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Astronomy 111: Astronomy 111: Overview of Modern Astronomy Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013 Fall 2013

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Page 1: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Astronomy 111:Astronomy 111: Overview of Modern Astronomy

Prof. D. L. DePoyFall 2013Fall 2013

Page 2: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Course DescriptionCourse Description

• This course will cover the roots of modern astronomy, the scientific method, fundamental physical laws, the nature and formation of p ys ca a s, t e atu e a d o at o oplanets, stars, and galaxies, and an introduction to cosmology. The course includes an integrated laboratory that reinforcesan integrated laboratory that reinforces concepts learned in lecture and includes supplemental information related to the lecture topics, including hands-on experience withtopics, including hands on experience with telescopes and digital imaging of celestial objects. This course is not open to students who have taken ASTR101 or ASTR314.

ASTR111 Lecture 1

who have taken ASTR101 or ASTR314.

Page 3: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Course ObjectivesCourse Objectives

• Explain the scientific process and how scientific theories are developed and tested.

• Recall basic physical concepts such as gravitational and ti l d h li ht d tt i t tconservation laws, and how light and matter interact.

• Describe the general characteristics of our solar system and the universe.

• Apply scientific thinking to the natural world to understand• Apply scientific thinking to the natural world to understand, e.g. what powers the sun, why galaxies differ, and how the universe began.

• Formulate a scientific hypothesis, identify a testableFormulate a scientific hypothesis, identify a testable prediction, verify by carrying out an experiment, and assess the results.

• Work effectively in a laboratory group.

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 4: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Class websiteClass website

• Class Website:– http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111.html/

Contents• All course handoutsAll course handouts• Online lecture notes

Links for further exploration• Links for further exploration

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 5: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Online lecture notesOnline lecture notes

• Outlines of the electronic overheads shown in class

• Posted to the website each week in advanceadvance

• Includes lecture graphics & computer animationsanimations

• They’re free...

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 6: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

TextbooksTextbooks

• Textbooks: – “The Essential Cosmic Perspective” byThe Essential Cosmic Perspective by

Bennett et al– “Astronomy 111 Handbook” (available at y (

Notes & Quotes)

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 7: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

TextbookTextbook

Suggested readings will be from Essential Cosmic Perspective• Will be skipping some extraneous or overly

detailed sections.• Readings are assigned by topic rather than

by lecture• Lecture sequence may not follow book

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 8: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Office hoursOffice hours

• On demand:On demand: – Please email me to request an appointment at any

time.– I have two offices

• Munnerlyn 204y– Building is locked and generally inaccessible

• Mitchell Institute 240I ill b th TTh i d ft– I will be there TTh mornings and afternoons

– Email is by far the best way to contact me!

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 9: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

TAsTAs

• Brett Salmon and others• Office hoursOffice hours

– ???• Email to arrange meetings• Email to arrange meetings

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 10: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Lab CoordinatorLab Coordinator

• Dr. J. Marshall• Email to arrange meetingsEmail to arrange meetings

– Only if necessary

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 11: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

GradingGrading

• On-line Pre-lectures and In-Class Exercises (10%)

• Three Mid-term Exams (45%): multiple choice• Three Mid-term Exams (45%): multiple choice • Final Exam (20%): multiple choice • Laboratory (25%): 10 labs completed over the

course of the semester

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 12: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

GradingGrading

• Approximate Grading Scale:A (>90%) B (80–89%) C (70–79%) DA (>90%), B (80 89%), C (70 79%), D (60–69%), F (<60%)

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 13: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Pre-lecturesPre-lectures

• Weekly videos to watch and answer questions aboutq

• Exercises in class about material• Starts next week• Starts next week• All will be available on eCampus

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 14: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Mid-term examsMid-term exams

• Three mid-term exams• Multiple choice questionsMultiple choice questions• Worth 45% of final course grade

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 15: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Final ExamFinal Exam

• Comprehensive & cumulative• Multiple choicep• Worth 20% of final course grade

N M k Fi lNo Makeup Finals

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 16: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

LabLab

• 10 labs completed over the course of the semester.

• Lab sections meet the first week of class in MPHYS 331

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 17: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

LabLab

• Bring lab handbook (from Notes & Quotes), a sturdy lab notebook, and a ), y ,writing implement with you to each lab

• Lab will be graded on attendanceLab will be graded on attendance, completion of labs in your lab notebook, and short weekly quizzesand short weekly quizzes

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 18: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 19: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

In class assessmentIn class assessment

• Astronomy Concept Inventory• Will not be gradedWill not be graded• For my benefit to determine what you

already knowalready know• Helps to decide if class has been

ff tieffective

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 20: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 21: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

What is Astronomy?What is Astronomy?

“astron” = starastron = star“nomos” = law

Astronomy is the science of stars andAstronomy is the science of stars and clusters of stars, galaxies and clusters of galaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and g , p , ptheir satellites, asteroids and comets, interstellar gas and dust, and everything else in the Universeelse in the Universe

A lot to cover in one semester…

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 22: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

“The most incomprehensible thing about the Universe is that it is comprehensible ”it is comprehensible.

