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Test your basic knowledge |
Cosmology
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
science
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The normal eastward movement of a planet against the background of hte distant stars.
Electromagnetic Radiation: Ultraviolet Light
Gamma-ray Burst
Make up of the jovian planets
direct motion
2. A volume of space where few - if any - galaxies are located
Color Index
Parallax
Dwarf planets
Void
3. A star without enough mass to begin hydrogen fusion
Blackbody
Nova
Brown dwarf
Corona
4. A small and dim but hot star.
supermassive black hole
meteorite
White Dwarf
Thermal Equilibrium
5. The faint glow of light left over from the Big Bang. cosmic microwave background are the photons that remain after the big bang that have not turned into matter.
superclusters
radiation pressure
nucleus
CMB
6. Theory virtually demands that the geometry of the universe be ______. Results of measuring lumps in the cosmic background radiation indicate that the universe geometry is ________.
Flat - Flat
If it is in a denser medium - such as glass - it will move slower
White Dwarf
Coldest surface
7. A crystalline patter found in iron meteorites
mass
Cepheid variables
Clouds of sufuric acid (very inhospitable and brightest object in the sky) - process called greenhouse affect traps radiation making it 900 degrees at times - spins with retrograde rotation (sun rises in west) and takes 58.4 days for it to set. Thick
widmanstatten pattern
8. Latin for 'cloud'. A word used to describe the collections of gas and dust in the Milky Way and other galaxies
Limb darkening
HII Region
Nebula
homogeneous
9. The final end state of an intermediate to high mass star. An entity in which all the electrons have been pushed into the protons.
Neutron Star
meteorite
Absolute Magnitude
epicycle
10. The mirror that gathers the light in a reflector
Ammonia - methane - and water
Hydrostatic Equilibrium
Primary Mirror
H2 Regions
11. A bridge of material held in position above the solar surface. They can remain for hours even days
Vernal Equinox
Convection
Flat - Flat
Prominence
12. Centered on the sun.
Thermonuclear Fusion
Neutron Star
AGN
Heliocentric
13. Sc galaxies where star formation and destruction is so rapid that supernova explosions are mainly responsible for compressing gas to create new stars.
Annular Eclipse
accretion disk
Spectroscopy
self-propagating star formation
14. The telescope configuration that has the focus placed at the back of the primary mirror
A family of radiant energy- includes light
Celestial Sphere
Extrasolar Planet
Cassegrain Focus
15. Infinitely long -> 10 cm
Big Crunch
Electromagnetic Radiation: Radio
Thermonuclear Fusion
Flat - Flat
16. The process that powers the sun and hydrogen bombs
Biologicla life created the recycling of nitrogen - co2 - and the production of oxygen. Oxygen is heavier so the atmosphere held onto it easier than hydrogen and helium.
Thermonuclear Fusion
HII Region
MOONS: larger than mercury
17. The family of radiant energy that includes light as a subset
Astronomical Unit
The Local Group
widmanstatten pattern
Electromagnetic Radiation
18. A location on an H-are Diagram where evolving stars pulsate
Instability strip
Proton-proton chain
Europa (Jupiters moon)
epicycle
19. The most mass a white dwarf can have before collapsing to a neutron star
2 Reasons Why there are Supermassive Black holes at the center of every Galaxy
Oort Cloud
Negative - Diverge - Less than 1
Chandrasekhar Limit
20. A volume of space where few - if any - galaxies are located
Ionization
Void
Jovian Planets
Make up of the terrestrial planets
21. A spread of light with an uninterrupted wavelength distribution of energy.
Coronal Loop
Winter Solstice
Maria
Continuous Spectrum
22. The layer of the sun just above the photosphere
Stephen-Boltzman Law
Big Crunch
Chromosphere
Ammonia - methane - and water
23. A subatomic particle with a negative charge. It creates light.
Electron
opposition
Nowhere visible to us. If there are higher dimension then the center would be visible to someone who lives in one. If there are no higher dimensions then the center does not exist.
aurora
24. Medium bulge - moderately would arms - arms have H2 regions in them and look sort of lumpy
Electromagnetic Radiation: Gamma Ray
Thermonuclear Fusion
Sb spiral galaxy
3 reasons we orbit satellites to observe universe
25. Highlands: rocks are made of lighter anorthosite (similar to old earth rocks) Maria: rocks made of heavy mare basalt (volcanic rock) everywhere else is loose regolith created by meteoric impact.
difference between maria and highlands of the moon.
