Term
"Laws of nature" can be characterized by saying that they: |
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Definition
Represent our best understanding of how the universe works under certain circumstances. "Trefil and Hazen 7) |
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Which of the following would be funded by a typical federal grant for scientific research? |
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Definition
all of the above (computer time to run analyses, salaries of investigators, equipment to conduct proposed research, travel to field sites) (Trefil and Hazen 18) |
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Which combination of the following statements best describes how a hypothesis is tested? i. By using the hypothesis to make concrete propositions? ii. By comparing observations in nature with predictions on the basis of the hypothesis iii. By constructing new hypotheses |
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Kepler's laws of planetary motion stated that: |
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Definition
all planets orbit in elliptical paths |
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To calculate the gravitational forces between objects, we need all of the following except: |
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Definition
acceleration of both objects (slide 51) |
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Term
If the Moon were positioned twice as far from the Earth as it is now, the gravitational attraction between the Earth and the Moon would be: |
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Definition
one-fourth as great (Trefil and Hazen 42) |
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Term
Newton's three Laws of Motion do NOT include the statement that: |
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Definition
the kinetic energy of an object is equal to one-half its mass times its velocity squared (Trefil and Hazen 37-39) |
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The paired forces in Newton's third law: |
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Definition
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The first law of thermodynamics states that |
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Definition
while the type of energy in a closed system can change, the total amount of energy cannot |
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Thermal energy is measured in: |
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Definition
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Term
Lighting a fire with a match uses which kinds of energy? |
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Definition
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Which statement best represents the Second Law of Thermodynamics? |
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Definition
every isolated system becomes more disordered with time (Trefil and Hazen 82) |
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Definition
The ratio of energy output to energy input |
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What type of heat transfer occurs in a fluid? |
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Definition
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Term
The phrase "Heat-death of the universe" refers to |
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Definition
Everything in the universe ultimately becoming the same temperature |
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Term
Which following statement(s) is/are true about the relationship between the Second Law of Thermodynamics and the theory that complex life evolved from single-celled organisms by neo-Darwinian means (natural selection sifting random genetic mutations) |
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Definition
The fact that the Earth is not a closed system does not resolve the fundamental problem of improbability that challenges neo-Darwinian accounts of the emergence of biological complexity |
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Term
Coulomb's law states that electric force is dependent on all of the following except |
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Definition
the sizes of the two objects |
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Term
Which of the following can produce a magnetic field? |
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Definition
moving electrical charges |
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Term
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Definition
voltage (volts) = current (amps) times resistance (ohms) |
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Term
The functioning of an electric motor depends on the fact that |
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Definition
an electrical current produces a magnetic field |
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Term
What important technology followed from Michael Faraday’s invention of the electric generator? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is not a consequence of Maxwell’s equations for the electromagnetic field? |
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Definition
that unlike charges repel while like charges attract |
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Term
If you are observing a light source moving very rapidly toward you, the Doppler Effect predicts that the light will be |
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Definition
shifted toward the blue end of the spectrum |
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Term
The fundamental difference between electromagnetic waves and other kinds of waves is that |
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Definition
they transfer energy without transferring mass |
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Term
The electromagnetic ether was postulated in an effort to provide |
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Definition
a medium through which electromagnetic radiation might propagate |
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Definition
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Which of the following is not a consequence of the Special Theory of Relativity? |
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Definition
Gravitational waves propagate at the speed of light |
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Term
Which of the following is the most accurate description of the cases in which the predictions of general relativity have been confirmed? |
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Definition
Gravitational shifts in the frequency of light, gravitational lensing, time dilation, and a precession of planetary orbits that differs from Newtonian prediction |
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Term
Which of the following was not taken as evidence for the correctness of the atomic theory of matter? |
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Definition
electromagnetic induction |
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Term
An electrically charged atom is known as |
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Definition
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Term
The Rutherford atom is unstable because |
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Definition
accelerating charges radiate energy |
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Term
Each electron shell in the Bohr atom corresponds to |
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Definition
a different electron energy level |
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Term
What technology produces coherent photons having wave crests in alignment? |
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Definition
light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation |
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Term
Each time an electron moves from a higher energy shell to a lower energy shell in an atom |
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Definition
another electron occupies the space it vacated |
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Term
The Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that |
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Definition
it is impossible to know with precision both a particle’s position and its velocity |
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Term
Measurements can be made on a macroscopic object without greatly disturbing its state because: |
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Definition
the energy of the object is much greater than the energy of the probe |
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Term
