The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL: ~ basri/astro10

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The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL: http:// astro.berkeley.e du/~ basri/astro10/
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Transcript of The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL: ~ basri/astro10

Page 1: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The Course Syllabus

and Plan

You can get directly here by using the URL:http://astro.berkeley.edu/~ basri/astro10/

Page 2: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

How to “enroll” in this course

• Go to “bb” if from the campus network berkeley.edu, otherwise “blackboard.berkeley.edu”

• Click “Create Account”. You will have to choose a username.

• Fill out all red-starred information slots, then “submit” at the bottom

• Click “Courses” tab in upper left; “Letters & Science”; “Astronomy”

• Click “Astro 10 (astro10-fa03)”

• Choose “Enroll in this Course” and follow directions

• You should end up in the Astro 10 Announcement screen

• You will have to use the username & password you chose above to log in; this will be your username for the course

Page 3: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The CourseInfo website by Blackboard

Page 4: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The Website Discussion Forum

Page 5: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Grading and Exams

Page 6: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Further Comments• There will be NO sections this week• You are not in the course unless a GSI has enrolled you on the

course website into a section (Telebears aside)• For that to happen, you MUST get an account in Blackboard• Sections next week are all in the basement of Campbell Hall• This is not a mathematical course, but there is simple algebra

in it (like L=R2 T4 ) a bit. Critical thinking IS required.• The main source of material is the book, but lectures tell you

what is important (and fill out detail – the book is brief)• Falling behind in reading or homework is fatal – this material

CANNOT be crammed at the end• If you aren’t used to critical thinking, or don’t need the grade,

we strongly encourage you to take the course P/NP

Page 7: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Science vs Non-science (nonsense?)

• What is “science”?– Empirical : must always be based on observations

– Predictive : should be able to predict new observations

– Reductionist(?) : tries to discover underlying “laws”

• Why don’t astronomers believe in astrology?– Precession has moved the “Sun signs”

– The constellations are not real entities

– Local forces are much greater than forces due to stars or planets

– Astrology is not really predictive (rigorous statistical analyses shows this)

[of course, just because it is not science doesn’t mean it should be banned, just that it shouldn’t pretend to be science]

Page 8: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Powers of Ten

We jump by a factor of 100in each frame. This also shows the context of the Earth in the Universe.

Page 9: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The Solar System

Page 10: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Our place in the Universe

Page 11: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

Timeline graphic

Page 12: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The Universe in a The Universe in a DayDay 

Let’s look at the entire history of the Universe as though it took place in a single day. The present is at the stroke of midnight at the end of that day. Since it is about 12 billion years old, each hour will be worth 0.5 billion years. A million years takes only a little over 7 seconds.

 

The Big Bang (as an opaque fireball) and the formation of H and He all take place in the first nanosecond. The Universe becomes transparent in about 2 seconds. The first stars and galaxies appear after about 2am, and our Galaxy forms at perhaps 4am. Generations of stars are born and die.

 

Page 13: The Course Syllabus and Plan You can get directly here by using the URL:  ~ basri/astro10

The Universe in a The Universe in a DayDay 

The Solar System does not form until 3pm. The first life (bacterial) appears on the Earth by 4pm. Our atmosphere begins to have free oxygen at 7 or 8 pm, and this promotes the development of creatures which can move more aggressively and eat each other. Life does not begin to take on complex forms (multicellular) until 10:45pm. It moves onto land at 11:10. The dinosaurs appear at about 11:40, and become extinct at 11:52. Pre-human primates appear at around 14 seconds before midnight, and all of recorded history occurs in the last 70 milliseconds.

 

Looking to the future, we can expect the Universe of stars to go on for another at least a millennium (using the same time compression factor). After that, there are other ages of the Universe (not dominated by stars), which grow colder and more bizarre, and take place on astronomical timescales (even after this compression of timescale).