Transcript Day-1

Astronomy 1010-H
Planetary Astronomy
Fall_2015
Day-1
Astronomy 1010-H
Planetary Astronomy
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MWF 1115 – 1210
Sundquist Science Center E-109
Dr. Allyn Smith
www.apsu.edu/astronomy
Instructor:
Dr. Allyn Smith
Office: SSC B – 329
(go in through B-332)
Hours: MWF 1000 – 1100;
T 1300-1400
or by appointment
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 221-6104
Textbooks
21st Century Astronomy: The
Solar System, 4th Edition by Kay,
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Palen, Smith & Blumenthal
•Lecture Tutorials for Introductory
Astronomy, 3rd Edition by, Prather,
Slater, Adams & Brissenden
Course Announcements
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Smartworks Practice: Due Fri. (Aug. 28)
Smartworks Chapter 1: Due Wed. (Sep. 2)
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Read Chapter 1 (if you haven’t already)
Read Chapter 2.1, 2.2
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Still time to register for ASTR-2010 –
Problems in Planetary Astronomy
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1600-1700 Wednesdays, E-118
Introduction to Observational Astronomy
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1830-2130 Wednesdays, B-310
Course Announcements - 2
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Clarksville Astronomy Club meeting
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Tuesday Aug. 25 – 7:30pm – Sears Planetarium
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Mt. Vesuvius eruption in 79 A.D.
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Sun.-Mon. Sept. 27-28 – total lunar eclipse:
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Pending weather, we will be at the observatory for
this. All are welcome to join us.
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Begins: Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 7:11 PM
Maximum: Sun, Sep 27, 2015 at 9:47 PM
Ends: Mon, Sep 28, 2015 at 12:22 AM
Duration: 5 hours, 11 minutes
Home Work - 1
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Between now and class time on FRIDAY. Turn
in Friday at class time:
Go outside, at night, and look at the sky. Try
to avoid street lights. Sketch what you see.
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Bright stars, the moon (show phase), and some
“local” landmarks.
1-3 hours later, repeat.
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What changed?
Definitions & Terms -1
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Syllabus: Plan for the class, loosely, your
contract.
Cell Phone: Demon spawn of the devil. Use
in class is prohibited. Failure to heed this
may cost you up to 1.5 letter grades.
Hat: A covering of the head to protect the
hair. Worn by women indoors or out. Men
wear them outdoors only.
Coffee: the drink of life, especially in the
mornings.
Definitions & Terms -2
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Planet: A body which:
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Orbits the star in the stellar system,
Has enough mass to self-gravitate to a spherical
shape;
Has cleared its orbit of similar-sized debris.
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“Solar System”: The group of planets and our star
which they orbit.
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Galaxy: An assemblage of stars, planets, dust, gas
… In the case of our galaxy “The Milky Way” we’re
talking about 400,000,000,000 stars.
Five-Minute Essay
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My name is… (LEGIBLY!!)
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I am taking ASTR 1010 because…
In ASTR 1010 I hope to learn about …
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When I graduate I hope to…
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Three important things that happened
this summer were …
Lab This Week
 Astronomy on the Internet
 In General:
 ClassAction Web Site (Link from
apsu.edu/astronomy)
 Print the instructions BEFORE you come to
class!
If you are interested in
math…
ASTR 2010: Problems in Planetary Astronomy
meets Wednesdays at 1600 (E118). It is a onehour class that only meets once a week. We will do
some of the problems from the back of the
chapters that involve math as well as
supplemental problems. The math level is basic
algebra. If you are interested, see Dr. Buckner to
sign up for the class. It may be planetary but much
of the material is also applicable for stellar. ASTR
2020 Problems in Stellar is a spring class.
And, If you are interested in
(more) observing…
ASTR-2011: Introduction to Observational
Astronomy meets Wednesdays at 1830 (B310). It
is a one-hour class that only meets once a week. It
is an introduction top observing and use of
telescopes. It is intended to be “under the stars”
as much as the weather allows. This will “release”
you from the observing report for this class.
Grading
Exams
Labs
Observations
In-class & HW
Projects
A…90 – 100%
B…80 – 89%
C…67 – 79%
D…50 – 66%
F…<50%
35%
25%
10%
15%
15%
Exams
Regular Exam
~30 Multiple Choice worth 3 points each
1 Essay or problem worth ~10 points
Final Exam
Exam 4: a regular exam (~30 MC + 1 SA)
Covering the chapters after Exam 3
PLUS
Final Exam: five essays worth 10 points
each over the rest of the semester
Check out the sample questions
on the class website.
Observations
You Must Attend a 1st Quarter Night
and
A Dark Sky Night
Then write an Observations Report
Grading:
First Quarter Attendance 3%
Dark Sky Night Attendance 3%
Observations Report
4%
If you do not attend a 1st Quarter night,
your Observations Reports will only be
worth half the maximum!
In-class Activities
Many class meetings will have some type of in-class activity.
Among the different types of activities will be short quizzes,
worksheets out of Lecture Tutorials for Introductory
Astronomy, five-minute essays, multiple choice iClicker
questions, ranking tasks and comment cards. Days which
have activities will be chosen at random. The Lecture-tutorial
workbook will be collected at each exam and graded for
completeness. The workbook will count for 2/3 the in-class
grade (that’s 10% of your total grade!).
IF YOU HAVE A USED WORKBOOK, TAKE IT BACK AND
GET A NEW ONE! YOU WILL NOT RECEIVE ANY CREDIT
FOR WORK DONE IN A USED WORKBOOK!*
*If your “used” workbook has no writing at all in it, bring it to me and I will approve
it for use. If it is not approved by me before you turn it in you will not receive any
credit for it.
Homework
Homework will be assigned by chapter and will be
due on the day of the first class meeting following
the completion of a chapter. Most of the homework
will be done online using the SmartWork system
run by the textbook publisher. There may also be
exercises handed out in class which will be due at
the beginning of the next class meeting.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION: The
SmartWork enrollment key for this class is
ASTRO4E8568
All caps, no blank spaces
See handout for how to set-up your SmartWork account
Labs
YOU MUST ENROLL IN THE LAB TO GET CREDIT
FOR THE COURSE!
A separate syllabus for the lab is on-line.
There will be two (?) formal lab write-ups this
semester. These will also include some statistical
analysis of the data for that lab.
You will get the same grade in lab
that you get in lecture!
Other “Stuff”
Disability Policy
Any student that has a condition that may affect his/her academic
performance is encouraged to make an appointment with me and with
Disability Services to discuss the matter. The discussions should take place
well before the first exam.
Academic & Classroom Misconduct
Students are expected to conduct themselves appropriately at all times.
Academic and classroom misconduct will not be tolerated. Students must
read the “Code of Student Conduct” in the new Student Handbook for an
understanding of what will be expected of them within the academic
setting.
The use of cell phones in class is not allowed. If you are caught using a cell
phone in class you will be given the choice of either surrendering the phone
for the remainder of the day (it can be picked up in the instructor’s office
after 5:00pm) or leaving class immediately and receiving a zero on any inclass activities for that day. PUT YOUR CELL PHONE ON VIBRATE AND
STORE IT AWAY FOR THE DURATION OF CLASS!!!