Experimental violations of various Bell inequalities demonstrate that: |
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Definition
there can be no non-local explanation for quantum correlations |
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Term
Which of the following represents the most stable arrangement of electrons in an atom? |
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Definition
any or all of the above (atoms with completely filled valence shells, elements positioned in the far right column of the periodic table of elements, inert gases such as helium, argon, and neon, atoms with a total of 2, 10, 18, or 36 electrons) |
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Term
Sodium chloride (NaCl) atoms form a crystal lattice that is held together by |
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Definition
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Term
If a chemical bond forms spontaneously |
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Definition
energy will be released in the interaction |
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Term
A material that shows polarization in its chemical interactions is |
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Definition
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Term
Most polymers are characterized as |
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Definition
a collection of small molecules combined into long chains, sometimes with branches |
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Term
Which state of matter maintains a constant volume but no fixed shape? |
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Definition
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Term
Which kind of strength describes a material's ability to resist twisting? |
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Definition
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Term
A superconductor has electrons that |
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Definition
move freely through the material without losing energy |
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Term
One important property of semiconducting diodes is that they |
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Definition
allow electricity to flow in only one direction |
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Term
Integrated circuits contributed most directly to |
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Definition
the miniaturization of computers |
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Term
Which of the following can be communicated using only a series of yes-or-no questions? |
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Definition
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Term
How is a microchip an improvement over a transistor? |
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Definition
a microchip incorporates thousands of transistors into one integrated circuit designed for a specific function |
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Term
Which of the following is true about radioactive decay? |
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Definition
After beta decay, the number of protons in a nucleus is unchanged. |
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Term
How do two isotopes of the same element differ? |
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Definition
Their neutrons differ in number |
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Term
The difference between nuclear fusion and nuclear fission is that |
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Definition
Fusion combines two nuclei into one, fission splits apart a nucleus. |
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Term
A particular isotope has a half-life of 10 minutes. If we start with 2,000 atoms now, in half an hour we will have how many atoms left? |
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Definition
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Term
How many protons, neutrons, and electrons are contained in Uranium-238? |
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Definition
92 protons, 146 neutrons, 92 electrons. |
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Term
A scientist who uses Carbon-14 dating is actually measuring the |
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Definition
number of carbon ions in a material. |
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Term
If you plotted the number of neutrons against the number of protons of all atoms listed in the Periodic Table of the Elements, what would you discover? |
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Definition
All of the above are correct. |
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Term
Which of the following statements is a characteristic of environmental radioactivity? |
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Definition
Much of the earth's interior heat comes from alpha decay |
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Term
An electron is to a beta particle as helium is to a(n) |
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Definition
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Term
How does gamma radiation differ from alpha and beta radiation? |
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Definition
Alpha and beta radiation change the chemical identity of the original element by changing the number of protons and neutrons; gamma radiation only changes the energy of the nucleus without altering the number of protons or neutrons. |
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Term
Why were the medieval alchemists unsuccessful in find a philosopher’s stone? |
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Definition
The medieval alchemists tried to change lead into gold using chemical reactions, but to change one element into another, it is necessary to manipulate the nucleus of the atom, not its electrons. |
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Term
If an atom emits two protons and two neutrons, the atom has |
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Definition
all of the above are correct. |
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Term
What was the significance of Wolfgang Pauli’s discovery of the neutrino? |
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Definition
It explained the apparent violation of the conservation of mass in alpha decay by showing that helium nuclei, when stripped of electrons, acquire two neutrinos. |
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Term
Why are atomic nuclei greater than 92 rarely observed in nature? |
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Definition
The structure of 92 protons seems to be the last stable geometry in nature. After uranium, elements with higher atomic numbers become increasingly unstable and can only be made in the laboratory, where they quickly decay. |
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Term
The difference between a quark and a lepton is |
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Definition
quarks exist in the nucleus, but leptons do not |
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Term
Which elementary particles have the same mass but a different charge than one of the leptons? |
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Definition
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Term
Quarks are one of the basic building blocks of matter. Which of the following particles or structures would not contain any quarks at all? |
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Definition
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Term
In what order are the fundamental forces unified as temperatures increase? |
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Definition
electromagnetism and the weak force combine at the lowest temperature, followed by the strong force, then gravity is added to unify all four fundamental forces in the super-force that last existed right after the Big Bang. |
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Term
If gravitons exist, which of the following pairs of objects exchange gravitons? |
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Definition
all of the above and every other pair of objects in the Universe. |
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Term
Bosons, as opposed to fermions, |
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Definition
are the carriers of the fundamental forces AND have integral spin, and therefore cannot form structures AND obey Bose-Einstein statistics, but not Fermi-Dirac statistics AND do not obey the Pauli Exclusion Principle |
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Term