The Big Bang Theory resolves Olber's Paradox
The Big Bang Theory resolves Olber's Paradox
Ganymede (Jupiter)
26. The telescope configuration that has the focus placed at the back of the primary mirror
Cassegrain Focus
Neutron Star
Europa (Jupiters moon)
Photon
27. After stars form they pump light energy into surrounding gas causing it to heat up and glow (H2=ionized hydrogen - H1= neutral hydrogen in molcular couds)
neutrino
Cosmic Microwave Background
MOONS: largest size
H2 Regions
28. Venus (retrograde)
Atomic Number
Positive - Converge - Greater than 1
Rich Cluster
slowest rotation
29. 10^2 nm 10^7 nm
Make up of the terrestrial planets
Observations of distant type Ia supernovae indicate that the expansion of the universe is speeding up with time - not slowing down! So there must be a force causing this.
Electromagnetic Radiation: Gamma Ray
cosmological principle
30. The science of measuring the apparent magnitudes of stars by imaging them through different filters.
tectonics of Venus
Secondary Mirror
radio galaxy
Photometry
31. Galaxies whose nuclei emit jets of materil at high speeds. material comes from supermassive black holes
Bulge
radio galaxy
density waves
Electromagnetic Radiation: Infrared
32. The temp at which a substance in the vacuum of space solidifies
Thermonuclear Fusion
condensation temperature
quarks
Main Sequence Stars
33. The mirror that determines the focus configuration of a reflector
great dark spots
Secondary Mirror
Cassegrain Focus
Celestial Sphere
34. Massive compact halo objects (MACHO) - weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPY's)
most moons
Dark matter candidates
mapping the structure of Milky Way disk
Geocentric
35. Young clusters in disk are irregularly shaped since they have no time to relax into the rounder relaxed shape of globular clusters-will constantly be torn apart and assimilated.
great dark spots
Seeing
open star clusters
quasar
36. Mercury
greehouse effects
Jupiters red spot
jovian
most eccentric orbit
37. The lowest energy of an atom.
Primary Mirror
300000 KM/sec
Energy Level
Ground State
38. A spinning neutron star
Galilean satellite
Ole Roemer
Kuiper belt
Pulsar
39. The oldest grouping of stars - found in the galaxy halo
smallest diameter
Sunspots
Globular Cluster
Biologicla life created the recycling of nitrogen - co2 - and the production of oxygen. Oxygen is heavier so the atmosphere held onto it easier than hydrogen and helium.
40. An evolved star - past the helium flash that is burning helium to carbon in it's cores
Horizontal Branch Star
Heliocentric
great dark spots
CMB
41. Orbit in Jupiters orbit
Trojan asteroids
Void
semimajor axis
Resolving Power
42. 1. We see rapid movements or high energy radiation coming at some level from the nuclei of nearly every galaxy we have looked at. 2. We suspect that the creation of these supermassive black holes is part of the galaxy formation process.
2 Reasons Why there are Supermassive Black holes at the center of every Galaxy
Spectroscopy
Light Curve
Heliocentric
43. The gap inthe outer portion of Saturn's A ring
Enke gap
Cosmic Microwave Background
Radiative Diffusion
Lagrangian Razor
44. When massive objects bend space and time enough to create multiple images of an object located behind them
Gravitational Lens
Ground State
Convection
Vernal Equinox
45. A push or a pull
coma
Light Curve
density
force
46. The process of acquiring material
accretion
Olber's paradox
Corona
jovian
47. Places in the asteroid belt - caused by resonance with Jupiter - where there are no asteroids
Degeneracy
Kirkwood gaps
Largest diameter
Population 1 vs Population 2 stars
48. A distance measure determined by the shifting of a star against the background sky every 6 months.
H2 Regions
cosmological red shift
coma
Parsec
49. Medium bulge - moderately would arms - arms have H2 regions in them and look sort of lumpy
cosmology
Sb spiral galaxy
radio galaxy
disk
50. The location in the Milky Way where stars orbit like a solid wheel
Bulge
Vernal Equinox
Light Gathering Power
Winter Solstice