A100 Exploring the Universe: Introduction. Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy
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1 A100 Exploring the Universe: Introduction Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy September 2, 2014 Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 1
2 What is Astronomy? Story of our understanding of the Universe By the end of the course, we will have traveled through the solar system, the Galaxy, clusters of galaxies to the beginning of the Universe. Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 2
3 What is Astronomy? Story of our understanding of the Universe By the end of the course, we will have traveled through the solar system, the Galaxy, clusters of galaxies to the beginning of the Universe. Objectives Organization of the Universe Principal components that create this organization Scientific method: how we try overcome human perceptual limitations to figure this out Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 2
4 Earth in the Universe Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
5 Earth in the Universe 10 4 km Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
6 Earth in the Universe km 10 4 km Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
7 Earth in the Universe km km 10 4 km Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
8 Earth in the Universe km km km 10 4 km Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
9 Earth in the Universe km km km km 10 4 km Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 3
10 Scale of the Universe Sun = basketball Earth = marble at a few hundred feet Nearest star = about miles away (Tokyo) Center of the Milky Way = times the nearest star or 100,000,000 miles away Nearest Galaxy = 1000 times distance to center of Milky Way 100,000,000,000 miles away Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 4
11 Human biases Cosmic length scales very large compared to human sizen Cosmic time scales very long compared to human lifetime Cosmic events at many wavelengths humans have limited sensitivity to the electromagnetic spectrum Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 5
12 Looking into the past What was the Universe like in the past? Destination Light travel time Moon 1 second Sun 8 minutes Sirius 8 years Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million years Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 6
13 Looking into the past What was the Universe like in the past? Destination Light travel time Moon 1 second Sun 8 minutes Sirius 8 years Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million years Observing at large distances is looking back in time!! Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 6
14 Looking into the past What was the Universe like in the past? Destination Light travel time Moon 1 second Sun 8 minutes Sirius 8 years Andromeda Galaxy 2.5 million years This is known as the Space-time continuum Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 6
15 The distance light can travel in one year About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles) Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 7
16 The distance light can travel in one year About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles) At great distances we see objects as they were when the Universe was much younger Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 7
17 The distance light can travel in one year About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles) At great distances we see objects as they were when the Universe was much younger Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 7
18 The distance light can travel in one year About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles) At great distances we see objects as they were when the Universe was much younger Question: can we see the entire Universe? Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 7
19 Three encompassing topics Motions, Light and Gravity Stars Galaxies & Cosmology Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 8
20 Three encompassing topics Motions, Light and Gravity Stars Galaxies & Cosmology Text book: The Cosmic Perspective: Stars, Galaxies and Cosmology, 7e, by Bennett et al. Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 8
21 Three encompassing topics Motions, Light and Gravity Stars Galaxies & Cosmology Text book: The Cosmic Perspective: Stars, Galaxies and Cosmology, 7e, by Bennett et al. Attendance is optional, but you are responsible for topics covered in class whether you attend or not. Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 8
22 Three encompassing topics Motions, Light and Gravity Stars Galaxies & Cosmology Text book: The Cosmic Perspective: Stars, Galaxies and Cosmology, 7e, by Bennett et al. Attendance is optional, but you are responsible for topics covered in class whether you attend or not. My role is to help you understand. Please ask questions!! Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 8
23 Three encompassing topics Motions, Light and Gravity Stars Galaxies & Cosmology Text book: The Cosmic Perspective: Stars, Galaxies and Cosmology, 7e, by Bennett et al. Attendance is optional, but you are responsible for topics covered in class whether you attend or not. My role is to help you understand. Please ask questions!! Web site: Lec 01 09/02/14 slide 8
24 Reading: Assignments in the text for each class will be given in preceding class and are required. The relevant chapters are also listed in the Syllabus by subject. You should expect to spend about 3 hours out of class for every one hour of class time. Effort = Final Grade Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 9
25 Exams: Three in-class one-hour exams and a final exam. Of the four, I will drop you lowest score. The exams will be multiple choice. The exam dates are in the syllabus. They will only change if the University is closed (e.g. snow day). In that case, the exam will be held at the next class meeting. Please bring a #2 pencil to each exam! Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 10
