Galactic Astronomy
Full course description
This course begins with an exploration of our Milky Way Galaxy, identifying its overall structure and our Sun’s place within which. Continuing outward, we study properties of other galaxies, highlighting properties of varying types, how they form and change with time. Finishing up with how large scale observations lead us to the initial conditions of our universe and the Big Bang theory itself.
Course objectives
- Illustrate the size/structure of our Milky Way Galaxy, how we are able to measure motions of stars/gas clouds, map its overall structure and determine our place within which;
- Compare/contrast the shapes, sizes & compositions of: spiral, elliptical, peculiar & irregular galaxies; being able to classify to which type they belong based upon imagery, orbital motions of bodies within which and/or physical content descriptions;
- Evaluate the likelihood of various astrophysical objects being found within the spiral, elliptical, peculiar & irregular galaxy types;
- Evaluate observational evidence to differentiate between the top-down and bottom-up models describing galactic formation;
- Critique the competing models explaining the presence of galactic spiral arms;
- Explain the methods of determining distances to galaxies within the cosmological distance ladder, applying them to various galactic structures;
- Compute the distances at which galactic systems tidally disrupt each other.
- Breakdown the historical classifications of active galaxies into the subcategories of: radio galaxies, Seyfert galaxies, quasars & blazars; understanding their impact on galactic evolution and why they are observed only at cosmological distance;
- Describe the various pieces of evidence for dark matter within most galaxies and clusters of galaxies, computing galactic masses when possible;
- Relate how observations of distant supernovae led to the discovery that our universe is accelerating in its expansion rate;
- Identify the key predictions/observations for the origin of our universe.
Prerequisites
- None
Recommended
- PHY2009
Recommended reading
- Ryden, B. & Peterson, B. (2020). Foundations of Astrophysics (1st ed.). Cambridge;
- Astronomy, OpenStax College. Retrieved via: https://openstax.org/details/books/astronomy.
PHY2010
Period 2
28 Oct 2024
20 Dec 2024
ECTS credits:
5.0Instruction language:
EnglishCoordinator:
Teaching methods:
PBL, Research, Lecture(s), Assignment(s), SkillsAssessment methods:
Attendance, Participation, Written exam, Assessment, Presentation