Homeworks 1: Difference between revisions

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'''Homeworks 1''' is the attempted solution to our second task<ref>Our first task was to register our PRS, visit the course web-page on Blackboard, look at the textbook, and write an equation for our wiki</ref> in the course [[AST4210_5211: Introduction to Astrophysics - Fall 2009|Introduction to Astrophysics]]. This assignment is due on ''Wednesday 09/09/09'' and was assigned on 09/01/09.
'''Homeworks 1''' is the attempted solution to our second task<ref>Our first task was to register our PRS, visit the course web-page on Blackboard, look at the textbook, and write an equation for our [[Exercise PhysicsWiki|wiki]]</ref> in the course [[AST4210_5211: Introduction to Astrophysics - Fall 2009|Introduction to Astrophysics]]. This assignment is due on ''Wednesday 09/09/09'' and was assigned on 09/01/09.


==Problem 1==
==Problem 1==
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==Problem 2==
==Problem 2==
The nearest star outside the solar system is about 4 light years away.
The nearest star outside the solar system is about 4 light years away.
* How far away is the star in kilometers?
# How far away is the star in kilometers?
* Suppose you travel to the nearest star in a rocket ship moving at 100 km per hour (100 km/hr is
# Suppose you travel to the nearest star in a rocket ship moving at 100 km per hour (100 km/hr is
about 62 mi/hr, a typical automobile speed on a Florida highway). How many years will it take
about 62 mi/hr, a typical automobile speed on a Florida highway). How many years will it take
you to get to the star?
you to get to the star?
* Suppose you travel to the star at 10 km per second (the speed of a rocket in orbit around the
# Suppose you travel to the star at 10 km per second (the speed of a rocket in orbit around the Earth). How many years will it take you to get to the star?
Earth). How many years will it take you to get to the star?


==Problem 3==
==Problem 3==

Revision as of 19:58, 6 September 2009

Homeworks 1 is the attempted solution to our second task[1] in the course Introduction to Astrophysics. This assignment is due on Wednesday 09/09/09 and was assigned on 09/01/09.

Problem 1

List in order of increasing size and give the approximate size of the following objects: An atom, a biological cell, a cluster of galaxies, the Earth, a galaxy, the Local Group of galaxies, a neutron, a neutron star, a person, the Solar System, our sun. Note: you may have to look in other books besides your textbook to get all this information.

Problem 2

The nearest star outside the solar system is about 4 light years away.

  1. How far away is the star in kilometers?
  2. Suppose you travel to the nearest star in a rocket ship moving at 100 km per hour (100 km/hr is

about 62 mi/hr, a typical automobile speed on a Florida highway). How many years will it take you to get to the star?

  1. Suppose you travel to the star at 10 km per second (the speed of a rocket in orbit around the Earth). How many years will it take you to get to the star?

Problem 3

Use the size of the Astronomical Unit in kilometers and the length of the year in seconds to calculate how fast the Earth moves in its orbit in kilometers/second.

Problem 4

Describe the essential differences between the Ptolemaic, Copernican, and Keplerian descriptions of planetary motion.

Problem 5

Use Newton’s laws to show that the orbits of planets are ellipses.

Notes

  1. Our first task was to register our PRS, visit the course web-page on Blackboard, look at the textbook, and write an equation for our wiki

References

  • B.W. Carroll & D. A. Ostlie (2007). An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-8053-0402-9