AY 110 02 - FALL 07 - Holtzman
Review list for first midterm
- Know the objects in the Solar system: Sun, planets, moons, asteroids,
meteors, comets. Know what a shooting star is.
- Know how the Sun is one of many stars that make up the Milky
Way galaxy; know about the variety of stars in the Galaxy. Know what shape the
Galaxy is and what it contains. Know the main different types of galaxies.
- Understand rough relative sizes of objects: Sun, planets, stars, Milky Way,
galaxies, and know what each of these objects is. Know what a light year
and an astronomical unit is.
- Understand the motions of objects in the Universe: planets around the
Sun, stars moving inside of galaxies. Understand the observation that
galaxies all appear to be moving away from us and the implication that
the Universe is expanding. Understand the basic ideas and justifications
for the Big Bang theory.
- Understand motions of objects in the sky as seen from Earth, which result
from a combination of our motion (reflex) and the intrinsic motion of
the object. Understand revolution and rotation of planets. Understand
apparent motion of stars, Sun with respect to the stars, and planets
with respect to the stars. In particular, understand day and night
and the path of the Sun and stars through the sky at different times
of year. Understand parallax and how it is used to measure distances
to stars.
- Understand how the rotation axis of the Earth is tilted with respect to
its plane of revolution. Understand and be able to clearly
formulate the reason we have seasons.
- Understand the orbit of the Moon. Understand the reason that the Moon
has phases, and how the phases are related to the time of day/night when the
Moon is seen from Earth. Understand what solar and lunar eclipses are
and why they don't occur every month.
- Understand the motions and appearances of the planets. Be able to figure out
whether planets have phases when you look at them. Know what retrograde
motion is.
- Understand historically how humans have reached the present understanding
of motions in our Solar System, e.g., the geocentric and heliocentric
models and what observations motivated these models. Understand the
contributions of Ptolemy, Copernicus, Galileo, Tycho Brahe, and Kepler.
- Understand Kepler's laws and be able to use them. Know the terminology which
comes into Kepler's laws: ellipses, focii of ellipses, semimajor axis,
eccentricity, period, astronomical unit.
Jon Holtzman
2007-09-28