Learning Outcomes
After taking this course, students should be able to
- Relate observations of the night sky: rising and setting motions, lunar phases, stars and planets
- Describe Earth's motion in space and how it affect the sky we see
- Explain the reasons for seasons, lunar phases, and eclipses
- Outline the Ptolemaic and Copernican cosmologies
- Describe the roles of Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, and Galileo in the Scientific Revolution
- Describe and apply Newton's Laws of Motion and Universal Gravity
- Explain the nature of electromagnetic radiation
- Describe thermal radiation and Kirchoff's Laws
- Summarize properties of telescopes and their instrumentation
- Discuss solar system formation and structure
- Describe properties of planets, their moons, dwarf planets, comets, and asteroids
- Explain the techniques for detection of exoplanets
- Discuss the general properties of known exoplanets
- Distinguish the basic traits of legitimate science, and the methods of scientific reasoning
- Paraphrase conceptual ideas through written and verbal work (homework, exams, and papers)