such as
the Astrophysics Data System.
·
Grading. The course grade will be
based on pre-class question sets (5%), in-class exercises (10%), homework (0%),
tests (57%), and final exam (28%). Your three lowest pre-class scores, two
lowest exercise scores, and lowest test score will be dropped. You may drop one
of the labs except for the observing labs. The course grade for the entire
course will be based on the lecture part (67%) and the lab part (33%).
o
Preclass questions are on angel. They are due at 9:00am on
the day of class.
o The in-class exercises use i-clickers.
§ Register your clicker at iclicker.com. If the identification number has
been rubbed off, you may register it in class, which does not require your reading the number. If you registered your i-clicker for another class,
you do not have to register again.
§ If you forget your i-clicker, you may write your
answers on paper and turn them in at the end of class. You may do this no more
than twice a term.
o
You may work together on your homework assignments. Answers will be
posted on the day the homework is due.
o
If you must attend a university sponsored event or you are sick, you
may be excused with a note from the person in charge or your doctor.
o
The weekly tests will be given during the first 12 minutes of class.
The tests must be taken on the scheduled dates. If you miss a test for an
excused reason, your average will have fewer tests.
·
Observing at the MSU
Telescope.
You will need to organize in teams of 4 to observe at the MSU Telescope. One
member of your team needs to have a car to drive to the telescope. Teaching
assistant Kraig Andrews, andre220@msu.edu, will help you with the
observations. He will schedule the observations with a doodle poll. You must be
at the telescope at your scheduled time if the weather is clear.
·
Ast 208 buddy. Doing science is a social and cooperative venture. Find an Ast 208 buddy with whom you can work on Ast208. If you get stuck, your
buddy may help. If you think you understand a concept, explain it to your buddy
to see if he/she thinks your explanation is sensible and clear. Difficult
concepts become clear with discussion.