PHYS 131

Survey of the Universe

Fall 2008

Instructor: Professor Gordon Richards  Lecture: TTh 2:00-3:20pm; Curtis 340
Office: 914 Disque Hall Phone: 215-895-2713
e-mail: gtr@physics.drexel.edu (subj: PHYS131) Office Hours: Mon 10-11pm (online); Wed 2:30-3:30pm
Text: Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide to the Universe (5th Ed.),, Chaisson & McMillan http://www.physics.drexel.edu/~gtr/teaching/phys131/

Reading:
The text for this class is Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide to the Universe (5th Ed.) by Chaisson & McMillan. Note that this is the short version of Astronomy Today, by the same authors. For anyone looking for more, I recommend Lecture Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy (2nd Ed.) by Prather et al. and Bad Astronomy by Phil Plait, but neither are required reading for the course.

Students are strongly encouraged to at least skim through the readings for each lecture before class in addition to reading the material in detail after the lecture.

Those of you that are particularly interested in learning about the night sky and constellations should buy a copy of a recent Sky & Telescope magazine.

Lectures:
We will meet for lecture twice a week for 1 1/2 hours. Lectures will consist primarily of information based on the readings. In-class activities (1-2 per lecture) during the lecture will be part of your participation grade (and will count 5% of your final grade).

Office Hours:
Currently scheduled for Wednesdays from 2:30-3:30pm and on Mondays from 10-11 pm. The Monday night office hours will be online. The link is at the bottom of the main BbVista4/WebCT page for this class.

Homework & Quizzes:
There will be no formal, graded homeworks. However, some web-based tutorials and practice problems will help you with the weekly quizzes. The practice problems will be posted to the BbVista4/WebCT site.

There will be a short (~10 minute) quiz at the start of class once each week (usually Tuesday) on the past week's material. To encourage doing the reading before lecture, one or two questions will be on new material (but can be answered by having skimmed the reading). Quizzes will be mostly multiple choice, labeling, matching, true/false, etc. Quiz questions will be drawn directly (or nearly so) from the "homework". There will be ~9 quizzes during the quarter. I will drop your lowest quiz grade.

Exams:
Currently no midterm is planned. A (comprehensive) final exam will be given during a time/date to be decided during the exam week. It will be mostly multiple choice, T/F, etc. questions with a few short answer and drawing problems. For the multiple choice and T/F part, your score will be the average of your own score and that of your group. I'll explain more about this in class.

Grading:
10 point scale (90=A-, 80=B-, 70=C-, etc.) using the following weighting:

Miscellaneous:


Topics to be Covered

Week Subject Chapter(s) Reading
1 Introduction & Constellations Chapter E, Appendix E1,E2,E5, Appendix 1,2, S-9 (18 pages)
2 Earthly Phenomena:
Seasons, Lunar Phases, Eclipses, Tides
Chapter E, Chapter 5 E2, E3, 5.2 (12 pages)
3 Light, Cameras, Telescopes Chapters 2 & 3 2.3, 2.4a, 2.4c, 2.5a, 2.5b (~9 pages)
3.1-3.3, [3.4-3.5] (13+10 pages)
4 Solar System Intro:
Killer Asteroids & Pluto's Exit
Chapters 4 & 8 4.1, 4.2, 8.5, 8.6, 4.4 (24 pages)
5 The Planets Chapters 5, 6, 7 & 8 6.1-6,8 (22 pages); 5.1,5.6-8 (10 pages)
7.1-4 (9 pages); 8.1, 8.4 (10 pages)
6 Stars & Stellar Evolution
We are Stardust
Chapters 9, 10 & 12 9.1, 9.4, 9.5a (10 pages); 10.3, 10.5 (6 pages)
12.1-3 (10 pages)
7 Black Holes Chapters 12 & 13 12.4-6, 12.8 (10 pages)
13.1-2, 13.5-8 (17 pages)
8 Galaxies
Ours and Others
Chapters 14 & 15 14.1-3, 14.5-7 (19 pages)
15.1, 15.3 (9 pages)
9 Clusters, Quasars, and "Dark Matter" Chapters 15 & 16 15.2b, 16.5a, 16.5b, 16.3 (7 pages); 15.4, 16.4 (13 pages)
16.1, 16.5d (4 pages)
10 Cosmology
The Age of the Universe
Chapter 17 17.1-8 (24 pages)

Final Exam:
TBD

Links

Astronomy Today
Astronomy Picture of the Day
BAD Astronomy
NASA
How to Buy a Telescope
Hubble Space Telescope Images
Spitzer Space Telescope Images
Chandra X-ray Observatory Images

Observing Information

Drexel's Joseph R. Lynch Observatory (our 16 inch Meade telescope)
Heavens Above (for viewing satellites)
Sky & Telescope (the premier astronomy magazine)

Sky Charts

SkyMaps.com
Spring Sky Chart
Summer Sky Chart
Fall/Winter Sky Chart
North Polar Sky Chart
South Polar Sky Chart
Northern Stars Planetarium Observing Resources

Philly-area Public Observing Nights

Note: These are weather dependent events and may be canceled in case of rain or significant cloud cover.

Last Modified: 19 September 2008