UIS
Graduate and Undergraduate Catalog
Academic
Year 2004 - 2005
ASTRONOMY - PHYSICS
Thematic Activity
Emeritus Faculty Alexander J. Casella, Charles Schweighauser
Associated Faculty Hei-Chi Chan
Contact: (217) 206-6721
asp@uis.edu or www.uis.edu/astronomy/
Students may pursue an individualized degree that includes astronomy-physics
through UIS' liberal studies or individual option programs.
The astronomy-physics option provides courses and laboratory
work in astronomy and physics, featuring an astronomical
observatory with one eight-inch and one 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain
telescope,
an eight-inch Newtonian telescope, an eight-inch fixed focal
point
telescope for persons with disabilities, a diffraction grating
spectrograph, a hydrogenalpha filter, an objective prism,
and a charge-coupled device (CCD). A 20-inch telescope, installed
under
dark skies at a site remote from the campus, is used for
training
advanced students and for research work. Opportunities are
provided for students to do research with astronomy-physics
faculty.
Admission
Courses are open to undergraduate and master's degree students.
In 400-level courses, however, graduate students are expected
to do additional work, including reading selected primary
sources and, when appropriate, completing additional observatory/laboratory
work.
Individualized Degree Option
Students may pursue an individualized degree that includes
astronomy-physics through UIS( liberal studies program
(bachelor's degree) or individual option
program (master's degree). A typical core group of courses for a degree
might include:
ASP 203 Modern Astronomy
ASP 404 Astrophysics
ASP 406 Modern Cosmology
ASP 407 Practical Astronomy
ASP 408 Observational Astronomy
ASP 409 Galaxies: Structure and Evolution
Students should ask astronomy-physics faculty for advice
about courses related to degree work in the individual
option or liberal studies programs.
Contact
the program office for further information.
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