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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 place in the sky that the Earth's axis points toward (can be either north or south)
radiant
quarks
Colestial Pole
great red spot
2. Ancient stream channels - flood planes - and sedimentary-type rock. Frozen water is found in the polar ice caps and in the soil.
protostar
Primary Mirror
evidence of water on mars
MOONS: larger than mercury
3. Moon in less than the angular diameter of the Sun.
Annular Eclipse
Gravitational Lens
Supernova (You can be my supernova girl)
Heliocentric
4. Sudden blasts of gamma radiation from a very distant galaxy caused possibly by a supernova explosion.
matter dominated universe
Gamma ray bursts
Sunspots
Make up of the terrestrial planets
5. An energetic event taking place in the early universe
Spectroscopic Parallax
Disk
Gamma-ray Burst
Absorption Spectrum
6. The act of removing an electron from an atom.
Plank's Law
Ionization
Light Gathering Power
planetary nebula
7. The 'edge' of the universe. Light beyond this has not reached us yet.
Dark Nebula
most moons
Horizontal Branch Star
partile horizon
8. A word used in astronomy to describe all elements besides hydrogen and helium
Cassini division
Metals
Largest diameter
bulge
9. The measure of a variable star's apparent magnitude as it brightens and dims with time
Light Curve
deferent
Open Cluster
Density Wave
10. How is the Hubble Law consistent with an expanding universe?
We don't know. It might be but does not have to be.
quasar
Rich Cluster
In an expanding universe all galaxies see all other galaxies that are not gravitationally bound to them receding away. This is what we see in the Hubble Law. We infer that the Hubble law also holds true for all other galaxies.
11. Dying small mass stars lose their outer layers in a relatively gentle way - creating a round or bipolar nebula about the star (round like planets)
Apparent Magnitude
Disk
Callisto (Jupiter)
planetary nebula
12. Half of the longest diameter across an ellipse
semimajor axis
jovian
Inverse Square Law
E=mc2
13. Largest moon in solar system - two differenet types of terrain - darker terrain is older - NOT ACTIVE SURFACE
nova
aurora
Ganymede (Jupiter)
cosmic fireball
14. Galaxies whose nuclei emit jets of materil at high speeds. material comes from supermassive black holes
greatest elongation
radio galaxy
MOONS: thickest atmosphere
most eccentric orbit
15. When material is heated and moves taking the heat energy with it
nucleus
Convection
Winter Solstice
protostar
16. The first rock-sized bodies that formed in the solar nebula from dust grains
Sb spiral galaxy
great red spot
density waves
chondrite
17. The universe is isotropic - homogeneous - and without beginning or end in time and space. If the universe is truly homogeneous then every line of sight will eventually end on a galaxy. If it has existed forever then there has been enough time for lig
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18. Small moons that maintain the shape of rings around Saturn and Uranus
Zenith
Parallax
Shepherd satellite
Hyashi track
19. Relativity predicts that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum - How can it move slower?
Cassegrain Focus
Dark Nebula
If it is in a denser medium - such as glass - it will move slower
direct motion
20. Mercury and venus
Atomic Number
Cepheid Variable
fewest moons
CMB
21. The law that predicts the possible types of spectra.
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22. What is the universe expanding into?
It does not have to expand into anything. It might just be that the 3 dimensions of space are getting bigger. It may also be that our 3 spatial dimensions are expanding into higher dimensions if such things exist.
Precession
Trojan asteroids
The Big Bang Theory resolves Olber's Paradox
23. Ganymede
Hyashi track
MOONS: largest size
Gravity only pulls matter back together. Therefore - if gravity is the only force that operates on cosmic scales then the expansion of the universe should decrease with time. The critical density is the value of matter density sufficient to halt the
homogeneous
24. Hot cells of gas that rise and fall in the hotosphere
Granules
Cassini division
Continuous Spectrum
epicycle
25. In a CLOSED UNIVERSE - the curvature of space-time is _________. Parallel beams will converge/diverge/remain parallel (circle one). The density parameter - Ω0 - is _____.
