Title: Welcome Astronomy 201 Cosmology
1Welcome! Astronomy 201 --- Cosmology
- Lecture 1 Introduction
- Aug 21, 2007
2At your service
- Instructor
- Prof. Xiaohui Fan
- Office Steward 310
- Office hour Thursday 2-330pm, or by
appointment - Emailfan_at_as.arizona.edu, Tel 626-7558
- Teaching Assistant
- Mr. Jared Gabor
- Office Steward N305
- Office hour Monday 3-4pm, or by
appointment - Emailjgabor_at_as.arizona.edu, Tel 621-6540
- Websitehttp//sancerre.as.arizona.edu/fan/ast201
3Lectures
- Lecture format
- 75 min lecture
- Activity somewhere in the middle of each lecture
- Quiz
- Video
- Cosmology News of the Week
- Stories
- Your request here
- Powerpoint file will be available online
- Attendance
- You will NOT be graded for attendance
- But be smart, come to the lecture (and maybe it
is fun!)
4Grading Policy
- Homework 20 (six times during semester)
- Pop Quiz 20 (six times during semester)
- Online Project Report 20
- Using real astronomical data to discovery one of
three important aspects of modern extragalactic
astronomy and cosmology - Galaxy classification
- Expansion of the universe
- Quasars
- Details will be announced in early Oct.
- Reports due Dec 1
- Midterm 20 (close book, in class, Oct 16)
- Final 20 (close book, Dec 13)
5Other Policies
- Make-up Exams
- Only in rare circumstances, and it will be oral
exam (30 min Q/A session in front of a
black/white broad) - Academic Honesty
- We take it seriously!
- Collaboration on online project allowed, but you
have to write your own report - Friendly discussion on homework a good idea,
collaborations on homework answers strongly
discouraged - Code of Academic Integrity strictly enforced for
midterm and final exams
6Textbook
- Stars, Galaxies and Cosmology, by Bennett,
Donahue, Schneider and Voit - Online study material at masteringastronomy.com
- http//www.masteringastronomy.com
- Voyager Skygazer software
- Other References
- One Universe At Home in the Cosmos
- New Perspectives in Astrophysical Cosmology
- A Brief History of Time
- Foundation of Modern Cosmology
- Lonely Heart of the Cosmos The Story of the
Scientific Quest for the Secret of the Universe
7What is Cosmology
- According to Webster Dictionary
- 1. A branch of metaphysics that deals with the
nature of the universe - 2. A theory or doctrine describing the natural
order of the universe - 3. A branch of astronomy that deals with the
origin, structure and space-time relationships of
the universe - So cosmology is.
- Theology
- Philosophy
- And most recently, a science.
- In this class, we are treating cosmology as an
empirical science
8What I expect you to take away from this course?
- Learn Cosmology as a science
- What are the basic components of the universe
- What are the basic physical laws that govern the
universe - What is the size and age of the universe
- Whats the current theory on origin and evolution
of the universe (big bang!), and what are the
evidences that support that theory - What is the nature of space/time/matter/energy
- What about the dark side of the universe black
holes, cosmic dark ages, dark matter, dark energy
etc. - Learn Cosmology in the context of human society
- What is the scientific method (or, is there a
scientific method) - How does human society, in particular religion
and philosophy affect the advancement of
cosmology - How does modern technology affect cosmology
- How does the personality of individual
scientists, and the culture of the scientist
community affect cosmology
9But, Most Importantly
- Be curious, ask questions!
- Be open-minded, explore new ideas!
- Be critical, make your own judgment based on
scientific evidences! - And have fun!
10Topic Covered
- Part 1 Introduction, Basic concepts (Ch 1 7)
- Part 2 Matter, Energy, Spacetime and Black Hole
(Ch S1, S2, S3, 18) - Concepts of relativity
- Gravity and space time
- Building blocks of the universe
- Black holes
- Part 3 Galaxies (Ch 19, 20)
- Milky Way
- Types of Galaxies
- Expansion of the Universe
11Topics Covered
- Part 4 The Evolution of the Universe (Ch 21, 22)
- Galaxy Evolution
- Quasars
- Structures in the Universe
- Dark matter
- Fate of the Universe, dark energy
- Part 5 Early Universe (Ch 23, 24)
- Cosmological Principles
- Cosmic History
- Hot Big Bang
- Inflation
- Theory of Everything???
12From Big Bang to the Galaxy movie
13Chapter 1Our Place in the Universe
Hubble Ultra Deep Field
14 1. A Modern View of the Universe
Our goals for learning
- What is our physical place in the Universe?
- Describe our cosmic origins and why we say that
we are star stuff. - Why does looking into space mean looking back
in time? - What is the scale of the Universe?
15Address Earth
- How would the Universal post office find us?
16What is our place in the universe?
17Star
- A large, glowing ball of gas that generates heat
and light through nuclear fusion
18Solar (Star) System
- A star and all the material which orbits it,
including its planets and moons
19Galaxy
- A great island of stars in space, all held
together by gravity and orbiting a common center
20Universe
- The sum total of all matter and energy that is,
everything within and between all galaxies
21Where do we come from?
- The first (and simplest) atoms were created
during the Big Bang. - More complex atoms were created in stars.
- When the star dies, they are expelled into
space. to form new stars and planets!
Most of the atoms in our bodies were created in
the core of a star!
22How can we know what the universe was like in the
past?
- Light travels at a finite speed (300,000 km/s).
- Thus, we see objects as they were in the past
- The farther away we look in distance, the
further back we look in time.
23Example
- We see the Orion Nebula as it looked 1,500 years
ago.
M31, The Great Galaxy in Andromeda
24Light-year
- The distance light can travel in one year.
- About 10 trillion km (6 trillion miles).
25 At great distances, we see objects as they
were when the universe was much younger.
26Sun, 8 light minutes
27Mars, 12 light minutes
28Jupiter, 40 lt min.
29Pluto and Charon, 300 lt min
30A star with planets forming 50 lt year
31Andromeda, a Galaxy like ours, 2 million lt yrs
100 billion Stars 100,000 lt yrs across
You are here!
32Virgo cluster, 60 million lt yrs 1000 galaxies, 6
million lt yrs across
33Coma Cluster, 360 million lt yrs, 1000
galaxies 6 million lt yrs across
34Hubble Deep Field, 10 billion lt yrs
A cluster 4 billion lt yrs 1000 galaxies, 6
million lt yrs across
35Cosmic Background, 13.7 billion lt yrs ? Baby
picture of the universe, 300,000 years after the
big bang
36 Can we see the entire universe?
37How do our lifetimes compare to the age of the
Universe?
- The Cosmic Calendar a scale on which we compress
the history of the universe into 1 year.
38How do our lifetimes compare to the age of the
Universe?
- The Cosmic Calendar a scale on which we compress
the history of the universe into 1 year.