Gravity is to a graviton as the strong force is to |
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Definition
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Term
The super-unification project associated with string theory postulates that |
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Definition
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Term
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Center for Nuclear Research in Geneva, Switzerland, is hoping to discover evidence of |
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Definition
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Term
A synchrotron is distinguished from a linear accelerator in that while both machines are particle accelerators that boost atomic particles to near-light speeds |
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Definition
The synchrotron accelerates particles with intense radio waves while employing a ring of magnets to constrain them to move in a circular track, but the linear accelerator uses a vacuum tube into which particles are injected to ride an electromagnetic wave. |
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Term
Which of the following are true? |
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Definition
We know that the strong force is stronger than the electromagnetic force because it overcomes the electrical repulsion between protons to hold the nucleus together AND the weak force is associated with the phenomenon of radioactivity AND The electroweak force is carried by W and Z vector bosons. |
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Term
The energy source of stars is primarily associated with |
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Definition
the reactions of nuclei in the star core |
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Term
Which of the following can be said about large stars? |
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Definition
Large stars have a shorter lifetime than smaller stars. |
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Term
The end products of fusion in the sun's core are: |
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Definition
helium isotopes, protons, and gamma rays. |
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Term
Which of the following affects the lifetime of a star? |
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Definition
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Term
The Hertzsprung-Russell diagram is a graphical technique used in astronomy to compare |
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Definition
the surface temperature versus the energy output of a star. |
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Term
Where were the heaviest chemical elements on Earth created? |
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Definition
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Term
If you were to observe a pulsar, what would you see? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is among the things that astrophysicists predict for the Sun’s demise? |
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Definition
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Term
If you were describing the structure of the Sun correctly, you would say that |
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Definition
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Term
Why do scientists think that black holes exist, considering that black holes cannot be seen and none have ever been directly observed in space? |
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Definition
Their existence is predicted by general relativity AND black holes are predicted to give off a particular radiation signature that has been detected AND Stars near black holes exhibit strange orbits and have their mass gradually sucked away. |
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Term
The Big Bang theory and the Steady State theory differ in that |
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Definition
The Big Bang theory proposes that the Universe is expanding and has a finite history |
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Term
The discovery of ubiquitous cosmic microwave background radiation |
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Definition
gives support to the Big Bang theory. |
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Term
What were the first three elements formed in the Big Bang? |
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Definition
hydrogen, helium, and lithium. |
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Term
According to the current ideas about the origin of the Universe, which of the following forces existed before 10-43 seconds (the Planck time)? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is true about inflationary cosmology? |
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Definition
It was originally proposed to explain the horizon problem, the flatness problem, and the fact that the magnetic monopoles predicted by certain Grand Unified Theories had not been observed AND The first formulation of the theory was inadequate and remedying its defects led to the theory of chaotic eternal inflation, which entails the endless production of bubble universes AND inflation is eternal into the future AND It is intended to resolve problems with the fine-tuning of the Universe’s initial conditions. |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a problem with inflationary cosmology? |
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Definition
It fails to satisfy the conditions of the BGV theorem |
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Term
The existence of a multiverse follows from which of the following theories? |
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Definition
The Hartle-Hawking no boundary proposal in quantum cosmology. |
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Term
Which of the following is true about quantum cosmology? |
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Definition
All EXCEPT that it is a mathematical description of dubious merit |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a problem with quantum cosmology? |
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Definition
Because it requires a realistic interpretation of the Feynman path-integral formalism for quantum mechanics, it relies on the many worlds interpretation of quantum theory, which is problematic from both a technical and a metaphysical standpoint. |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT true about the String Landscape? |
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Definition
it presumes the truth of quantum cosmology and exists in a superspace of geometrical superpositions AND it relies on each of the vacua of string theory being associated with different laws in virtue of the size of the compactified spatial dimensions and different universal constants in virtue of the shape of the compactified extra dimensions |
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Term
Which statement about dark matter is accepted by most astronomers? |
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Definition
Dark matter interacts with ordinary matter through its gravitational effects. |
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Term
Which of the following is true of the Kālām Cosmological Argument? |
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Definition
all of the above EXCEPT that the universe had a beginning |
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Term
Which of the following is evidence for the Big Bang theory? |
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Definition
The abundance of hydrogen, helium and lithium in the Universe, the cosmic microwave background radiation, universal expansion, and the Second Law of Thermodynamics. |
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Term
The argument to intelligent design in cosmology and astronomy rests on which of the following facts and correspondences? |
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Definition
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Term
Antimatter is rarely observed in our galaxy because |
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Definition
laboratory research indicates that matter was more plentiful in the early universe and annihilated the antimatter. |
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Term
Why do scientists think that dark matter does not interact through the electromagnetic force? |
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Definition
because if it did, it would absorb or emit photons |
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