Term
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Definition
The tilts of the Earth’s axis |
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Term
Will a planet in retrograde motion rise in the east or west? |
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Definition
Rise in the east and set in the west |
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Term
Problem computing circumference from angle of shadow |
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Definition
(angle(°) )/(360°)= distance/circumference |
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Term
What are right ascension and declination? |
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Definition
RA = longitude, DEC = latitude |
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Term
Two phenomena which prove that the Earth moves |
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Definition
Stellar parallax and the aberration of starlight |
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Term
Conversion of RA and DEC to decimal degrees |
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Definition
1 hr = 15°, 1 min = .25°, 1 sec = .004167°, 1’ = (1/60) °, 1” = (1/3600) ° |
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Term
Escape velocities of Mars, Earth, and Saturn |
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Definition
From smallest to largest: Mars ? Earth ? Saturn |
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Term
How did Newton deduce that the force of gravity obeyed an inverse square law? |
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Definition
He tried various power laws to see which yielded Kepler’s third law |
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Term
Possible consequences of precession of Earth’s axis |
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Definition
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Term
Why is the inner core of Earth solid? |
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Definition
Higher temperature and especially higher pressure at the center (crystallized iron and some nickel) |
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Term
Directions of vibration and propagations in S waves and P waves |
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Definition
S-waves: vibration is perpendicular to the direction of propagation, P-waves: vibration is parallel |
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Term
Problem on distance, velocity, and time with seismic waves |
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Definition
t = d/v d = distance, v = velocity, t = time |
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Term
Greenhouse gases are equivalent to what in a greenhouse? |
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Definition
The glass in the greenhouse |
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Term
Evidence that the Earth has a liquid core |
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Definition
S-waves don’t get through to the other side |
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Term
Composition of the plates on Earth’s surface |
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Definition
A combination of crust and mantle |
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Term
If you were on a beach and the water went out… |
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Definition
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Term
Difference between lunar rilles and rays |
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Definition
Rilles = canyons, rays = streaks that radiate out from craters |
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Term
Time dependence (if any) of eccentricity of the Moon’s orbit |
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Definition
Varies periodically with a period of about 206 days |
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Term
Definition of an eclipse season |
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Definition
A period of time in which eclipses are possible) a few days, 2 eclipse seasons per year |
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Term
Problem with the twin formation theory of the formation of the Moon |
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Definition
It does not explain the density difference |
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Term
Conditions for the highest spring tides |
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Definition
New/full moon, moon closer to Earth’s orbit (at perigee) |
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Term
Problem (if any) with the giant impact model of the formation of the Moon |
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Definition
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Term
Relation between Moon’s orbital and synodic periods |
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Definition
Synodic = phase period, 29 days, sidereal = true revolution, 27 days, 2 days shorter |
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Term
Problem on ratio of apogee to perigee distances |
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Definition
rA/rp = ((1+e))/((1-e)) e = eccentricity, rA = a(1+e), rp = a(1-e) |
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Term
Characteristics of extrasolar planets detected thus far |
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Definition
Masses of .5 to 5 times that of Jupiter, distances less than 1 AU, Eccentric orbits |
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Term
Reason why there are two main types of planets |
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Definition
4 inner planets: rocky, iron cores, smaller, thin atmospheres (terrestrial, like Earth) and 4 outer planets: gaseous/liquid, larger, rich atmospheres (Jovian, like Jupiter) |
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Term
Bias of the Doppler method |
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Definition
Biased toward detecting massive planets that orbit at small distances close to their parent stars (only big and nearby planets detected) |
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Term
Advantage of the transit method |
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Definition
It can determine a planet’s diameter, and thus, can also calculate its density |
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Term
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Definition
