When and Where: Friday Feb 26, 2010 in class. 50 minutes long.
Format:
About 35 multiple choice and true or false questions.
About 5-10 of these questions will use arithmetic.
About 5-8 of these questions will be slide images.
What to bring:
Pencils. Non-programmable calculators. No Textbooks. Note: cell
phones, pagers, PDAs, MP3 units or electronic translators are
explicitly listed as unauthorized materials, and must not be present
during tests or examinations. Leave them at home or you
will be asked to put them at the front of the classroom.
Math Questions:
If constants are needed they will be given. Exact
characteristics (radii, distances, masses) will be given if needed. However
approximate scales of classes of objects should be known. Equations for exact
calculations will be given except for Wien's Law and the Stefan-Boltzmann
Law, telescope formulae, the definition of density, the escape velocity,
velocity = circumference/period, Doppler shift, and the relationship between
Mass, velocity, and distance between objects.
Range of Questions:
Although there is overlap with the lab material, questions will be
selected from lecture material and from specific readings that have
been requested by the instructor (e.g. specified sections, diagrams,
tables). For example, the lectures did not emphasize history so dates
and scientists' names will not be required. See "Topics" below.
Slide Questions:
Slides questions will not ask for the specific
name of the object but will test for astronomy information, e.g. the
class of objects, and concepts, e.g. what causes the kind of emission
shown or how the image is relevant to our studies of, say, gravity.
Answer Forms and Question Sheets:
Answer Forms (i.e. Bubble Sheets) must be filled out according to the
instructions on the sheet. ONLY USE PENCIL. These will be read by a
machine so try to be tidy to ensure that you get the correct mark.
Fill these in at least five minutes before the end of the test time
period. You must write down your name, student number, your faculty,
the class number (Phys 1810), and the instructor's
name.
Question sheets will be returned to the instructor at the end of the test. They
will be retained for about 1 week after the marks are posted so that you may
discuss them individually with the instructor. Therefore do your work on the
question sheets and put your name on them. Leave at least 5 minutes for
transferring your answers to the bubble sheet before the end of the test. The
exam key outside the Dr. English's door (Allen Building 514) Marks will be
posted, about 5 days after the test, outside the Dr. English's door (Allen
Building 514).
Topics on this test:
The topics will cover the material following the last test.
This material includes radiation, and spectra, the Doppler shift, telescopes and detectors, and basic information about planets in our solar system.
With respect to the textbook, see the topic outline online at http://www.physics.umanitoba.ca/~english/2010winterphys1810/phys1810sched.html for some sections that are relevant. Also the "road maps" at the beginning of each lecture were more specific.
Note that knowledge in this course is
cummulative so that material from the first part of the term appears
in these topics.
Links to some supplemental
material are posted at
http://www.physics.umanitoba.ca/~english/2010winterphys1830/index.html#sup.
Tips for Review and Practise:
Tip for the test:
During the test, it is recommended that the whole
test is read first in order to rank the
questions as "easy", "challenging", and "difficult". It is best
to do the easiest questions first and the difficult questions last
so that as many questions as possible are answered before the
time runs out.