Solar System Exploration

Instructor:

Cheng Li

Grader:

Ramya Bhaskarapanthula

Ombuds Person:

Kenneth Lam

Email:

chengcli@umich.edu

Office Hours:

Monday 2 - 4 pm

Office Location:

1535 Space Research Building

Note

Students requiring accommodations or special assistance with course requirements should contact us as soon as possible (by the mid of January) to discuss appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities.

Course Objectives

  1. Know major space missions to planets in the Solar System.

  2. Understand the history of the Solar System and the major planets.

  3. Be able to apply remote sensing and in situ measurement techniques to understand planetary environments.

  4. Have an extensive knowledge of one space instrument.

Textbooks

You will be given reading assignments from the following textbooks. You are not required to purchase them. Some of them are freely available online, others are available through the U-M library.

Non-technical Readings

  1. Linda Billings (2021). “50 Years of Solar System Exploration: Historical Perspectives” [Ebook link]

  2. Fred Taylor (2016). “Exploring The Planets: A Memoir” [Ebook link]

Technical Reading:

  1. Planetary Science and Astrobiology Decadal Survey 2023-2032 [Download]

  2. Jack J. Lissauer and Imke de Pater (2015). “Fundamental Planetary Science: Physics, Chemistry and Habitability” [link]

Evaluation

You will be evaluated based on your knowledge and skills learned in this course. The following table shows the weight of each component. In particular, the scope of the mini-project consists of two parts:

  1. A thorough discussion of your project, including the scientific motivation, the technology, and the impact/results. This part contributes 15% of your total grade.

  2. Your technical report should involve proper formatted examples, figures, tables, computer programs, and other visualizations to demonstrate your understanding of the project. This part contributes another 15% of your total grade.

The skills you learned during the course and doing the homework assignments will help you to complete the mini-project. You are encouraged to discuss with the instructor as early as possible to choose a project that you are interested in.

Component

Weight

Letter Grade

Knowledge

Attendance

10%

  • A+ : 97%

  • A : 93%

  • A- : 90%

  • B+ : 87%

  • B : 83%

  • B- : 80%

  • C+ : 77%

  • C : 73%

  • C- : 70%

  • D+ : 67%

  • D : 63%

  • D- : 60%

Homework

40%

Mid-term Exam

20%

Mini-project

15%

Skill

Programming

5%

Presentation

5%

Techinical Writing

5%

Other Resources

Basics

These resources provide general guidelines to prepare you for the technical aspects of the course. They are modern tools that ease your effort of writing computer programs and technical documents. If you are already familiar with them, you can skip this section. Otherwise, instructions will be given in class when you need to review the material. You will not be evaluated on learning these materials. But your homework and mini-project may require you to use them.

  • Linux interactive user guide [link]

  • Vim interactive user guide [link]

  • Python interactive user guide [link]

  • Git interactive user guide [link]

  • reStructuredText user guide [link]

Advanced

These resources are for students who wish to learn a graduate level of planetary science and advanced numerical simulation. These materials are not required for the course.

  • de Pater, Imke, and Jack J. Lissauer (2015). “Planetary Sciences” [link]

  • Rust free book [link]