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Welcome to Astronomy 101 Course Instructor: Prof. Darren L. DePoy Course TA: B Salmon Course TA: B. Salmon Suggested Textbook: B tt D h Sh id & V it Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit: The Essential Cosmic Perspective 7 th ed. Web Site: http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101.html

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Page 1: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Welcome to Astronomy 101

Course Instructor: Prof. Darren L. DePoyCourse TA: B SalmonCourse TA: B. SalmonSuggested Textbook:

B tt D h S h id & V itBennett, Donahue, Schneider, & Voit: The Essential Cosmic Perspective 7th ed.

Web Site:http://faculty.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101.html

Page 2: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

TextbookTextbookThe Essential Cosmic Perspective 7th

by Bennett, Donahue, Schneider, & VoitReadings will be from Chapters 1 through 18g p g

• Will be skipping some extraneous or overly detailed sections.

• Readings are assigned by topic rather than by lecture

• Lecture sequence may not follow book

Page 3: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

In-Class Exams

3 in-class exams:• On the material since the last examOn the material since the last exam• closed-book, closed-notes• Comprise 60% of course grade• Comprise 60% of course grade• graded on a curve

Febr ar 12 March 12 & April 16• February 12, March 12, & April 16• Makeup exams will be different

Page 4: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Final Exam

• Comprehensive & Cumulative• Closed-book, Closed-notes• Worth 30% of final course grade.• Tuesday, May 12, 1-3pm MPHYS 204y, y , p

No Makeup Finals

Page 5: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Homework & In-classHomework & In class assignments

• Problems and exercises that extend material covered in class

• Cooperative and collaborative work encouraged

• Worth 10% of final course grade• Any assignments turned in late will given

significantly reduced score• Will be assigned and due throughout the

semester

Page 6: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Course Websitehttp://people.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astro101.html

ContentsContents• All course handouts

O li L t N t• Online Lecture Notes• Quiz results

• Not individual, but ensemble performance and curve

• Links for Further Exploration• Should be up and active by Wednesday

Page 7: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

OOnline 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...

Page 8: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

OOffice Hours, etc.Office Hours: TTh 8-10:30amOffice: MIST 420E-mail is much better!

[email protected] prompt answers to all questions big or small!

Teaching Assistant is Brett SalmonTeaching Assistant is Brett [email protected] 313WF 11-12pm

Page 9: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes
Page 10: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Lecture 1:Lecture 1:IntroductionIntroduction

Astronomy 101

Page 11: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

What is astronomy?“ t ” t“astron” = star“nomos” = law

Astronomy is the science of stars and clusters of stars, galaxies and clusters of

l i l t “d f l t ” d th igalaxies, planets, “dwarf planets” and their satellites, asteroids and comets, interstellar gas and dust and everything else in thegas and dust, and everything else in the Universe

A lot to cover in one semesterA lot to cover in one semester…

Page 12: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

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

Albert Einstein

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 13: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

“It will seem difficult at firstIt will seem difficult at first, but everything is difficult at first.”y g ff f

Miyamoto MusashiTh B k f Fi RiThe Book of Five Rings

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 14: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

QThree 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

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

Page 15: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Main Topics: • The Night Sky

History 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 16: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Night Sky

Page 17: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Night Sky

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

N i ti• Navigation• Long term changes

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 18: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

History of Astronomy

Page 19: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The History of Astronomy

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

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 20: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Light and Matter

Page 21: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Light & Matter

• Light– PhotonsPhotons– Wavelengths and energies

• Matter• Matter– Fundamental particles

F• Forces– Four fundamental forces

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 22: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Solar Systemy

Page 23: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 24: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure andEvolution ofEvolution of

StarsS a s

Page 25: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure & Evolution of 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 26: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure and Evolution of GalaxiesGalaxies

Page 27: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure & Evolution ofThe Structure & Evolution 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

g

Page 28: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure and Evolution of h U ithe Universe

Page 29: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The Structure & Evolution of theThe Structure & Evolution of the Universe

• 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

fate of the Universe

Page 30: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Frontiers of ModernFrontiers of Modern Astronomyy

Page 31: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Frontiers of Modern Astronomy

• What is Dark Matter and Dark Energy?

• Are there other planets in the Galaxy?

• Are There Giant Black Holes in Galactic

Nuclei?Nuclei?

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 32: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 33: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

The 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

Lecture 1: Introduction

Page 34: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Planet: The Earth

13 000 kil t13,000 kilometers across

Page 35: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Satellite: The Moon

380,000 kilometers away3,500 kilometers across

Page 36: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Star: The Sun

150 million kilometers away1.4 million kilometers across

Page 37: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Cluster of Stars: The Pleiades

430 light-years away430 light years away15 light-years across

Page 38: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Gas & Dust: The Lagoon Nebula

5000 light-years away50 light-years across

Page 39: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Galaxy: The Andromeda Galaxy

2,200,200 light-years away80 000 li ht80,000 light-years across

Page 40: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Cluster of Galaxies: Coma

320 million light-years away10 million light-years across

Page 41: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes
Page 42: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

A Sense of Scale

proton 10-15 mhydrogen atom 10-10 mthi k f h h i 18 t 180 i (10 6 )thickness of human hair 18 to 180 microns (10-6 m)human 2 mmedium sized town 10 km (104 m)

Page 43: Welcome to Astronomy 101 - Texas A&M Universitypeople.physics.tamu.edu/depoy/astr101TR/Notes/lecture1b.pdfGalaxies • Observed properties of Galaxies – distances, sizes, shapes

Earth diameter ~104 km = 107 mdistance from Earth to Sun 1.5 X 1011 mdistance from Earth to Sun 1.5 X 10 mdistances to nearest stars 1017 msize of Milky Way galaxy ~1021 mLocal Group of galaxies 5 X 1023 mLocal Group of galaxies 5 X 1023 mradius of observable universe 1.4 X 1026 m

Sometimes we like to use different units:1 mile = 1.609347 kilometersmean Earth Sun distance = 1 Astronomical Unitmean Earth-Sun distance = 1 Astronomical Unit1 light-year = distance that light travels in one year (roughly6 trillion miles)

Will define a new unit called a “parsec” that will be usefulRoughly 3 light-years

Will discuss objects that are very close to as far awayAs possible to get: 13 Billion light years!