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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 location in the Milky Way where stars orbit like a solid wheel
Electromagnetic Radiation: Ultraviolet Light
Bulge
Yes - frozen at the poles- remains protected from the suns rays
Coronal Loop
2. Flattened spherical distribution of old stars with some young stars too. 'hub' of Milky way - stars orbit with solid body speeds. Elongated into bar shape
superclusters
bulge
Active Optics
Electron
3. A phenomenon seen when the Earth passes through the orbit of a burned out comet
protostar
Light-Year
meteor shower
Chromosphere
4. The law that describes the blackbody curve - and let to quantum mechanics.
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5. The dark - relativley smooth areas on the moon; Latin for sea
Maria
Flat - Remain Parallel - Exactly 1
semimajor axis
Hyashi track
6. Dying large-mass stars lose their outer layers in a violent explosion creating large - chaotic remnants. these brighten like nova but are so much brighter and only occur ONCE PER STAR
supernova
Electron
Eyepiece Lens
Geocentric
7. The organized effort to find life elsewhere in the universe. (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence)
SETI
Ammonia - methane - and water
Plank's Law
Grand design spirals
8. Stars fromt he Halo that have drifted into the disk. as earth zooms past them in a faster orbit they appear to be going backward very fast
Open - flat - and closed.
Colestial Pole
High Velocity Stars
Sa spiral galaxy
9. A word used in astronomy to describe all elements besides hydrogen and helium
Flocculent spirals
Europa (Jupiters moon)
Metals
Flat - Flat
10. Relativity predicts that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum - How can it move slower?
accretion
Terrestrial Planets
supermassive black hole
If it is in a denser medium - such as glass - it will move slower
11. Earth
Coldest surface
Most dense
Kirchhoff's Law
tectonics of Mars
12. A planet that is closer to the sun than the earth
jovian
Total Eclipse
inferior planets
accretion
13. An entity that is likely in the nucleus of most - if not all - galaxies.
tectonics of Venus
most eccentric orbit
Oort Cloud
supermassive black hole
14. The part of the Milky way that has on-going star formation
Disk
Granules
Blackbody
force
15. Wave- only waves cause an interference pattern when passing through a double slit - particle- only particles deposit energy at specific locations (the way an image builds up on digital camera)
Proton-proton chain
jovian
Thermonuclear Fusion
Light: travels like a wave - detected like a particle
16. Latin for 'cloud'. A word used to describe the collections of gas and dust in the Milky Way and other galaxies
Dark matter candidates
Annular Eclipse
Nebula
quarks
17. When a planet lines up with the sun inthe sky
Ganymede (Jupiter)
conjunction
Differential Rotation
Hydrostatic Equilibrium
18. A rock or iron specimen that has fallen from space
Light Pollution
nucleus
meteorite
Spectroscopic parallax
19. Jupiter
Proton-proton chain
Earth resurfaces itself due to erosion and plate tectonics - while the moon has neither.
mare basalt
fastest rotation
20. A term referring to the orbital character of stars near the Sun
Spectral Lines
White Dwarf
weight
Differential Rotation
21. The particle horizon is the farthest we can see. It exists because the universe had a beginning and thus a definite age. Light from distances farther away from the particle horizon have not had time to reach us yet.
Particle Horizon
Wein's Law
radiation dominated universe
Make up of the jovian planets
22. 100 nm 10 nm
Winter Solstice
Electromagnetic Radiation: Ultraviolet Light
critical density
meteor shower
23. A star that has become a red giant for the second and final time. It is burning helium to carbon in a shell surrounding the core
Coldest surface
Asymptotic giant Branch Star
Disk
Kirkwood gaps
24. The distance light travels in one year (=9.46x10^12km).
Cosmic Microwave Background
cosmology
general star population
Light-Year
25. The apparent backward motion of a planet against the background of stars.
dark energy
retrograde motion
Terrestrial Planets
Nova
26. Stars orvits do not define the spiral patterns - instead they are density waves that move at slower speeds (arms are defined by young O and B stars and gas clouds)
How is winding dilemma solved?
Bok Globule
Maria
Planck time
27. Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune
cosmological red shift
density waves
Jovian Planets
Dark matter candidates
28. The relation that tells how light dims with distance.
Roundest orbit
critical density
CMB
Inverse Square Law
29. The dimming of starlight by intervening dust
Horizontal Branch Star
most eccentric orbit
Interstellar Extinction
Coronal Loop
30. Disk dust grains are made of all the elements that are not in gaseous form in space which blocks starlight and causes interstellar extinction
Dark Matter
Cosmological Principle
interstellar dust
belt
31. Hot cells of gas that rise and fall in the hotosphere
Granules
open star clusters
Plank's Law
chemical differentiation
32. A collection of comets in the plane of the solar system - located beyond the orbit of Pluto
Main Sequence
Kuiper belt
radio lobe
Pulsar
33. A logarithmically scaled value for the measured brightness of a star.
Apparent Magnitude
Light Pollution
Cassini division
Coldest surface
34. The point directly overhead.
2 Reasons Why there are Supermassive Black holes at the center of every Galaxy
Zenith
Triple Alpha rocess
regolith
35. Material that shoots rapidly out into space. Flares cause Auroras
The Local Group
Flare
belt
Wein's Law
36. A measure of the ability of a telescope to see fine detail
synchronous rotation
Resolving Power
Dark Nebula
fusion crust
37. A bright area of higher temperature that often proceeds the formation of sunspots.
Neutron Star
Active Optics
epicycle
Plague
38. The source of the force that is accelerating the expansion rate of the universe.
Light Curve
meteor shower
Gravitational Lens
dark energy
39. Norhern lowlands- darker in color and have far fewer craters as if an ancient sea or ice field covered them. southern highlands- much higher in density of craters.
Thickest atmosphere
Radio Galaxy
interstellar dust
contrast northern lowlands and the southern highlands of mars...
40. When the Sun is farthest north of the celestial equator (about June 22)
Ole Roemer
Summer Solstice
Planetary Nebula
Radio Galaxy
41. A plot of star absolute magnitude verses spectral type.
Sunspot cycle
Black Hole
Neutron Star
H-are Diagram
42. Titan
Energy Level
MOONS: thickest atmosphere
Focal Length
Rich Cluster
43. The apparent path of the Sun through the stars on the celestial sphere.
Ecliptic
Electromagnetic Radiation: Infrared
greatest elongation
Liquid metallic hydrogen
44. 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
Make up of the terrestrial planets
CMB
The Big Bang Theory
partile horizon
45. A force exerted by reflecting sunlight
radiation pressure
Flat - Remain Parallel - Exactly 1
terrestrial planet
Ionization
46. Is there water on the moon?
Yes - frozen at the poles- remains protected from the suns rays
Oort cloud
cosmology
Radio Galaxy
47. All possible types of energy that can be emitted and absorbed by atoms.
isotropic
Electromagnetic Radiation
High and low pressure which stretch into bands due to the rapid differential rotation. deeper - darker colors are in the belts and zones are lighter
Population 1 vs Population 2 stars
48. IO
Light: travels like a wave - detected like a particle
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
MOONS: most geologically active
Void
49. The organization of clusters of galaxies into sheets and strings
CMB
Sb spiral galaxy
Asymptotic giant Branch Star
Supercluster
50. Light scattered through the atmosphere that degrades astronomical images
chemical differentiation
Atomic Number
Asymptotic giant Branch Star
Light Pollution