Edward Brown edited about-AST208.tex  about 9 years ago

Commit id: ee6c392310108812f207f0f82094f8c98f0bca48

deletions | additions      

       

\subsection{About AST 208}  AST 208 is the first rigorous course in the astronomy major. A recommended background course, AST 207, 207 (\emph{The Science of Astronomy}),  serves as more of a broad survey over the entire field, whereas AST 208 contains a laboratory (observing) component and explores a specific topic, planetary science \citep[using, e.g.,][]{Lissauer2013Fundamental-Pla}, in greater depth. The marriage of a lecture-based planetary science course with a laboratory course on observational practice came about as a quirk of history. Indeed, in previous editions of the course these two components operated independently. With the introduction of more rigorous data analysis and statistical methods, we felt that a tighter integration of the lecture and the lab was more appropriate. In Spring 2015, out of 28 students there were 17 astrophysics majors (including 3 Lyman Briggs astronomy majors) and 5 physics majors.