an empirical numerical rule which correctly predicts the relative distance of most of the planets. Start with 0, 3, then double each preceding number (6, 12, etc.), add 4 to each number, and divide the result by 10. |
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Term
Why is there no planet in the asteroid zone? |
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Definition
Jupiter’s gravity disrupted the accretion process |
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Term
Problem to determine semimajor axis from period |
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Definition
(exoplanet orbits a star of 1 solar mass) p2= a3 (AU) p = period, a = semi-major axis, put period in terms of years |
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Term
Surface features of Mercury compared with those of the Moon |
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Definition
Scarps and volcanoes are not on the Moon (no iron core in the Moon) |
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Term
Time taken for a radar signal to go to Venus and back |
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Definition
Distance (to planet) = speed of light * timeSpeed of light = c = 3.00*108 m/s (or 2.99*108 m/s) |
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Term
Main type of surface features on Venus |
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Definition
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Term
Name of the current mission to Mercury |
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Definition
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Term
What were the canals on Mars as seen by Percival Lowell? |
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Definition
They were an optical illusion |
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Term
Uses of radar for studying Venus |
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Definition
Distance, rotation period, surface features—on Titan, also surface elevation |
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Term
Surface features on Mars and presence of liquid water |
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Definition
Dry river beds and lake beds ? climate change |
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Term
Interior structure of Jupiter and Saturn |
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Definition
Rocky core ? liquid metallic hydrogen (H) ? molecular hydrogen (H2) |
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Term
How does the Cassini mission penetrate the haze of Titan? |
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Definition
Radar (bright surface = rough, dark surface = smooth) |
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Term
Location of the ring systems of the giant planets |
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Definition
Planet ? rings ? satellites |
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Term
Why is the space near Jupiter a dangerous environment? |
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Definition
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Term
Reason why Uranus and Neptune are blue |
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Definition
Methane absorbs red light |
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Term
Probable explanation for the odd tilt of Uranus’s axis and its satellite orbits |
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Definition
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Term
Calculation of the Roche limit |
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Definition
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Term
Temperature at a distance of one of the Jovian planets |
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Definition
Inverse square law: T2/T1 = v(d1/d2) |
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Term
Name of a piece of rock from space which lands on Earth |
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Definition
Meteoroid (in space), meteor (in sky), meteorite (on Earth) |
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Term
Dependence of kinetic energy of an asteroid on diameter and speed |
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Definition
KE = 1/2 mv2, m = d3 ? KE = d3v2 |
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Term
How do we know what asteroids are made of? |
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Definition
Reflection spectrum, minerals reflect wavelengths |
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Term
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Definition
Earth goes through the comet’s orbit while going around the Sun |
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Term
Nighttime sky from an asteroid |
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Definition
You would not see your neighbor (aka spacing is very wide) |
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Term
Cause of the two tails on some comets |
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Definition
Dust tail is caused by radiation pressure (photons), ion tail is driven by solar wind (particles from the Sun) |
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Term
Effect of emission and absorption on an electron in an atom |
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Definition
Absorption: increases energy level, emission: reduces energy level |
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Term
Wien’s law problem on a logarithmic scale |
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Definition
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Term
Why are neutrinos a good probe of stellar interiors? |
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Definition
They are generated by nuclear reactions of the Sun, they interact weakly with matter so we can observe |
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Term
Why doesn’t the Sun collapse? |
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Definition
Balance between pressure (pushing outward) and gravity (pushing inward), known as hydrostatic equilibrium |
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Term
Name of the series of reactions which produce the Sun’s energy |
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Definition
Proton-proton chain (deuteron ? helium 3 ? helium 4), also P-P chain |
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Term
What is the Mauder minimum? |
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Definition
A period of low sun spot activity (ex: during 1620-1710) |
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Term
Why do sunspots appear dark? |
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Definition
