FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

  • Where is the ETSU Observatory? Here are directions and a map.

  • Where is the ETSU Planetarium? Room 207 (top floor) of Hutcheson Hall. Here is a map.

  • How can I get extra credit for this course? There are several ways to get extra credit. There are 11 scheduled evening labs during the semester, but only 10 are required for full credit-- the 11th is extra credit (or a make-up, if you missed a lab). In addition, there are two optional take-home labs that can be done for extra credit (or as additional make-ups). Note that these take-home labs need to be started early in the semester. In addition, you can earn up to 3 percent extra credit by class participation, which includes helping with class demonstrations, speaking up in class, or good attendance.

  • What are the pictures on the Astro 1010 home page? Click on the images below and see!

                     

  • How can I find the web pages of various observatories? Here are some useful links, which will connect you to the web pages for various observatories and other relevant places.

  • What is the format of the quizzes? How many questions will they have? The quizzes will consist of 20 multiple choice questions. Be sure to study the practice quiz problems before each quiz.

  • I was sick and missed a quiz. Can I take a makeup? Do not worry about missing a single quiz. The lowest two quiz grades OR your grade on the final will be dropped. There will be NO individual makeups for the quizzes or homeworks. Instead, the final is, in a sense, a general `makeup' for everyone in the class. If you are sick and missed a quiz or homework, take it easy and get healthy, and don't worry about it. Missing one quiz will not hurt your grade. I urge you, however, to take every quiz unless there is an extreme emergency, in case other unforeseen problems arise later on in the semester.


  • Do you have any suggestions that may help me study for the quizzes? Review the study guides, the practice quiz problems, and study the review questions at the back of each chapter in the book. Please get in touch with me if you do not understand something we have covered in class.


  • When is the final for this course? The final will be given Thursday December 13 at 1:20 PM. MARK THIS DATE AND TIME ON YOUR CALENDAR.


  • Can I take the final earlier than the scheduled time? (or later?) The final must be taken at the regularly scheduled time. There will be NO make-ups or early exams. Remember, the lowest of either the lowest two quiz grades OR the grade on the final will be dropped, so if you take all of the quizzes, you do not need to take the final. I suggest, however, that you take the final even if you have taken all of the quizzes unless you have an A average. There is always the possibility that by taking the final you will improve your grade.


  • Do you have any suggestions that may help me study for the final? One hint is that the final will cover the same material that was covered in the quizzes (plus the additional material covered in class after the last quiz). In studying for the final, make sure you understand the answers to the quiz problems, and review the six study guides again. Go over the problems that you got wrong on the quiz, and make sure you understand the correct answers. If you are uncertain about the answers to any quiz problem, get in touch with me.


  • The final is worth two quiz grades, that is, it will replace the lowest two quiz grades if one does well. What if the final exam score is only higher than ONE of the quiz grades? (What if all the quiz grades save one are higher than the final exam score?) If the final grade is higher than the sum of the two lowest quiz grades, then it will replace both of them. Otherwise, the two grades will stand. For example, if your lowest quiz grades are 5 and 16, and you get a 20 (out of 40 problems) on the final, then the final won't replace them. But if you get a 22 on the final, it will replace them.


  • Is the final cumulative? Yes, it may contain questions on anything we covered during the entire semester.


  • Because of an emergency, I missed my lab (or will have to miss my lab). Can I go to lab on a different night?
    Students are NOT permitted to attend a different lab section. If you miss a lab, you can make it up by either: 1) doing one of the take-home labs, 2) attending the 11th meeting of your regularly-scheduled lab period. Since only 10 labs are required for full credit, the 11th lab can be used as a make-up or as extra credit, NOTE THAT THE MAXIMUM NUMBER OF LABS A STUDENT CAN DO DURING THE SEMESTER IS 12; if a student has attended all 11 regular evening labs, they cannot do both take-home labs for extra credit.


  • Will you tell us our grades in the course before the final? I would like to know if I need to take the final or not.
    Before the final exam, I will email everyone the grade they will get in the course IF THEY DO NOT TAKE THE FINAL. Note that if you have missed a quiz, a zero will be averaged into your pre-final grade, thus your pre-final grade does not necessarily represent the grade you will get in the class if you take the exam. Remember that the final exam is worth two quizzes. The grade on the final can be used to replace your two lowest quiz grades, or can be used as a make-up if you have missed 1 or 2 quizzes. If you have taken all 6 quizzes, you do not have to take the final unless you want to improve your grade. If you do not have an A in the course before the final, I strongly advise you to take the final. Taking the final cannot hurt your grade; it can just help. If you have a pre-final grade of a C and do worse on the final than your two lowest quizzes, your course grade will be a C.

