Syllabus


Monday 7-9 / 46690


AST 103L

Observational Astronomy

Fall 2015

Unique Number: 46690

Classroom: RLM 13.132

Class Time: 7PM - 9PM Monday

Instructor: Alan Sluder

Office: RLM 16.327 471-6858

Office Hours: 1-2PM Tuesday

Email: alsluder@astro.as.utexas.edu

Purpose

The point of this course is to understand the observations that astronomers make and how they are explained by theory.

Prerequisites

You should understand some basic astronomy and mathematics (algebra and how to use a scientific calculator).

Materials

You need a scientific calculator, or something that functions as one.

Grading

There will be one assignment for each week (13 assignments total) and 100% of your grade is from these. All assignments are worth 100 points, and your final grade will be your total number of points divided by 1200 times 100 (equivalent to dropping the lowest grade). The assignments will be done in class.

The grade scale is:

Grading Scale
Grade Final Score
A 85-100%
B 70-84%
C 55-69%
D 40-54%
F 0-40%

Course Website

We will use Canvas as the course website. The syllabus and all worksheets will be posted there.

Academic Honesty

You are expected to fill out your worksheet yourself.

Attendance

Please notify me in advance if you are going to miss a lab.

Students with Disabilities

If you need academic accomodations, please contact 471-6259 (voice) or 232-2937 (video) as soon as possible. I will need an official letter outlining authorized accomodations.

Schedule

Here is a list of the topics covered for each class date:

August 31 - Mathematics

September 7 - No Class (Labor Day)

September 14 - Parallax

September 21 - Velocity of a Comet

September 28 - Light

October 5 - Spectroscopy

October 12 - Age of the Universe

October 19 - The Magnitude System

October 26 - Special Relativity

November 2 - General Relativity

November 9 - Orbital Dynamics of Extrasolar Planets

November 16 - Detecting Extrasolar Planets

November 23 - Weather and Climate of Extrasolar Planets

November 30 - The Milankovitch Cycles