They are regions of concentrated magnetism, deflect electrons and inhibit convection (light energy), reduce energy flow |
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Term
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Definition
A gravitationally-bound star, two binary stars orbit each other |
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Term
Determination of individual masses from combined mass and mass ratio |
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Definition
M1 + M2 = a3/p2 , M1 + M2 = c (constant) |
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Term
Parallax of the nearest star as seen from Neptune |
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Definition
PNeptune = 30 PEarth (30 AU : 1 AU) |
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Term
What is the mass-luminosity relation? |
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Definition
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Term
Why are stellar parallaxes difficult to measure from the ground? |
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Definition
The atmosphere blurs the images |
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Term
Most common stars in the Sun’s neighborhood |
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Definition
Red dwarfs (class M/M5/MV on the main sequence) |
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Term
Original classification of stellar spectra by Annie Cannon |
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Definition
Simple spectra ? most complex spectra |
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Term
Problem to determine main sequence lifetime from mass and luminosity |
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Definition
t = M/L * 1010 year (M and L are in solar units) |
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Term
Range of masses of stars which will eventually become white dwarfs |
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Definition
Minimum of .4 solar masses, maximum of 8 solar masses |
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Term
Fate of a single white dwarf |
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Definition
Cools down after formation |
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Term
What property of a star changes most during the main sequence stage? |
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Definition
Composition in the core (He increases) |
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Term
Meaning of hydrostatic equilibrium |
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Definition
Balance between forces of gravity and pressure |
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Term
Use of the main sequence turn-off point for a cluster |
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Definition
Used to determine the age of a cluster |
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Term
Types of pulsating stars that are useful as distance indicators |
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Definition
RR Lyrae, Cepheids, Miras |
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Term
When are elements heavier than iron produced? |
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Definition
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Term
Comparison of escape velocities of a white dwarf and a neutron star |
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Definition
Vesc = v(2GM/R), neutron star has greater escape velocity |
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Term
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Definition
A rotating neutron star that produces a “lighthouse effect” temperature of gas in a supernova remnant |
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Term
Doppler shifts in supernova spectra |
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Definition
Red shift due to expansion of universe, also blue shift due to mass approaching us at a great velocity (we don’t see the red shift) |
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Term
Basic observational difference between Type I and Type II supernovae |
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Definition
Type I: no hydrogen lines vs. Type II: hydrogen lines |
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Term
Basic physical difference between Type Ia and Type II supernovae |
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Definition
Type Ia: from a white dwarf vs. Type II: from a massive star (O or early B) |
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Term
What best reveals the spiral structure of the Milky Way? |
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Definition
Studies and observations of our own galaxy, combined with general features known to occur in other galaxies, have led us to infer that the Milky Way is a flat disk with spiral arms. Shapley’s studies proved it was a flat disk, and other galaxies of that shape have extending spiral arms. |
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Term
Differences between low-metallicity and high-metallicity groups of globular clusters |
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Definition
Low metallicity: metallicity of less than -0.8, about 75% of the Milky Way’s globular clusters, generally older, spatial distribution more spherical, reflect early universe conditions, more RR Lyrae clusters. High metallicity: metallicity greater than -0.8, about 25% of the Milky Way’s globular clusters, generally younger, spatial distribution is more flattened, reflect the shape of galactic flattening over time, less RR Lyrae clusters |
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Term
Main parts of the Milky Way and the Sun’s position in it |
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Definition
A disk, a surrounding halo, a flattened and somewhat elongated bulge of stars at its center, spiral arms that extend outward, a core/galaxy nucleus, the Sun is about 2/3 of the way out in the disk, NOT at the center |
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Term
Why is our line of sight to the globular clusters clear? |
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Definition
Many contain RR Lyrae stars, which are pulsating stars, globular clusters can be seen from great distances. Unlike open clusters, in which the stars eventually escape and the cluster dissolves, globular clusters pull the stars into a denser ball, there is not as much dust obscuring the view, and the larger number of stars in these clusters creates a stronger gravity, which pulls them in closer. Globular clusters outline the halo and bulge. |
