FALL
2007
E-Mail:
loris@physast.uga.edu
Teaching
Assistants: Adam Schneider & Valmin
Miranda
E-mail: phunk10@uga.edu
val@physast.uga.edu
Class: Tuesday 8:00 – 10:45 PM and/or Wednesday 7:55 – 9:50 PM. When we meet in class, the room will be Physics 302; when we use the telescopes, we will meet at the Intramural Fields.
NOTE: You may come at either scheduled class time (regardless of what section
you signed up for), or even both times during the week.
Office
Hours: By appointment:
e-mail or call Prof. Magnani (see above)
Text:
The Cambridge Star Atlas
– 3rd Edition – Wil Tirion. Also, notes will be
posted on the Web page.
Web Page: www.physast.uga.edu/~loris follow
link to ASTR 1010L & ASTR
1020L pages
Objective:
The purpose of this course is to introduce you to the night sky and to
telescopes for making simple astronomical observations.
Methodology:
The first nine weeks of the course are basically training sessions to
learn about the night sky and how to use the telescopes. The first three class meetings will be
in room 302 in the Physics Building; afterwards, class will meet at the
Intramural Fields (see map on Web page), if the weather permits. As the semester progresses, you will
learn how to identify celestial objects (stars, constellations, planets)
visually, and how to make simple telescopic observations of these and other
celestial objects. The two TAÕs
(Mr. Schneider and Mr. Miranda) will be at the Intramural Fields every clear or
mostly clear Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. Sometimes, Prof. Magnani will be there also. Obviously, if the weather is completely
overcast and/or it is raining, then there will be no lab meeting that
evening. In that case, you will
have to attend the next clear class night. During the training phase, we do not take attendance. You do not have to show up on a clear
class night on a given week, and, conversely, if you wish, you could show up
twice a week (weather permitting).
The
idea for the first nine weeks is to learn how to use the equipment, how to find
celestial objects in the sky, and how to make simple descriptions and/or
drawings of them – NO MATTER HOW MUCH OR HOW LITTLE TIME THAT MIGHT TAKE. You might be able to pick up all you
need to know in only a few sessions, or you might need more than a dozen
sessions (which would entail coming two nights a week for at least some of the
first nine weeks). The
bottom line is that by the end of first nine weeks of the course you will have
learned your way around the night sky and picked up enough telescopic
observational techniques for you to complete the lab assignments during the
last 6 weeks of the semester.
Beginning
the week of October 21st, you will begin to carry out the lab
assignments described below. Your
grade will be partially based on how many labs you actually finish (the grading
system is explained below). If you
donÕt finish any labs to the TAÕs satisfaction, then you will get no credit for
that lab. To get credit for a lab
assignment, you will make an appointment with one of the TAÕs and attempt to
carry out the tasks outlined on the Web pages for the given lab assignment (a
list of the labs is shown below), while the TA is watching. As you will see below, most of the labs
involve finding objects with the telescope so you will have to prove to the TA
that you can do this by actually pointing the telescope at the object and
finding the object in question.
The Lunar Lab, The Phases of Venus, and the Mass of Saturn Lab involve making some
observations over several nights, doing some calculations at home, and turning
in a brief write-up.
Given
the likelihood of bad weather in the fall in Athens, it will not be trivial to
finish the maximum of 5 lab assignments during the last 6 weeks of the
semester. If you wait till the
last few days and those days are cloudy, then whatever assignments youÕve done
up to that point will be included in your grade (see below for how the
assignments are factored into your final grade). Make sure you are clear on this point: IT IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY TO SCHEDULE A
TIME WITH ONE OF THE TAÕs – WHEN THE WEATHER WILL BE CLEAR – SO
THAT YOU CAN COMPLETE THE LAB ASSIGNMENTS IN QUESTION. If you wait till the very end to do
this and time runs out and the weather does not cooperate, then that is
unfortunate; but bad weather will not be accepted as a valid excuse. If you get sick, or have another
documented emergency that prevents from completing the number of labs you
wished to complete, then you will receive a grade of Incomplete and will have
to schedule a session with the TAÕs or Prof. Magnani during the subsequent two
semesters to change the Incomplete to a letter grade. A grade of Incomplete that is not remedied during the following
two semesters automatically becomes a grade of F after the end of the second
semester.
Grading: The
grading system consists of completing satisfactorily (as judged by the TAÕs) a
number of lab assignments. There
are a total of 7 lab assignments to choose from (see below), of which you can
do a maximum of 4 that will count towards your grade. Each successfully completed lab assignment will be graded on
a maximum scale of 20 points. You
will get approximately 14 points if you are judged to have done a satisfactory
job, approximately 17 points if you did a good job, and the full 20 points if
you did an excellent job. The
actual number of points that you get on a given lab is at the discretion of the
TA or Prof. Magnani. If you do an
unsatisfactory job on the lab, as judged by the TAÕs or Prof. Magnani, you can
get as little as 0 points on a given lab and then you will have to try it again
(see below). If you get less
points on a lab than you would like, you can always try the lab again. The highest number of points you get
for a given lab will be your final score for that lab. For example, I do the Double Star Hunt
three times and I get scores of 12, 18, and 17 points, in that order. What will get recorded for my
Double Star Hunt Lab is an 18. For
the observing labs where you point the telescope and have to find a given
number of objects (i.e., the Double Star Hunt, Deep Sky Hunts – both Hard
and Easy), the number of points you get for finding less than the ideal number
of objects is spelled out in the individual lab write-up on the Web pages.
As stated above, the maximum
number of labs you will be scored on is 4; if you do 4 labs and get a maximum
of 20 on each, you will have a maximum total of 80 points. A Lab Final Exam (given the last two
weeks of class – meet at either your Tuesday or Wednesday class time in
room 302 Physics) will contribute a maximum of 20 points to your final score. The
two components (Lab Assignments and Lab Final Exam) thus add up to a maximum of
100 points. Once your final score
is calculated, the letter grade you receive will be based on the following
scale: A is for a score of 93.00 or above, A- is for
the range 90.00 – 92.99, B+ is for 87.00 – 89.99, B is for 83.00
– 86.99, B- is for 80.00 – 82.99, C+ is for 77.00 – 79.99, C
is for 73.00 – 76.99, C- is for 70.00 – 72.99, D is for 60.00
– 69.99, and F is for any average below 60.00.
If you attempt a lab and it
is deemed unsatisfactory by one of the TAÕs (for example, you look for three
globular clusters but you canÕt find any), then you can re-try the lab as many
times as you want until it is deemed satisfactory. However, for each re-try, you will have to make a new
appointment with the TA. The labs
can be done in any order (though the hard Deep Sky Hunt really is difficult and
should probably be attempted last after youÕve gotten some experience using the
telescopes). All the labs with the
exception of the Retrograde Motion of Mars and the Find an Asteroid Lab can be
done in one evening.
The absolute last day to
complete a lab assignment will be Friday, December 7, 2007. No appointments with the TAÕs will be
scheduled after that date.
The laboratory assignments
are the following:
Constellations and the
Celestial Sphere
Double Star Hunt
Deep Sky Hunt – Easy
Deep Sky Hunt – Hard
Lunar Mountains Lab
Retrograde Motion of Mars Lab
Find an Asteroid Lab
You can follow the links on
the course main web page to read the writeups for these labs.
Note that we will be
observing at the intramural fields in cold weather for a good part of the
semester. Make sure you have warm
clothing. A hat is probably a very
good idea.