26 : lecture + lab A100: four credits with a lab The lecture counts for 75% of your total grade The lab counts for 25% of your total grade Your lecture grade: Your course grade: score = Your points Total points 100 score = Lecture grade Lab grade 0.25 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 11
27 Lab info Steve Schneider runs the labs, not me. Meet in the new Integrated Learning Center (ILC) ILC S220 on Mondays and Wednesdays ILC S110 on Tuesdays and Thursdays During the first two weeks, please attend the lab on your registered day. Labs will begin today (Tuesday). First meeting for the Monday lab will be on the Monday of next week Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 12
28 Lab info Steve Schneider runs the labs, not me. Meet in the new Integrated Learning Center (ILC) ILC S220 on Mondays and Wednesdays ILC S110 on Tuesdays and Thursdays Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 12
29 Lab info Steve Schneider runs the labs, not me. Meet in the new Integrated Learning Center (ILC) ILC S220 on Mondays and Wednesdays ILC S110 on Tuesdays and Thursdays During the first two weeks, please attend the lab on your registered day. Labs will begin today (Tuesday). First meeting for the Monday lab will be on the Monday of next week Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 12
30 Makeup exam policy: Following the University guidelines, makeup exams will be given only for documented medical or family emergencies or by prior arrangement. Homework: There will be (roughly) weekly homework assignments worth 25% of the total lecture score. We will using an online assignment system. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 13
31 Extra credit: At the end of each class, you may pass in a sheet of paper with your name, UMass ID and 1. Brief description of an idea or topic from the day that you found particular interesting 2. Your top question from the day s class 1/2 credit for each. Over the entire semester, this is worth up to 5% to your final score. Some of the homework assignments will have additional questions that count for extra credit. There are no other forms of extra credit. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 14
32 will be assigned on a modified straight scale. Scores will be adjusted upward if the exam is too hard. 92.5% A 90% A- 87.5% B+ 82.5% B 80% B- 77.5% C+ 72.5% C 70% C 67.5% D+ 60% D 3 exams 56.25% Online homework 18.75% In-class feedback 3.75% Lab score 25% Academic Honesty is expected of all scientists, and also of all students of science. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 15
33 Interactive, online homework and study system (see your handout) You must register using the access packet that comes with your textbook Buying a used book is perfectly OK; need to purchase access on line for $60 Can purchase e-text and for $90 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 16
34 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 16
35 : grading The assignments untimed. You may stop in the middle, go back later, etc. The system offers you hints, if you want them. Not using hints is worth 2% bonus credit. If you give an incorrect response, in many cases, you will get some extra help from the system and you can try again. However, every time you answer incorrectly, you lose 20% of the available credit for that problem. Assignments submitted before the due date, of course, get full credit. For every day an assignment is late, you lose 3.5%. So after approximately two weeks, you will have lost 50%. Assignments that are more than two weeks late receive at most 1/2 credit. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 17
36 : assignments Practice assignment available (DO THIS FIRST) Check your computer/browser/plugin installation by testing all aspects of Get used to style First real assignment available Physical scales Due next Tue Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 18
37 Scientific Notation km km km km 10 4 km Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 19
38 Scientific Notation The numbers encountered in this class are astronomical: The nearest star is 41,000,000,000,000 kilometers away The mass of the sun is 2,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grams Scientists have devised a more compact notation for dealing with such numbers called scientific notation. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 20
39 Scientific Notation 41,000,000,000,000 kilometers 2,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 grams There are really only two important parts to each of the numbers: 1. The leading digits which establish the precision of the number itself 2. The number of digits which sets the size or magnitude of the number In Scientific notation: and Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 21
40 Scientific Notation The is, as it appears, a multiplication: 10 2 = = = = 1, = = 10, = = 100, = = 1,000,000 so = = 45,000. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 22
41 Scientific Notation Counting zeros and moving the decimal place is a convenient way of carrying out the multiplication by powers of ten Example: Want: = = 10 8 The result of that long string of multiplication is that we add the exponents of the 10 s: = 8 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 23
42 Scientific Notation Addition a bit more tricky: = = Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 24
43 Scientific Notation Addition a bit more tricky: = = or 1, ,000 = 101,000 = Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 24
44 Scientific Notation Addition a bit more tricky: = = or or 1, ,000 = 101,000 = = Rule: add the prefix (mantissa) when power of ten (exponent) for the addends is the same Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 24