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Term
Why star counting cannot be used to locate the galactic center |
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Definition
Interstellar dust; it dims and blocks our view of distant parts of the galaxy, thus it affects our ability to measure distances to stars and to determine the size of the Milky Way. The dust dims the brightness and alters the colors of stars we see through it, may even dim it to the point of invisibility. Also, each star is pulled in by gravitational force towards the center of the galaxy, and follows its own orbit. |
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Term
What maintains the spiral structure of the Milky Way? |
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Definition
Density-wave theory: waves of stars and gas sweep around the galactic disk, we see it as a spiral arm, very wave-like. Some stars have greater gravitational force, which pulls in other stars temporarily and creates a “clump,” where stars can collide and form new stars. SSF Theory: self-propogating star formation, at a random point in the disk of a galaxy, a gas cloud collapses and turns into stars. The stars heat the gas around them, explode as supernovas, generate disturbances that make the surrounding gas clouds collapse and turn into stars. This keeps triggering more gas clouds to collapse and form additional stars, so star formation spreads across the galaxy’s disk, forms a spiral due to the difference in rotation rate between the inner and outer parts of the disk. |
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Term
Problem to determine the mass of the central object by Kepler’s Third Law |
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Definition
m + M = a3/p2 , m = mass , of smaller object , M = mass of larger object (sometimes not used), a = distance between objects (also semi-major axis), p = years to complete one orbit |
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Term
The three main types of galaxies |
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Definition
Spiral (barred and S0), elliptical, and irregular |
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Term
Problem to determine distance from recession velocity |
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Definition
v = Hd v = velocity, d = distance, H = Hubble constant = 70 (or 71) km/megaparsecs, answer given in megaparsecs |
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Term
What is the power source for active galaxies? |
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Definition
Accretion disks around immense black holes, galaxy centers = black holes of at least 1 million solar masses |
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Term
Evidence for supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies |
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Definition
Images from the Hubble Space telescope; disk shown, gas falling into disk releases gravitational energy, heats material to millions of Kelvins, some material boils off into space, stars and gas are orbiting the core at high speeds, must be bound in by a black hole, emits no light/radiation, both massive and dark, accounts for the difference in observed mass vs. calculated mass |
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Term
Evidence that active regions of quasars are small |
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Definition
Their light variability; if a quasar varies in brightness in a time as short as a few days, then the emitting region can be no more than a few light-days across in diameter (aka, very small diameter compared to the rest of the universe), proof from the delay of light from the nearest side of quasar vs. delay of light from the farthest side of quasar |
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Term
Evidence for dark matter in clusters of galaxies |
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Definition
Evidence comes from observations of the motion of galaxies within clusters; galaxies in clusters orbit too rapidly for their luminous mass. Also, evidence comes from the hot gas they contain—this infers a strong inward gravitational pull on the gas to keep it contained |
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Term
Explanation of pairs of quasars with identical spectra |
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Definition
The quasar “companions” are actually images of a single quasar created by a gravitational lense |
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Term
Celestial objects which can be directly imaged |
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Definition
Objects whose redshift (z) is less than 1.645 |
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Term
Celestial objects which cannot be directly images |
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Definition
Objects whose redshift (z) is greater than 1.645 |
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Term
Temperature of matter which emitted the cosmic background radiation, and reason it appears to have a temperature of 2.73 K today |
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Definition
Temperature = approx. 3000 K. Initially, it had much shorter wavelengths, but those wavelengths have been stretched out over billions of years by the stretching of space associated with the expansion of the universe. 2.73 K is due to a redshift effect because of the expansion of the universe, rather than a cooling effect. |
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Term
How we know that the expansion rate of the universe is accelerating |
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Definition
The rate of expansion has been increasing. Dark energy is used to account for this expansion rate. Normal/dark matter would act to slow the expansion rate. With the universe’s thinning density over time, it means that the accelerating effect of the repulsive dark energy component dominates the decelerating effect of the attractive gravitational force. |
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Term
The four distances used in cosmology |
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Definition
Luminosity distance, Now distance, Light-travel-time distance, and Angular-size distance |
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Term
Objects which can be used to test the angular-size vs. red shift relation at high redshift |
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Definition
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