| Undergraduate Astronomy at SFA | ||
The astronomy minor has been developed at SFA for those students who have interests in astronomy beyond the introductory level. The course of study includes introductory physics, introductory astronomy, observational astronomy, and astrophysics. A student majoring in physics may minor in astronomy, but those courses that are applied to the minor cannot be applied to the major at the same time. The requirements for the minor in astronomy are PHY 131 (or 241), 132 (or 242), AST 105, 305, and 335. All minor programs must be approved on the degree plan by the Chair of the Department. Astronomy 105: Modern AstronomyDescriptive Astronomy is open to all SFA students. We cover the universe in one semester, including stars, their evolution and end fates, star clusters, galaxies, cosmology, and planets. We emphasize the scientific method throughout the course and introduce the new findings as they are made. The associated lab shows how large ideas can be discovered using simple tools. The students get an opportunity to visit the SFA Observatory for real, hands-on telescope time.
Astronomy 305: Observational AstronomyObservational Techniques is a course that few universities can offer. The proximity of the Observatory permits an in-depth study of the tools and techniques of professional astronomers as well as useful insight into the lifelong hobby that hundreds of thousands of people enjoy. The students get a chance to use the research telescopes at the SFA Observatory. The course breaks naturally around the observing projects that the student teams perform, includingAstronomy 335: Astrophysics
For those who want the answers in more depth,
try Astrophysics. We cover the same topics as the introductory course but
take the time to show the mathematics involved. We suggest that introductory Physics (131/241 & 132/242) and first semester calculus precede Astrophysics.
Physics 475 & 476: Special Problems - Astronomy ResearchFor undergraduate credit only. Experimental or theoretical independent study in research. Prerequisite: 12 semester hours of physics.
Graduate Astronomy at SFA
|
| Students interested in astronomy at the graduate level may pursue a degree in physics while getting involved in research at the SFA Observatory. Physics 575 & 576: Advanced Graduate Studies - Astronomy Research1-4 semester hours. Individual instruction, and special problems not a part of thesis. May be repeated under different topics.Physics 589 & 590: Thesis Research and Thesis Writing
Example Thesis Titles
|