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Midterm 1 Completion What is the official name of the special star that lines up with the Earth’s North Pole? ______Polaris___________ The _________Helio-centric________ theory describes the Sun as the center of the Universe. ID: A Express 4.2 x104 in regular format: _________42000_______________ ID: B Express 4.2 x106 in regular format: _________4200000_______________ Approximately how old is our Solar System? _______4.6 billion years____________ ID: A In order for a lunar eclipse to occur, the Moon must be in the _____full_______ phase and must cross the _______ecliptic______ plane. ID: B In order for a solar eclipse to occur, the Moon must be in the _____new_______ phase and must cross the _______ecliptic______ plane. Short Answer (+2-3pts) Record the answers to these questions directly on the exam and NOT on the scantron. Describe specifically what causes the temperature variations that we experience as the seasons on the Earth. To earn full points, please be as specific as possible. (+3pts) 1) The revolution of the Earth around the Sun 2) The tilt of the Earth: The tilt of the Earth affects the temperature on the Earth in two ways: a) Number of daylight hours- When the Earth is tilted towards the Sun during the summer, the number of hours that the Sun is above the horizon is the longest (warmer temperatures result). When the Earth is tilted away from the Sun during the winter, the number of hours that the Sun is above the horizon is the shortest (cooler temperatures result). b) Angle of the Sun’s rays hitting the Earth- When the Earth is tilted towards the Sun during the summer, the Sun appears higher in the sky and the Sun’s rays hit the Earth more directly, the rays are more concentrated, warmer temperatures result. When the Earth is tilted away from the Sun during the winter, the Sun appears lower in the sky and the Sun’s rays hit the Earth at an angle, the rays are more spread out, cooler temperatures result. What is an annular eclipse? To earn full points, please include as much detail as possible. Include in your answer whether it is a type of solar or a type of lunar eclipse. (+3pts) An annular eclipse is a solar eclipse, when the Moon is in the new phase and gets between the Earth and the Sun. But during this type of solar eclipse, the Moon’s distance is slightly farther away than its average distance from the Earth so that it does not completely cover all the Sun. Instead there seems to be a ring of light around the Moon. This is because since the Moon is slightly farther away than its average distance from the Earth, the angular size of the Moon is slightly less than the angular size of the Sun so that it cannot complete cover the Sun when the alignment occurs. Describe two of Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion. (+2pts) 1) Planets orbit around the Sun in an ellipse with the Sun at one focus of the ellipse. 2) The line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas in equal times. Because of this when a planet is closer to the Sun in its orbit, it moves faster than when the planet is farther away from the Sun. 3) The squares of the period of revolution is proportional to the average distance cubed. (p2 a3) a) What is precession? b) How long does the cycle of precession last? (+2pts) a) Precession is the wobble or slow circular motion of the Earth’s axis of rotation. The star that lines up with the Earth’s North pole is defined as the North star, but since the axis wobbles, the North Pole points in different directions over 26,000 years, thus for many years we may not have a North Star or the North Pole will point to a different bright star other than Polaris. b) It takes 26,000 years to complete one full wobble. What are the four components of the scientific method? (To earn full credit, you must use the same terms that we used in the classroom) (+2pts) Observe/Ask Questions, Hypothesize, Test, and Modify, Reject, or Theorize Short Answer (+4pts) Record the answers to these questions directly on the exam and NOT on the scantron. Ptolemy’s theory and Copernicus’ theory both explained the retrograde motion of planets. Explain a) what is retrograde motion b) Which theory (Ptolemy’s or Copernicus’) correctly explains why planets exhibit retrograde motion and how did the theory explain it? a) Retrograde motion is when a planet appears to change direction in the sky from the Earth’s point of view. It is the apparent backwards and forward motion of a planet. In actuality, the planet is not changing directions, it just appears to do so. b) Ptolemy said that we live in a geo-centric Universe. Here planets exhibit retrograde motion because they orbit on epicycles, which is a small circle on top of the larger circular orbit. Its motion on the epicycle around the Earth makes it appear to move forward and backwards and exhibit retrograde motion. Copernicus explained retrograde motion by stating that we live in a heliocentric Universe where the planets orbit around the Sun. He explains retrograde motion by stating that the inner planets such as the Earth orbit the sun faster than the outer planets, such as Mars. Thus when the Earth passes Mars in its orbit, it appears that the slower moving Mars is moving backwards with respect to the stars. This view is the correct explanation for retrograde motion. Mars is not really changing direction, it just appears to do so from our point of view. It’s kind of like when you are passing a slower moving car. When you’ve passed it, it looks like it is moving backwards. Galileo made two important telescope observations that proved that it is the Sun and not the Earth that is in the center of the Solar System. Describe in detail what the two observations were. 1) He saw objects orbiting around Jupiter. These later were known as the four largest moons of Jupiter. But this observation showed that the geo-centric theory was incorrect because according to this theory, the Earth is at the center of the Universe and every other object in space should orbit it. Obviously the moons of Jupiter were not orbiting the Earth so this observation contradicted the geo-centric theory. 