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Welcome Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 1
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Questions to Consider Am I in the right place? Astronomy 315: Stars, Nebulae and Galaxies Do I have the right stuff? “Astronomy Today”, Chaisson and McMillan (4 th Edition) Star and Planet Locator Calculator WebAssign card
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Things to Know Professor Dr. Lee Carkner Office Hours M W F 1-2 pm Science 208 Places We will normally meet in Science 102 Some classes we will meet in the planetarium (like this Friday) We will have evening observing sessions in the observatory
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How Does the Class Work? Read the book material before class Do the online homework via WebAssign Come to class Do the in-class activities Go out and make the assigned observations and turn them in by the due date Come to the observing sessions when announced Three quizzes and a final
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Web Page http://helios.augustana.edu/~lc/as315/ intro.html Outline gives readings and lecture topics Lectures posted online before class Download and print out before class Fill in blank areas during class Outline will be updated and modified as the class goes on Web page will also list observing sessions
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WebAssign Homework is due every class day Go to webassign.net/student.html Click on student login Username: firstnamelastname e.g. johnsmith Institution: augustana Password: Your Augustana ID number You can change the password after you login If you have used webassign before you may still have our old password You will have to register using a WebAssign card purchased at the Runestone bookstore
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WebAssign Homework Once logged in you will see a list of assignments Click on the current assignment For Wednesday it is “2historyoftheuniverse” Be sure you have done the reading first Answer all questions and click “submit” You only get one submission so be sure you are ready to answer all questions before you start
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Grading Three Quizzes -- 45% (15% each) Observing -- 10% In Class Activities -- 15% Homework – 10% Final -- 20%
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Guidelines for Work Handed In Written answers must be in complete sentences Numbers must have units Answers must reasonable If not reasonable, explain why All work must be neat and easily readable Explain all work!
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Survey Please fill out the front page with information about your background Answer the questions as best you can on the back page Survey is optional But please put your name on it for attendance Information will be used to help improve the course
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Why is Astronomy Unique? How is astronomy different from all other sciences? Astronomy is almost entirely observational Very few hands-on experiments you can do Exceptions: meteors, probes to other planets Everything we know about the universe outside the solar system comes from observation Observation forms the foundation for astronomy
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Observing How does the Observing Project work? Make several copies of the blank observing forms Go outside on a clear night and sketch and label the required constellations Answer the questions on a separate sheet Come to the observing sessions and sketch the objects through the telescope This class requires you to do work at night both on your own and in groups at the times announced in class!!
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How to Observe Face a cardinal point (N, S, E, W) The semi-circle represents the half of the celestial dome in front of you Draw each star as a dot Size proportional to brightness Draw to scale Label and include comments! For telescope views, draw what is in the eyepiece
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Observing Tips Take advantage of clear nights Use resources to help find things Star and Planet Locator Sky maps in back of book planetarium software Make many copies of observing form and do a first “practice” sketch Draw only what you can see Do not cheat!
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Next Time Read Chapter 2.1-2.4 Do WebAssign homework Observe if clear!
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