SPS 1010 Introductory Astronomy - 1999 Fall

The essentials to study for the Final Exam, Tuesday, December 14, 1-3 p.m.,
Skurla A106 (the regular classroom)

Read this now, and bring it to class on Friday, December 10, with your questions to discuss.

What will the final exam cover? It'll be cumulative, covering the entire course. This includes everything I wrote on the blackboard, and everything in Chapters 1-6, 7.6 to 7.9 (pp. 173-185), and 18-30 of Universe, 5th ed., by Kaufmann and Freedman, as well as the notes on Cosmology and Active Galactic Nuclei.

Although there will be some emphasis of material presented later in the course, by far the best two places to study for this exam will be the solutions for Mid-Term Exams 1 and 2, especially Mid-term 2. I was dismayed by how many people had forgotten that M dwarfs are by far the most common stars in the Universe, for example: a normal stellar population has a mass-to-light ratio of 10, remember?

Remember also that nearly all extrasolar planets found so far were detected spectroscopically, by periodic Doppler shifting of their spectral lines. (Just writing "the wobble" doesn't describe this adequately: it could mean astrometric detections, which have had the most notorious record for false detections.) Gravitational lensing is the most promising method for extrasolar terrestrial planet detection; it's also a method we could conceivably do with the SARA telescope. Remember also the various types of extrasolar planets so far discovered: hot Jupiters, eccentric Jupiters, classical Jupiters, and pulsar planets, but not terrestrial planets, unless you specifically mention pulsar planets. Anything around a pulsar may be as massive as Earth, but is probably not too similar!

Be able to reproduce the following sketches, and explain what they mean:

Rework the simpler homework problems, too: you should have solutions to everything now. Be able to do the following calculations (and do bring a calculator):

Be sure to read the chapters again thorougly. Take notes when you read. Practice the above calculations, too: one can't learn much mathematics just by reading it, one must pick up a pencil and work the problems oneself. If you do the readings and work the problems, you should be OK. This will be a closed-book, closed-notes, open-mind exam, just like the Mid-Term Exams.

As far as memorizing constants and formulae goes, it'll be much like Mid-term Exam 2: don't memorize constants, they'll either be given or will be derivable from the information given. Most formulae should also be derivable; e.g., you should remember that blackbodies get bluer as they get hotter, and so, expressed quantitatively, this is Wien's law.


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Last updated 1998 December 10. Web page by Dr. Ringwald
Department of Physics and Space Sciences, Florida Institute of Technology