Dr. Robert
Herrick
Geophysical Institute
108I WRRB
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK 99775-7320
rherrick@gi.alaska.edu
Work: (907) 474-6445
Fax: (907) 474-7290
Home: (907) 455-4664
Dr. Herrick's graduate assistants: Abby Gleason and Katie
Hessen, (907) 474-1152
Class meets Tuesdays and Thursdays, 5:20 - 6:50 p.m., Room 233, Natural Sciences Building.
Official office hours are 3:00 - 5:00 p.m. Monday and Wednesday.
I am often in my office between 10:00 - 5:00 during the week if you
wish to drop by, or you may call or email me with questions.
Required text - The
Planetary System, 3rd Edition, by David Morrison and Tobias Owen,
Addison Wesley Publishing, 2003. There is a web site for the book at
http://wps.aw.com/aw_morrison_planetsys_3/0,6095,446863-main,00.html.
The web site has review questions, tutorials, etc., that are fairly
useful.
Grading:
3
non-cumulative tests (including final) 23.3%
each (70% total for
tests)
Term
paper
20%
Homework
10%
Make-up exams given only for those with excellent, verifiable
excuses who, if at all possible, notified me in advance. Make-up exam
dates are at instructor's discretion. More tolerance is shown for those
who want to take an exam early rather than late.
1/24
Review of the Solar System
Chap. 1, 3
topic 1 notes, topic 1 images
1/31 Formation of the Solar System
Chapter 17
topic 2 notes, t2 images part 1, t2 images part 2, t2 images part 3, t2 images part 4
2/7
Available Data
topic 3 notes, topic 3 images
Meteorites,
Asteroids, and Comets
Chapters 4-6
topic 4 notes, topic 4 images
2/14 Planetary Interiors
Chapter 9.2
topic 5 notes, images, interiors and impact cratering
2/21
Test 1 – Through
planetary interiors (2/21)
Impact Cratering
Chapter 7.3 – 7.4
topic 6 notes, demo of sf-dist
2/28 Impact Cratering (cont.)
Volcanism and Tectonics
Chap 9.3 – 9.4
topic 7 notes, geologic processes, images, volcanism, tectonics, and erosion
3/7 Volcanism and Tectonics (cont.)
Erosion
3/14 Spring break, no classes
3/21 Earth
Chapter 9
topic 8 notes, images,
earth
3/28 Moon and Mercury
Chap. 7,8
topic 9 notes, images moon and Mercury
4/4 Test 2 – through Moon and Mercury (4/4)
Venus
Chapter 10
topic 10 notes, images Venus
4/11 Venus (cont.)
Mars
Chapter 11
3d images
topic 11 notes, images Mars
link to Themis
movie and images of Valles Marineris
4/18 Mars (cont.)
4/25 Rings
Chapter 16
Outer Planet Satellites
Chapter
15
topic 12 notes, images outer planets and moons (except
Saturn's)
5/2 Term Paper Due (5/2)
Outer Planet Satellites (cont.)
Saturn lecture, Saturn's moons lecture
Test 3 during final exam period, Tuesday May 9, 5:45 - 7:45
Term paper:
The term paper will be 8 - 12 pages of double - spaced 12 pt. text, 1” margins, not including title page, abstract, references, tables, or figures. Twenty points will be deducted for papers not within this length range. The paper should discuss a topic in planetary science for which multiple points of view exist. The author should summarize existing knowledge of a topic and support a particular point of view.
Format:
Title page - Must
include your name and title of the paper
Abstract
Body of the paper. 8 - 12 pages
References
Figure Captions
Tables
Figures
Format should file
AGU (American Geophysical Union) style guide for submitted
manuscripts – Directions for how to prepare a paper can be found at
http://www.agu.org/pubs/au_contrib_rev.html.
Ignore the directions for index terms and supporting nonprint
material. Please pay particular attention to the link for the
Grammar and Style Guide and the Reference Style Guide Term papers
should be submitted in hardcopy, not electronic, form.
A sample manuscript
that is in the correct format for a term paper can be found here. The official AGU
reference format has changed slightly since the sample manuscript was
created, and you can use either the old or current format as long as
you are consistent.
References should be peer-reviewed articles from relevant scientific journals with perhaps a few references to abstracts from presentations at scientific meetings. With few exceptions, WEB PAGES ARE NOT REFERENCES. At least five references must be peer-reviewed articles or books. The most common publications that have articles in planetary science are: Nature, Science, Journal of Geophysical Research (Planets), Icarus, Meteoritics and Planetary Science, Geology, and Geophysical Research Letters. Two good places to look up articles are the NASA Astrophysics Data System (http://adswww.harvard.edu/) and the abstracts of a recent Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (http://www.lpi.usra.edu/publications/abstracts.shtml).
Twenty points off per day for late papers.
Sample topics (others may be selected):
Resurfacing history
of Venus
Dating surfaces on
Mars with small craters
The dark area on
Iapetus
History of water on
Mars
Does Europa have an
ocean?
Formation of
complex craters
Association of
asteroids and meteorites