Apollo asteroids
Energy Level
Positive - Converge - Greater than 1
Gamma-ray Burst
26. A cool collection of gas and dust silhouetted against a brighter background of stars and/or gas
3 reasons we orbit satellites to observe universe
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)
Ammonia - methane - and water
Dark Nebula
27. A galaxy sending out a stream of material from its nucleus
era of recombination
Spectroscopy
Radio Galaxy
shape and color of ELLIPTICAL galaxies
28. Loops that trace the magnetic field as it erupts from a sunspot area and arches over to an adjacent area. They glow in the light of gas pouring out of corona and falling into photosphere.
Coronal Loop
Ganymede (Jupiter)
mass
Milky way Galaxy
29. A method of finding a star's distance from its absolute magnitude and spectral type or color.
least dense
scarp
density
Spectroscopic Parallax
30. A measure of the seasonal shifting of a star's position against farther stars or galaxies. The closer the star - the greater is the angular distance it shifts. We use it to find distances to stars that are up to 1000 pc away.
Black Hole
Terrestrial Planets
quasar
Parallax
31. A planet orbiting about a distant star
Enke gap
Extrasolar Planet
semimajor axis
great red spot
32. A repeated - periodic push or pull capable of summing into a larger push or pull
Colestial Pole
resonance
It does not have to expand into anything. It might just be that the 3 dimensions of space are getting bigger. It may also be that our 3 spatial dimensions are expanding into higher dimensions if such things exist.
matter dominated universe
33. An empirical scheme for predictin ghe orbital distances of planets
density parameter
bulge
2 Reasons Why there are Supermassive Black holes at the center of every Galaxy
Titus-Bode Law
34. The north-south line passing directly overhead through the zenith.
2 Reasons Why there are Supermassive Black holes at the center of every Galaxy
tectonics of Venus
Meridian
Cosmic Microwave Background
35. A star that erratically and explosively brightens and dims
resonance
Nova
general star population
Flocculent spirals
36. Collections of young - hot stars
Sunspots
OB Associations
Sa spiral galaxy
Corona
37. 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
Olber's paradox
Nucleus
supernova
38. The force of attraction between any two objects having mass
Instability strip
Autumnal Equinox
meteor shower
gravity
39. First accurately measured the speed of light in a vacuum
cosmology
Annular Eclipse
Absorption Spectrum
Ole Roemer
40. The Big Bang was not an explosion of matter into empty space - like the explosion of a bomb. Instead - it was an emergence of space and time filled with pure energy where before none of this was present. The point from which is emerged is called the
opposition
Filament
The Big Bang Theory
Reflector
41. The Greek philosopher responsible for making the stellar magnitude scale.
Maria
Hipparchus
Planetary Nebula
Gravitational Lens
42. Flat disk with gas - dust - H2 regions - molecular clouds - dust young stars and remnants of old planetary nebula and supernova remnants. stars spin together with similar velocities called differential rotation
disk
aphelion
Nova
mapping the structure of Milky Way disk
43. The average distance between the Earth and the Sun (=1.5 x10^8km)
Astronomical Unit
Europa (Jupiters moon)
difference between maria and highlands of the moon.
Resolving Power
44. Extremely round - lots of liquid water - ice rafts on surface ACTIVE SURFACE
regolith
Blackbody Curve
Callisto (Jupiter)
Europa (Jupiters moon)
45. Moon in less than the angular diameter of the Sun.
bulge
Asymptotic giant Branch Star
density waves
Annular Eclipse
46. A spherical shell of comets that orbit the sun at a great distance (roughly two light years from the sun)
Electromagnetic Radiation: X-Ray
widmanstatten pattern
Oort cloud
Photon
47. An efficient - two-dimensional electronic light detector. Common in digital cameras - they revolutionized astronomical imaging
Kirchhoff's Law
CCD
Cassegrain Focus
Nova
48. Light scattered through the atmosphere that degrades astronomical images
Spectroscopic Parallax
radio galaxy
Light Pollution
radio lobe
49. A streak of light in the atmosphere
smallest diameter
Light: travels like a wave - detected like a particle
meteor
Open Cluster
50. The location around an atom where an electron resides.
Filament
Nucleus
Energy Level
Spectroscopic Parallax