PHYS 1203

PHYS 1203

Course information provided by the 2018-2019 Catalog.

This course offers opportunities to face fundamental issues in scientific thought, and to provide a sense of the profound ideas that form the modern views of our world. Physics is not a collection of laws, or dry mathematical formulas that must be painfully memorized and exercised. Astronomy is not just a collection of fascinating, disconnected facts about our universe. This course introduces physics and astronomy as the development of a basic curiosity about our world, and a grand desire to understand how it works. A significant theme of this course will be: "How do we know?" This will include discussions of how we have come to know and how scientific thought and ideas have evolved as well as who has been involved in that evolution. In this course, we will evaluate the process of science through the lens of "modeling". In science, we can think of models as simplified representations of a phenomenon that can make new, testable predictions. The process of modeling in science is about iteratively developing, refining, and testing the limits of these models. We will evaluate cases of scientific modeling of the physics of the heavens and Earth, from Tycho Brahe's detailed observations of the motions of objects in the sky, to Newton's laws of motion, to Einstein's theory of general relativity. 


Distribution Category (PBS-AS)

When Offered Spring.

Comments For non-science majors.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Choose one lecture and one discussion.

  • 3 Credits Stdnt Opt

  •  6011 PHYS 1203   LEC 001

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  6012 PHYS 1203   DIS 201

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  6013 PHYS 1203   DIS 202

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  6015 PHYS 1203   DIS 204

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  6016 PHYS 1203   DIS 205

  • Instruction Mode: In Person

  •  6017 PHYS 1203   DIS 206

  • Instruction Mode: In Person