2) He saw that Venus goes through a full cycle of phases just like our moon does. In Ptolemy’s model of the geo-centric theory (which was widely accepted at the time), Venus would orbit the Earth in an epicycle, and the Sun would also orbit the Earth. Because of that, the only phases you would expect to see are the new and crescent phases. It would be impossible to see the other phases. Midterm 2 Completion (+1pt) Complete each sentence or statement. What is the side of the Moon that always faces the Earth called? _____The Near Side_____________ What are telescopes that use two mirrors to collect light and bring it to a focus called? ___Reflecting Telescopes______________ What year did human beings first walk on the Moon? _______1969______________ What is the layered structure of the Earth called? ______Differentiation_______________ What is Pluto’s largest moon called? ____Charon___________ What is the name of another object in our Solar System besides the Earth and Mars that could potentially have liquid water on it? __Europa (Jupiter’s Moons) or Enceladus (Saturn’sMoons)__________________ Short Answer (+2pts each) List two specific geographical locations in the world that were mentioned in the lecture where professional research observatories are located in. (note, do not include the location for Fremont Peak Observatory as part of your answer since this is not a professional observatory). Some locations of observatories that I mentioned were: Arizona, Chile, Hawaii, Canary Islands, New Mexico, and Puerto Rico. How did cyanobacteria help us to evolve? Through photosynthesis, it helped to remove the carbon dioxide in our atmosphere and produce oxygen. Scientists have discovered compelling evidence for past and current liquid water on Mars. Describe two discoveries that were made of Mars that demonstrates liquid water has existed or may still exist on Mars. There are erosional features all over the surface of Mars such as dried up riverbeds and gullies that indicate the presence of liquid water. In addition, the surface of Mars is covered in iron oxide (rust) that may indicate iron exposed to liquid water. Spirit and Opportunity found sedimentary rock and hematite which can only be formed in liquid water. Recently the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter found Recurring Slope Linea, which are seasonal streaks of hydrated salts that indicate the presence of liquid water. Short Answer (+3pts) a) What will happen to the rotation of the Earth in the future? b) What is causing the Earth’s rotation to change over time? a) The rotation rate of the Earth is slowing down with time. b) The Moon exerts a tidal force on the Earth and causes tides to occur. The tides, which cause the oceans to rub against the land, create tidal friction. This tidal friction slows down the rotation of the Earth. a) What is the most volcanically active object in our Solar System? (+1pt) b) Describe why this object is so volcanically active. (+2pts) a) Io b) Because it is the closest moon to Jupiter so Jupiter’s gravity produces tidal forces on it and it flexes the moon and heats up the interior causing the 300 volcanoes to constantly erupt and make its surface entirely molten. a) Which is the hottest inner planet? b) Describe in detail the main reason why this planet is hotter than any other inner planet. a) Venus b) Venus is the hottest inner planet because it experiences the runaway greenhouse effect. This is because it has a thick atmosphere that consists of mostly the carbon dioxide (96%), a known greenhouse gas. On Venus the carbon dioxide gas lets in the visible light from the Sun. This visible light hits the surface which gets heated up and produces infrared light. The infrared light cannot pass through the carbon dioxide atmosphere so it gets trapped. The trapping of infrared light by the carbon dioxide gases causes Venus to heat up to very high temperatures (900 deg) and makes it even hotter than Mercury. Note: Many of you put Mercury as the hottest planet because it is the closest planet to the Sun. But as mentioned Venus is hotter than Mercury because of the greenhouse effect. Short Answer (+4pts to 5pts each) a) When did our Solar System form? (+1pt) c) Describe in detail how our Sun and our planets were formed (+3pts) 4.6 billion years ago the solar system started out as a huge cloud of gas and dust (solar nebula). If the gas in the material is dense enough, most of it collapses to the center to form the star. The rest of the gas and all the dust get flung out into a disk. The dust debris in the disk orbit around the central star and collide with each other. If the collisions are slow enough, the particles accrete (stick together) by gravity and grow larger and larger with time until they become planetesimals. The planetesimals grow larger as they sweep up more of the dust debris and become protoplanets when they are spherical in shape. The protoplanets continue to grow in size by sweeping up all the material in its path and become planets. Note: Some of you said the Big Bang Theory. The Big Bang theory explains how the Universe was formed, not the birth of the solar system. The Solar System was formed about 10 billion years after the Big Bang and there was no explosion. a) List the names of the inner/terrestrial planets in their correct order from the Sun. (+2pts all or nothing) b) List the names of the outer/Jovian planets in the correct order from the Sun. (+2pts all or nothing) a) Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars (MVEM) b) Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune (JSUN) a) According to the IAU, what three characteristics should a planet possess? b) If Pluto is not a planet, what type of object is it? (+4pts) a) The IAU came up with 3 criteria that all planets must fulfill: A planet must: 1) Orbit a star. 2) Be a nearly round in shape. 