(Don't Use Canvas Messages to contact me, use email link)
Office: LD 156-S, 278-9244
http://woodahl.physics.indianapolis.iu.edu/Astro105Summer/
Astronomy, the Oldest of the Sciences, 5000 Years Old: Stonehenge
Approaching Modernity: Galileo Galilei's 1610 AD Notebook Page (Who Needs Computers?)
"Kelvin & Helmholtz Theory, Sun's Exterior" #2 Video Lecture
Magnetic Field Lines Trap Moving Charged Particles (Thus They Spiral)
Coronal Mass Ejection (Orange Disc is Photosphere, Red Disc is Chromosphere, X-Ray Photography)
The 4 Fundamental Forces Occur Only at Moderately Low Temperatures
Sun's Proton-Proton Chain Fusion Reaction (4 Protons Produce Helium + Energy)
Ray Davis, 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics for the Detection of Cosmic Neutrinos During 1960's
Quarks Fundamental Particles, Three Quarks in Every Proton and Neutron
Einstein (in 1904): Speed Of Light is the "Speed Limit of Our Universe"
Visible Light is a Small Part of the Entire Electromagnetic Spectrum
Isaac Newton (in 1670): White Light Contains All the Visible Colors (Visible Frequencies)
James Maxwell (in 1860): Father of the Famous Maxwell Equations Governing the Behavior of Light
Niels Bohr (sitting with Einstein): Architect of Modern Theory of Atomic Physics
Photon (wavy line) Being Absorbed by Atom -> Electron (solid blue line) Jumps Up into Higher Orbit
Atom Emitting a Photon (wavy line) -> Electron (solid blue line) Jumps Down into Lower Orbit
"Parallax Formula and Surface Temperatures" #7 Video Lecture
Stars with Higher Surface Temperatures Emit Mostly Shorter Wavelengths
Mass Information from Doppler Shift of Spectra from a Binary Star System
Absolute Brightness or Luminosity Versus Apparent Brightness
Traditional H-R Diagram with the Absolute Magnitude Scale (on right-hand side)
The Red SuperGiant Betelgeuse (Hubble): Diameter is Larger than Jupiter's Orbit Around the Sun
An Interstellar Medium Containing Carbon Monoxide (Radio Frequencies)
Atmospheric Scattering of Light: Blue Daytime Skies and Red Dawn
Death of a High-Mass Star: Supernova (Crab Nebula Produced in 1054 AD)
BTSOTC: Unruh Radiation and Violation of Equivalence Principle
Schwarzschild: Discovered Event Horizon of Black Hole (Schwarzschild Radius)
General Relativity Allows for Wormhole Solutions for Faster than Light Travel
"Back To The Past": General Relativity Allows for Wormhole Solutions for Time Travel
Edwin Hubble: Determined M31 Was a Galaxy 2 Million Light-Years Away
Dark Matter (Imagine that the green/yellow/orange strands are dark and you cannot see them.)
Spiral Structure of Milky Way Galaxy -- possibly a "Barred-Spiral"
A Globular Cluster in Milky Way: Omega Centauri (NGC5139), Visible by Unaided Eye
LSS of Universe: Clusters & Superclusters that Neighbor the Milky Way (Near-Infrared Frequencies)
The Jets of Cygnus A (color enhanced, microwave frequencies)
Looking for Quasars and Radio Galaxies: Australia's Telescope Compact Array (ATCA)
"Gamma-Ray Bursters and Cosmological Constant" #22 Video Lecture
Massive Star Collapses Forming Black Hole: Jets Along Rotation Axis Produce Gamma-Ray Long-Burst
Gamma-Ray Short-Burst: Collision Involving Neutron Stars & Black Holes
Evidence for the Big Bang Theory: Penzias and Wilson and their Microwave Antenna
Spectrum of Microwave Radiation Closely Matches Big Bang Theory
"High-Tech" Big Bang Detector in Your Home: Snowy Channel on an Antenna-Fed TV (1% is CMBR)
Gravity: Binds Objects with Mass (Motorcycle's Front Wheel Overcomes Gravity)
Electromagnetic: Binds Electrons to Protons to Form Atoms (Beryllium Atom)
Strong: Binds Quarks to Form Protons, Neutrons, and Nuclei (Helium Nucleus)
Lawrence Krauss (with S. Hawking): Quintessence, The Variable Vacuum Energy
Required Exam 1 (in-person): Monday, June 2 from 11:00 AM to Noon at IUI Campus in IO 105 (aka Innovation Hall Room 105)
Exam 2 (online): Monday, June 16 from 11:00 AM to Noon
Optional Exam 3 (online): Monday, June 30 from 11:00 AM to Noon
Scores will be posted to Canvas.
Students need not take last exam, if they are satisfied with their scores on the first two exams.
Exams: 100 %
Standard grading percentages are employed.
There is (unadvertised) curving on the C range and to a lesser degree, some curving on the B and A ranges.
Syllabus (PDF). Take with a grain of salt, mostly a formality.
Textbook purchase is totally optional.
Universe: Stars and Galaxies, Sixth Ed, 2019, Freedman; Geller; Kaufmann (paperback and loose-leaf)
Universe: Stars and Galaxies, Sixth Ed, 2019, Freedman; Geller; Kaufmann (eTEXT)
Many thanks to Ryan Bertram (Astro A100 student), who introduced me to this neat YouTube video (courtesy of Rob Bryanton, Canadian author) that discusses the ten possible dimensions of our universe.
PhET's page that demonstrates elements of gravity.
Many thanks to Elizabeth Potter (Astro A105 student), who showed me this neat webpage highlighting the relative sizes from the Local Group down to Quarks (and the corresponding orders of magnitude, or powers of ten)
Department of Physics, IU Indianapolis - Updated on May 10, 2025 at 1:30 PM EDT