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Grades 6-8: Answers to Questionnaires After students have completed the Pre and Post-Visit Questionnaire, discuss each topic with your class. Ancient cultures used celestial objects to keep time. TRUE. Ancient cultures observed seasonal movements of celestial objects and based their calendars on them. A year is based on the time required for the Earth to orbit the Sun once. A month is about the time required for the Moon to orbit the Earth once. A day is the time required for the Earth to rotate once on its axis. The Earth’s distance from the Sun causes the seasons. FALSE. The tilt of the Earth on its axis and the Earth’s orbit around the Sun are what causes the seasons on Earth. Parts of the Earth that have the Sun appear high in the sky experience summer and those that have the Sun low in the sky experience winter. Spring and fall occur when the sunlight is directly over the equator (in the middle) so for neither hemisphere the sun appears to be particularly high or low in the sky. A site with excellent downloadable videos vividly showing this concept and many others is available at http://www.mogivice.com/Pagine/Downloads.html Stars are forming in the universe as you read this. TRUE. Stars are continually being formed and destroyed. Stars are formed, or born, in clouds of gas and dust in the interstellar medium. Gravity squeezes the mass of these “star nurseries” so that the centers become incredibly dense and hot. These extreme conditions allow hydrogen fusion to begin. The outward pressure from the fusion balances the inward force of gravity. The gas stops collapsing and a star is born. Grades 6-8: Answers to Questionnaires The Moon’s phases are caused by the Earth’s shadow. FALSE. Half of the Moon is always lit, but we don’t always see all of the lit side. Often we see a portion of the lit side (100% is a full moon and 0% is a new moon) depending on where the Moon is with respect to the Sun. There are eight phases that the Moon goes through and they always occur in the same order. The phases of the Moon are: 1) New Moon, 2) Waxing Crescent, 3) First Quarter, 4) Waxing Gibbous, 5) Full Moon, 6) Waning Gibbous, 7) Last Quarter, 8) Waning Crescent, and back to the New Moon. (From www.coldwater. k12.mi.us/lms/planetarium/guide/moon.html) See and download an excellent visual on this concept and many others at www.mogi-vice. com/Pagine/Downloads.html. We always see the same side of the Moon because it doesn’t rotate. FALSE. We always see the same side of the Moon because it does rotate. Because it takes about the same amount of time to rotate as it does to revolve around the Earth, we always see the same side. The side we don’t see is known as “the far side of the Moon.” Pluto is the ninth planet. FALSE. There are only eight planets. Since 1992, we have discovered hundreds of icy bodies like Pluto with tilted oval orbits past the orbit of Neptune. These bodies are called Kuiper belt objects. Pluto is one of the larger members and in August 2006 was reclassified as a dwarf planet. As of February 2009, there are 5 official dwarf planets, also known as “Plutoids,” (Ceres, Pluto, Eris, Haumea, Makemake) with others pending. Your zodiac sign is related to the stars. TRUE. Ancient people observed that the Sun, Moon, and planets always seem to move across the sky through a series of twelve constellations, known as the zodiac. In particular, a person’s zodiac sign was the name of one of the 12 constellations of the zodiac that the Sun was closest to at the time of the person’s birth. Grades 6-8: Answers to Questionnaires What does the solar system contain? It contains the Sun, planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, meteoroids (small debris traveling through the solar system), radiation, etc. In Milwaukee there are stars we can see all year round. TRUE. Some we can see include the stars of the Big Dipper, and Polaris the circumpolar North Star. What are constellations? Name three. Constellations are patches of sky that contain a characteristic pattern of stars. The patterns are often named after characters from ancient Greek and Roman mythology (although individual stars have mostly Arabic names). There are 88 official constellations. Common constellations visible from Milwaukee include the Big Dipper, Cassiopeia, the Little Dipper, Gemini, Orion, Leo and many more. What is the difference between a star and a planet? A star is a ball of very hot gas where nuclear fusion can occur and which produces the light that make stars shine. A planet, on the other hand, gets its light reflected from its companion star. How can you tell the difference between a star and a planet in the sky? The stars in the sky appear to be in fixed positions with respect to each other. Planets move in complicated paths across the sky. They exhibit a behavior called “retrograde motion” where they appear to go backwards for a period of time relative to the background stars in the celestial sphere as they move in their orbit around the Sun. Also, planets almost never twinkle. Some of this information from “Curious About Astronomy at http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/question.php?number=549