  • What would happen to an unprotected human being in the vacuum of space? Would they explode?

    See the answer on the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center `Imagine the Universe!' web page.

  • Can you help me figure out what time of day a first quarter, full, or third quarter moon rises, and when it crosses the meridian?

    The easiest way to solve these problems is to draw pictures of the Sun, Moon, and Earth, and a person on the Earth. The trick is to remember that people are really tiny compared to the Earth, so can't see over their horizon (a line tangent to the Earth where they are located), and that the Sun and Moon are *really* far away from the Earth, compared to the size of the Earth--essentially at infinity (so parallel lines intersect at the Sun or Moon). Also, remember that sunset (i.e., about 6 PM) occurs when the location of the viewer is turning away from the Sun, and the Sun is on the observer's horizon.

    This is easiest to explain with a picture:

    s     o-     m

    Imagine the "o" is the Earth, the "s" is the Sun, the "m" is the Moon, and the "-" is a person on the Earth. The person is on the opposite side of the Earth from the Sun, so it is midnight for the person. The Moon is also opposite the Sun, so it is a full moon. The Moon is directly above the person, so the Moon is on the meridian for that person at midnight.

    Here's another drawing:

            |
    s     o     m

    This is still the full moon. Looking down on the north pole, the Earth is spinning counterclockwise. For this person, the Sun is on the eastern horizon (i.e., the person is turning towards the Sun, that is, the Sun is rising). (remember, the person can't see past his/her horizon, which is tangent to its location on the Earth, and parallel lines intersect at infinity).

    Here's the same drawing with the horizon marked, as well as parallel lines going to the Sun and Moon:


    horizon--------|-------------
    s   -----------o------------- m

    The Sun is on the horizon for the observer, and the person is turning towards the Sun, so it is 6 AM for this person. The person is turning away from the moon, and the moon is on the horizon. This means the moon is setting. So a full moon sets at 6 AM.

    Here's another drawing:

        m
          |
    s   o

    In this case, we see half the face of the Moon (i.e., its a quarter Moon). Looking down on the North Pole, not only is the Earth spinning counterclockwise, but the Moon is orbiting the Earth counterclockwise. So the Moon is getting closer to the Sun. So its a waning Moon, or 3rd quarter.

    Like in the last picture, it is 6 AM for the person, so at 6 AM a 3rd quarter Moon is directly above the person.

    Here's another picture:

          m
    s   -o

    Again, it is 3rd quarter, but now the person is on the side of the Earth facing the Sun, that is, it is noon. The Earth is spinning counterclockwise, so the person is moving away from the Moon. The moon is on the horizon for that person, i.e., it is setting. So a third quarter moon sets at noon.

  • Can you help me understand the practice problems about Right Ascension and Declination?
    See the description of Celestial Coordinates here.

  • Can you tell me how to solve Questions 12 and 17 in Practice Quiz 3? Question 12 starts: `Star A has a surface temperature of 3000K, while Star B has a surface temperature of 12,000K. Therefore the wavelength of the peak of the spectrum of Star A is:' Question 17 is the same problem, with different numbers: Star A has a surface temperature of 5000K, while Star B has a surface temperature of 10,000K. Therefore the wavelength of the peak of the spectrum of Star A is:
    This is a comparison problem, involving two objects. The equation you use is Wien's Law, lambdamax is proportional to 1/T. To solve these kinds of problems, write down the equation twice, once for each object:

    lambdamax(A) prop to 1/T(A)

    lambdamax(B) prop to 1/T(B)

    Then divide the two equations. When you divide two proportionalities, you can change the proportional signs to an equal sign:

    lambdamax(A)/lambdamax(B) = 1/T(A)/1/T(B)

    You are dividing two fractions. To simplify, flip over the bottom fraction and multiply:

    lambdamax(A)/lambdamax(B) = 1/T(A) * T(B)/1 = T(B)/T(A)

    Then plug in the numbers. For question 12, the numbers are: T(A) = 3000K and T(B) = 12,000K:

    lambdamax(A)/lambdamax(B) = 12,000K/3,000K = 4.

    Then write in the final form:

    lambdamax(A) = 4 lambdamax(B)

    This is option c).

  • What is a pancake dome? A corona? A tick volcano?
    See the
    pictures of Venus from the Magellanic satellite.

    Last updated 11/30/07