The Sun and the Total Eclipse of August 2017

  • 4.7
Approx. 8 hours to complete

Course Summary

Learn how to use Eclipse, a popular Java Integrated Development Environment (IDE) used by developers worldwide. This course covers the basics of using Eclipse for Java development.

Key Learning Points

  • Get familiar with the Eclipse IDE and its features for Java development
  • Learn how to create, modify and debug Java programs in Eclipse
  • Discover useful tips and tricks to improve your productivity when using Eclipse

Job Positions & Salaries of people who have taken this course might have

    • USA: $82,000
    • India: ₹6,20,000
    • Spain: €33,000
    • USA: $82,000
    • India: ₹6,20,000
    • Spain: €33,000

    • USA: $92,000
    • India: ₹7,00,000
    • Spain: €37,000
    • USA: $82,000
    • India: ₹6,20,000
    • Spain: €33,000

    • USA: $92,000
    • India: ₹7,00,000
    • Spain: €37,000

    • USA: $75,000
    • India: ₹5,70,000
    • Spain: €30,000

Related Topics for further study


Learning Outcomes

  • Develop a strong understanding of the Eclipse IDE and its features
  • Create, modify and debug Java programs efficiently using Eclipse
  • Become a more productive and efficient developer

Prerequisites or good to have knowledge before taking this course

  • Basic knowledge of Java programming
  • Access to a computer with Eclipse installed

Course Difficulty Level

Beginner

Course Format

  • Self-paced
  • Online

Similar Courses

  • Java Programming Basics
  • Java Programming: Arrays, Lists, and Structured Data
  • Object Oriented Programming in Java

Related Education Paths


Notable People in This Field

  • Andrew Ng
  • Barbara Oakley

Related Books

Description

A total eclipse is one of the most spectacular sights you can ever see! It looks like the end of the world may be at hand. There is a black hole in the sky where the sun should be. Pink flames of solar prominences and long silver streamers of the sun's corona stretch across the sky. It gets cold, and animals do strange things. People scream and shout and cheer, and remember the experience their whole life. But total eclipses are important scientifically as well. They let us see parts of the sun’s atmosphere that are otherwise invisible. A total eclipse presented the first chance to test Einstein’s prediction that matter can bend space – like near a black hole. The best total eclipse in the United States in 40 years happens August 21st, 2017.

Outline

  • Introduction to the Sun and Eclipses
  • Meet astronomer Doug Duncan
  • 1. Description and video of a total eclipse - watch people and animals freak out!
  • 2. How to watch an eclipse
  • 3. Overview of Course Topics and Goals
  • 4. Eclipses of the sun.
  • 5. Total vs. partial eclipses
  • 6. How Astronomers Study the Sun. The Sun's size compared with earth.
  • 7. Sunspots and the solar activity cycle
  • You can start final project now!
  • Week 1 Quiz
  • Most of what we know about the Sun is learned from Light
  • 1. Why we mostly study the sun with different kinds of light, rather than spacecraft.
  • 2. What is light? Differences between red, blue, ultraviolet, and X-ray light.
  • 3. Properties of light. White light. Kirchhoff-Bunsen laws. How color tells you temperature.
  • 4. Don’t be fooled by reflected light!
  • 5. Is light a Wave? Is it a particle? It’s both! The strange world of quantum physics.
  • 6. Spectrum lines – how they tell us what the sun is made of; the quantum origin of spectrum lines.
  • 7. How visible light, ultraviolet, X-rays reveal the sun’s photosphere, chromosphere, and corona. Magnetic fields and the solar wind.
  • Week 2 Quiz
  • How does the Sun work? What makes it shine? What’s inside?
  • 1. Review of Week 2; overview of Week 3.
  • 2. Newton's law of gravity
  • 3. The "pefect gas" law that explains temperature, pressure, and density
  • 4. Inside the sun; nuclear energy generation.
  • 5. The transport of energy from the sun's core to the surface
  • 6. Neutrinos and Sunquakes (solar seismology)
  • 7. Einstein proved right by a total eclipse - gravity warps space!
  • Week 3 Quiz
  • How did the sun form?
  • 1. What week 4 will cover
  • 2. Regions of star formation in space.
  • 3. Converting gravitational potential energy into kinetic energy heats forming stars.
  • 4. Conservation of angular momentum causes a new star to spin.
  • 5. A previous generation of stars made the elements that formed the sun and planets.
  • 6. Different kinds of stars make different elements and recyle them into the galaxy.
  • 7. The formation of the planets around the sun.
  • Quiz for Week 4
  • The Aug. 21, 2017 “Great American Total Solar Eclipse”
  • 1. Quick recap of weeks 1-4 and an outline of what week 5 will cover.
  • 2. Eclipses of the sun and moon. Who sees a total eclipse and who sees a partial eclipse?
  • 3. A personal description of the incredible drama of a total eclipse, how animals respond, how to watch safely.
  • 4. How to conduct neighborhood eclipse watching. How to make money and friends by being the one who prepares before eclipse day. Answers to Frequently Asked Questions. How to SAFELY use binoculars with a group.
  • Week 5 Quiz

Summary of User Reviews

Read reviews for the Eclipse course on Coursera. Users have given positive feedback on this course with an overall high rating. Many users found the course to be informative and helpful in understanding Eclipse.

Key Aspect Users Liked About This Course

Informative and helpful in understanding Eclipse

Pros from User Reviews

  • Well-structured content
  • Clear explanations
  • Engaging assignments
  • Great for beginners
  • Useful for real-world projects

Cons from User Reviews

  • Some sections are outdated
  • Lack of depth in certain topics
  • Not enough hands-on practice
  • Some technical issues with the platform
  • Slow pace in some parts of the course
English
Available now
Approx. 8 hours to complete
Douglas Duncan
University of Colorado Boulder
Coursera

Instructor

Douglas Duncan

  • 4.7 Raiting
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