Albert Einstein

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 23: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Three Questions:Three Questions:

1) What is it?– Describe it: how bright, far, energetic, etc.Describe it: how bright, far, energetic, etc.

2) How does it work?)– Underlying Physics (testable theories)

3) How does it evolve?– How does it form, develop & end its

ASTR111 Lecture 1

o does o , de e op & e d sexistence?

Page 24: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 25: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Main Topics:

• The Night SkyHistory of Astronomy & Science• History of Astronomy & Science

• Light and Matter• The Solar System• Structure and Evolution of Stars• Structure and Evolution of Galaxies• Structure and Evolution of the Universe• Frontiers of Modern Astronomy

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 26: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Night Sky

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 27: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Night SkyThe Night Sky

• Observed motions of the sky• Definitions of day year etcDefinitions of day, year, etc.• Seasons

N i ti• Navigation• Long term changes

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 28: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The History of AstronomyThe History of Astronomy

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 29: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The History of AstronomyThe History of Astronomy

• Ancient Observatories and Measurements• Tycho, Kepler, Copernicusy p p• Galileo• Newton• Development of the Scientific Method

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 30: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Light and MatterLight and Matter

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 31: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Light & MatterLight & Matter

• Light– PhotonsPhotons– Wavelengths and energies

• Matter• Matter– Fundamental particles

F• Forces– Four fundamental forces

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 32: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Solar SystemThe Solar System

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 33: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Solar SystemThe Solar System

• Terrestrial planets• Jovian planetsJovian planets• Other stuff

A t id– Asteroids– Comets

D f l t– Dwarf planets• Formation of the Solar System

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 34: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure and

Evolution of

Stars

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 35: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure & Evolution of Starsof Stars

• Observed properties of stars– distances, motions, brightness, temperature, etc.g p

• Physics of stars– internal structure– sources of energy

• Stellar EvolutionStellar Evolution– formation, development, and final states

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 36: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure and Evolution of

Galaxies

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 37: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure & Evolution of GalaxiesEvolution of Galaxies

• Observed properties of Galaxies– distances, sizes, shapes– constituents (stars, gas, and dark matter)

• Physics of Galaxiesy– structure and dynamics

• Evolution of GalaxiesEvolution of Galaxies– star formation histories– interactions with other galaxies

ASTR111 Lecture 1

g

Page 38: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure and Evolution of

the Universe

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 39: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Structure & Evolution of the UniverseUniverse

• Observed Characteristics– size, age, constituentssize, age, constituents

• Physics of the Universespace time and gravitation– space, time, and gravitation

• Evolution of the Universeorigin of the Universe– origin of the Universe

– development (Big Bang theory)– fate of the Universe

ASTR111 Lecture 1

fate of the Universe

Page 40: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Frontiers of ModernFrontiers of Modern Astronomyy

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 41: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Frontiers of Modern AstronomyAstronomy

• What is Dark Matter and Dark Energy?

• Are there other planets in the Galaxy?

• Are there giant Black Holes in galactic

nuclei?nuclei?

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 42: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 43: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

The Challenges of AstronomyThe Challenges of Astronomy

• We can’t “touch”, we can only observe.• Vast, unbridgeable distancesg

– hard to measure distances accurately– sometimes hard to measure distances at

all!all!• Long times (millions & billions of years)

properties of “populations” of objects– properties of “populations” of objects– cosmic “lookback”: distance=time

ASTR111 Lecture 1

Page 44: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Planet: The EarthPlanet: The Earth

13 000 kil t

ASTR111 Lecture 1

13,000 kilometers across

Page 45: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Satellite: The MoonSatellite: The Moon

380,000 kilometers away

ASTR111 Lecture 1

3,500 kilometers across

Page 46: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Star: The SunStar: The Sun

150 million kilometers away

ASTR111 Lecture 1

1.4 million kilometers across

Page 47: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Cluster of Stars: The PleiadesCluster of Stars: The Pleiades

430 light-years away

ASTR111 Lecture 1

430 light years away15 light-years across

1 light year = 9.4605284 × 1012 kilometers

Page 48: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Gas & Dust: The Lagoon NebulaLagoon Nebula

5000 light-years away0 li h

ASTR111 Lecture 1

50 light-years across

Page 49: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Galaxy: The Andromeda GalaxyGalaxy: The Andromeda Galaxy

2,200,200 light-years away80 000 li ht

ASTR111 Lecture 1

80,000 light-years across

Page 50: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

Cluster of Galaxies: ComaCluster of Galaxies: Coma

320 million light-years away10 illi li h

ASTR111 Lecture 1

10 million light-years across

Page 51: Prof. D. L. DePoy Fall 2013Fall 2013people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr111TR/Notes/lecture1a.pdf · of gg,p , palaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids

ASTR111 Lecture 1