Syllabus
Homework
Astronomy: Journey To
The Cosmic Frontier, 6th ed by John (Jack) D. Fix (University of Iowa, University of Alabama-Huntsville)
When you look out on a clear dark night, away from city lights, you are looking
out into the Universe. This course will help you to make a connection between
what you can see and some basic physical principles which govern the world and
universe that you are a part of. You are an integral part of the universe! You
are made of star stuff! The Hydrogen and Helium atoms where made in the first
three minutes of big bang. Atoms heavier than Hydrogen, necessary for everything
on the earth, including our bodies, were forged in the firey cores of stars and
supernova explosions eons ago.
Understanding the world about us is a life-long pursuit. In this course we only get a
start in the form of an overview. John D. Fix writes in the preface of his fine
textbook, "The book provides a complete description of current astronomical
knowledge, neither at an extremely technical level nor at a level that fails to
communicate the quantitative nature of physical science."
The course is a lot of work, but it's also a lot of fun. We will be looking at the night
skies with our naked eyes, binoculars and with small telescopes from the MCC
campus grounds. You will gain some understanding of what everything is all about!
Read the text, work the problems, pose your questions, and learn about this truly
awesome universe and our connections to it.
American Astronomical Society (AAS)
Asteroids
Astrology versus Astronomy
Astronomical Calculations
Astronomical Calendars
Astronomical Data
Astronomy/Astrophysics on the Internet
Astronomy Clubs, Societies, Associations and Organizations
Astronomy: Journey to the cosmic Frontier
Astronomy Picture of the Day
Aurora
Automated Telescopes
Binary Stars
Binoculars
Books
Comets
Conferences, Lectures, Meetings & Star Parties
Constellations
Cosmology
Dark Skies, the Need For
Deep Sky Objects
Double and Multiple Stars
Earth
Eclipses
Educational Resources
Galaxies
General Relativity
Gravitational-Wave Astronomy
Hubble Space Telescope Images
Introductory Astronomy at MCC
Iowa State University, Dept. of Physics & Astronomy
Journals
Messier Objects
Meteors
Moon
Naked Eye Observing
Neutron Stars & Black Holes
News
Observing Resources
Occultations
On-Line Courses in Astronomy
Planets
Planetary Maps
Radio Astronomy
Satellites
Science Magazines
Science versus Psuedoscience
Sketcher's Astronomical Sketches
Software
Solar System
Sounds of the Universe
Space Weather
Star Catalogs
Star Charts
StarDate
Sun
Tasking the Educational Observatory ATFs
Telescopes
Time
Variable Stars
Weather
What's Happening in the Sky
White Dwarfs
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