TTh 2-3:15 · WEL 3.502 · Unique No. 47705

quasar pair

Quasar Pair (Chandra)

Professor

Raphael Flauger

RLM 9.301 · · · email

Courses - Fall '10

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Drop Dates. You may drop a course without academic penalty until September 22. You can then drop courses until October 20 with a Q or F, depending on your performance in class up to that time. October 20 is also the last day to change to or from the credit/no credit basis. After October 20, you may drop the course or withdraw from the University only for urgent and substantiated, nonacademic reasons. Please consult the University's published calendar (http://www.utexas.edu/student/registrar) to verify these dates and for further information.

Star Parties. Every Wednesday evening, if the weather is clear, there will be astronomical viewing with the 16-inch telescope on the roof of RLM Hall. These sessions will start about 7 p.m. (8 p.m. when daylight saving time is in effect). There is also a 9-inch telescope on Painter Hall that is open to UT students on Friday evenings and to the general public on Saturday evenings. For observing hours, see the Department of Astronomy public outreach Web page at http://outreach.as.utexas.edu/public. You can use the 9-inch yourself if you are checked out on it. McDonald Observatory in west Texas has star parties and public nights (see http://mcdonaldobservatory.org/; phone 471-5285; recorded information in available at 1-877-984-7827).

Astronomy Department Policies. For information on Department policies and courses, see https://www.as.utexas.edu/astronomy/education/courses.html, which includes links to the Memo to Undergraduate Astronomy Students and the Course Catalog headnotes.

About the Instructor: Professor Shields was born in Los Angeles, California and grew up in Nebraska and Kansas. He earned a B.S. in Physics from Stanford University in 1968 and a Ph.D. in Astronomy at Caltech in 1973. Following a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard, he joined the UT faculty in 1974. He now holds the title of The Jane and Roland Blumberg Centennial Professor in Astronomy, and served as Chairman of the Department of Astronomy from 1990 to 1994. He teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses at UT. His research interests include studies of nebulae, quasars and black holes, and he has published numerous research papers and popular articles.

Suggested reading:

The Big Bang, by Joseph Silk (2001), W. H. Freeman and Co., 3rd ed. A survey of cosmological ideas from the ancients to the latest scientific theories. Emphasizes observations and theories of the early universe and galaxy formation.

The Cosmic Perspective, by Jeffrey Bennett et al. (5th ed., Addison Wesley). An introductory astronomy text; later sections deal with galaxies and the universe. A shorter version called The Cosmic Perspective: Stars, Galaxies, & Cosmology is similar but omits the solar system. Any recent edition of these or similar introductory astronomy books should be good for review.

"The University of Texas at Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact the Office of the Dean of Students at 471-6259, 471-6441 TTY."

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