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Material Type: Notes; Professor: Armitage; Class: General Astronomy: Stars and Galaxies; Subject: Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences; University: University of Colorado - Boulder; Term: Unknown 1989;
Typology: Study notes
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ASTR 1120 Section 1 (3 credit hours): Spring 2006
This is the first of weekly summaries of what I consider to be the key concepts introduced in class. These summaries are not intended to replace your own notes, and are by no means inclusive (i.e. anything we’ve covered in class or in readings from the textbook is fair game’ for an exam question), but they should help when it comes to reviewing the class for the tests. **Lecture #** What do we mean by science and what is involved with studying a subject using the
scientific method’? Science seeks the simplest natural explanation for observed phenomena (note natural rather than supernatural), and advances via a process of first formulating hypotheses and then testing them against experiments or new observations. A theory that makes no testable predictions is not normally regarded as scientific. Chapter 3 of the textbook (either edition) discusses this in detail. We then did a super-quick overview of the Universe:
As well as sunspots, we can observe a `boiling’ pattern on the photosphere. Technically this is called granulation , and it’s the surface manifestation of a process called convection in which hot gas rises to the surface, loses energy and cools, before dropping back down. Convection is how the energy generated in the deep interior of the Sun makes its way to the surface. In the corona, magnetic fields power various phenomena: solar flares, prominences, and coronal mass ejections. These can be studied most easily by looking at the Sun in X-rays or UV light that trace the very hot coronal gas (1 million K). The Earth is partially protected against coronal mass ejections (or Solar storms) by our own magnetic field: observable effects include the aurora and occasional damage to power grids and satellites in places exposed to the high energy radiation released during Solar storms. Astronauts away from low Earth orbit (e.g. en route to Mars) would have to be especially careful.