| Instructor: Professor Gordon Richards | Lecture: TTh 12:30-1:50pm; Room: PISB "Taki" 104 |
| Office: 914 Disque Hall | Phone: 215-895-2713 |
| e-mail: gtr@physics.drexel.edu (subj: PHYS131) | Office Hours: WF 3:30-4:30pm |
| Text: Astronomy: A Beginner's Guide to the Universe (6th Ed.), Chaisson & McMillan | http://www.physics.drexel.edu/~gtr/teaching/phys131/ |
Reading: For anyone looking
for more, I recommend Prather et
al.'s Lecture
Tutorials for Introductory Astronomy (2nd Ed.). It isn't strictly
required, but it would be helpful to have.
You might also be interested
in Bad
Astronomy by Phil Plait, but it is also not required reading for
the course.
Those of you that are particularly interested in
learning about the night sky and constellations should buy a copy of
a recent Sky & Telescope or Astronomy magazine.
The text for this class
is Astronomy:
A Beginner's Guide to the Universe (6th Ed.) with Mastering
Astronomy by Chaisson & McMillan. Note that this is the short
version of Astronomy Today (which you don't want) by the same
authors. You can get the book from the publisher
for
$143
(hardcopy) ,
$93 (e-book),
or
$79 (rented e-book). The ISBN number for the paperback
hardcopy is ISBN-13: 978-0-321-60510-8. Amazon has it for $110.76;
the bookstore will carry it as well, but I'm not sure what the price
is.
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.
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). You will be allowed to miss 1 lecture in the first half of the quarter and 1 in the second half without any penalty.
Office
Hours: Homework & Quizzes:
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 may 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; no make-up quizzes will be given, so don't be late for class on quiz days. Exams: Grading: I'll talk about the telescope open houses and the planetarium visit (two separate things) in class.
Students are responsible to monitoring their progress using the online gradebook. The table is sorted by the last 5 digits of each student's Drexel ID number. It is your responsibility to let me know (in a timely fashion) if I am missing any grades for you.
Last Modified: 14 March 2012
Tentatively set for WF 3:30-4:30pm. I may have to
adjust these after the first week of classes. For those that cannot
make those days/times, I can arrange for some online office hours in the
evening if there is enough demand.
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.
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.
10 point scale (90=A-, 80=B-, 70=C-, etc.) using the following weighting:
Topics to be Covered
Week
Subject
Chapter(s)
Reading
1
Introduction & Constellations
Chapter 0, Appendix
0.1,0.2,0.5, Appendix 2, S1-9 (18 pages)
2
Earthly Phenomena:
Seasons, Lunar Phases, Eclipses, TidesChapter 0, Chapter 5
0.2, 0.3, 5.2 (13 pages)
3
Gravity, Light, Cameras, Telescopes
Chapters 2 & 3
2.3, 2.4a, 2.4c, 2.5a, 2.5b, 2.7 (~10 pages)
3.1-3.3, [3.4-3.5] (13+11 pages)
4
Solar System Intro:
Killer Asteroids & Pluto's ExitChapters 4 & 8
4.1, 4.2, 8.5, 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 StardustChapters 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
12.4-5, 12.7 (9 pages)
13.1-2, 13.5-8 (17 pages)
8
Galaxies
Ours and OthersChapters 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 UniverseChapter 17
17.1-8 (24 pages)
Final Exam:
Wednesday June 13 8-10am
Links
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.
First Wednesday of each month
Second Tuesday of the month.
Every Monday, and the first Friday of the Month