45 1 light-year = (speed of light) (1 year) = 300,000 km 365 days s 1 year 60 min 1 hour 60 s 1 min 24 hr 1 day Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 25
46 1 light-year = (speed of light) (1 year) = 300,000 km 365 days s 1 year 24 hr 1 day 60 min 1 hour 60 s 1 min Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 25
47 1 light-year = (speed of light) (1 year) = 300,000 km 365 days s 1 year 24 hr 1 day 60 min 1 hour 60 s 1 min = 9,460,000,000,000 km Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 25
48 1 light-year = (speed of light) (1 year) = 300,000 km 365 days s 1 year 24 hr 1 day 60 min 1 hour 60 s 1 min = 9,460,000,000,000 km = km Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 25
49 1 light-year = (speed of light) (1 year) = 300,000 km 365 days s 1 year 24 hr 1 day 60 min 1 hour 60 s 1 min = 9,460,000,000,000 km = km km Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 25
50 10 15 femto pico nano micro milli centi deci- 10 deka hecto kilo mega giga tera peta- Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 26
51 Measuring distance Distance in meters (m) Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 27
52 Energy Source Big Bang Radio galaxy Supernova Sunlight (1 y) Volcanic explosion H-bomb Thunderstorm Lightning flash Baseball pitch 10 2 Typing (per key) Flea hop Total Energy (J) Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 28
53 Earth rotates: speed = 0.5 km/s = 1,700 km/hour = 1,000 miles/hour Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 29
54 Earth rotates: speed = 0.5 km/s = 1,700 km/hour = 1,000 miles/hour Earth orbital speed (solar system) = 30 km/s = 170,000 km/hour = 67,000 miles/hour Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 29
55 Earth rotates: speed = 0.5 km/s = 1,700 km/hour = 1,000 miles/hour Earth orbital speed (solar system) = 30 km/s = 170,000 km/hour = 67,000 miles/hour Sun s orbital speed (Galaxy) = 200 km/s = 450,000 miles/hour Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 29
56 Motions in the galaxy Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 30
57 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 31
58 Expanding Universe Discovery by Edwin Hubble in 1929 All galaxies outside of our Local Group are moving away from us The more distant the galaxy, the faster it is moving Nothing special about our location in the Universe Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 32
59 Expanding Universe Discovery by Edwin Hubble in 1929 All galaxies outside of our Local Group are moving away from us The more distant the galaxy, the faster it is moving Nothing special about our location in the Universe Conclusion: We live in an expanding Universe! Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 32
60 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 33
61 Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 34
62 Gas (mostly hydrogen) settles in the disk of galaxies This gas fragments into dense knots, forms stars The stars fuse hydrogen into helium and heavier, generating energy The star explodes! Galaxy: a huge island of stars moving around a common center and held together by gravity. Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 35
63 Gas (mostly hydrogen) settles in the disk of galaxies This gas fragments into dense knots, forms stars The stars fuse hydrogen into helium and heavier, generating energy The star explodes! Nebula: an interstellar cloud of dust and/or gas Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 35
64 Gas (mostly hydrogen) settles in the disk of galaxies This gas fragments into dense knots, forms stars The stars fuse hydrogen into helium and heavier, generating energy The star explodes! Star: generates heat and light through nuclear fusion Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 35
65 Gas (mostly hydrogen) settles in the disk of galaxies This gas fragments into dense knots, forms stars The stars fuse hydrogen into helium and heavier, generating energy The star explodes! Supernova: fusion fuel exhausted, the star explodes Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 35
66 Gas (mostly hydrogen) settles in the disk of galaxies This gas fragments into dense knots, forms stars The stars fuse hydrogen into helium and heavier, generating energy The star explodes! Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 35
67 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
68 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
69 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
70 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Time for Sun to Orbit the Galaxy: Time = 2π 28,000 light years 200 km/s Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
71 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Time for Sun to Orbit the Galaxy: Time 2π 28,000 light years = 200 km/s 28,000 light years = 2π 220 km/s km 1 year 1 light year s Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
72 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Time for Sun to Orbit the Galaxy: Time 2π 28,000 light years = 200 km/s = 2π 28,000 light years 220 km/s km 1 year 1 light year s = year = year Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
73 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Time for Sun to Orbit the Galaxy: 240 million years Time for Milky Way to collide with Andromeda Galaxy: 10 billion years Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
74 Time for Earth to make one rotation: 1 day Time for Earth to orbit the Sun: 1 year Time for Uranus to orbit the Sun: 84 years Time for Sun to Orbit the Galaxy: 240 million years Time for Milky Way to collide with Andromeda Galaxy: 10 billion years Time for light to get to us from the most distant galaxy: 14 billion years Read: Chap 1 09/02/14 slide 36
A100H Exploring the Universe: Introduction. Martin D. Weinberg UMass Astronomy
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