3) Clear the neighborhood around its orbit. Pluto does not satisfy the 3rd criteria since its orbit intersect Neptune, it didn’t clear the neighborhood around its orbit and this is why it is no longer a planet. Pluto is a Dwarf Planet. a) What are planets that orbit around another star called? (+1pt) b) Describe one method that astronomers have developed to detect these planets. (+2pts) c) Describe one property (as discussed in the lecture) in some of these other solar systems that is very different than ours.(+1pt) a) Exoplanets are planets that are located outside of our Solar System. They orbit around another star (not our Sun) Note: Some of you put Dwarf planets…Dwarf planets are objects like Pluto that exist in our Solar System and orbit around our Sun. They are objects that have not cleared the neighborhood around their orbits. 1) Stellar Wobble: Since the planet is orbiting around the star, it has a gravitational pull on the central star and causes the star to wobble. Astronomers can detect the wobble of the star by observing the star’s absorption line spectrum and seeing if it exhibits the Doppler effect. If it does, it means that the star is wobbling back and forth. The absorption line spectrum has a blueshift (shift to shorter wavelengths) when the star moves towards us and a redshift (shift to longer wavelengths) when the star moves away from us. 2) Planetary Transits: If a star has a planet orbiting around it, the planet would on occasion cross the disc of the star (this is called a transit) and dims its light. Astronomers monitor the brightness of the star with time, and if the brightness dims, then they can tell that a planet is transiting the star. This method is currently being used by the Kepler spacecraft. c) The planets in these solar systems are different in that they are much more massive than the planets in our solar system and that these massive planets are closer to their stars than in our solar system. Midterm 3 Completion (+2pts) Complete each sentence or statement. What is a system of at least two stars in orbit around the center of mass called? ____binary star__________ Name one type of eruption of gas associated with the presence of sunspots that can occur on the Sun. _____solar flare/prominence/ coronal mass ejection______________ A cloud of gas and dust that represents the birth stage of stars is called a: ___nebula____________ The “fingerprint” of a gas that allows astronomers to determine the chemical composition of the gas is called a _______spectrum_____. The baby/young stage of a star where it has 2 jets called bipolar outflows and an accretion disk around it is called a: ___protostar_____________ Asteroids that cross the Earth’s orbit are called ___Near_____ ___Earth_____ (two words) Asteroids. Short Answer (+2 pts) What are the two tails that comets possess when they come close to the Sun made of? Gas and dust What are the two places that comets are located in called? Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud Describe in detail what causes meteor showers to occur on the Earth. When a comet gets close to the Sun, it leaves some debris behind from the dust tail. This debris gets trapped in orbit around the Sun. If the debris crosses the Earth’s orbit, meteor showers can occur every year when the Earth runs into the debris and the material gets burned up in the Earth’s atmosphere causing more than average numbers of meteors to be seen. Each meteor shower is associated with the dust debris left behind by a different comet. What is the definition of the wavelength of light. You can describe it and/or include a CLEAR drawing. The distance between two consecutive peaks or minima of a wave. Short Answer (+3-5 points each) a) What are the two types of star clusters called? b) Describe two specific differences between the two types of star clusters (as discussed in class). (+3pts) a) Globular Cluster and Open Clusters b) Globular Cluster Tightly bound stars Thousands to millions of stars Red, Orange, Yellow stars Shaped like a Sphere Open Clusters Loosely bound stars Dozens to hundreds of stars Blue stars Gas cloud surrounding the stars What is the prism experiment and who was the first to conduct it? (+3pts) The prism experiment was conducted by Sir Isaac Newton. This is when he shined white light into a glass prism and on the other side a rainbow appeared. This proved that white light is the sum of all the colors of the rainbow. Describe the difference between a meteor, meteorite, and meteoroid.(+3 pts) The difference is their location: Meteoroids: Chunks of rock floating in space. Meteor: When these pieces of rock or debris falls through the Earth’s atmosphere and gets burned up. Meteorite: If the piece is large enough it can survive the atmosphere and fall and hit the surface. Describe a) What causes sunspots to appear to be dark? b) How long is the sunspot cycle? c) What causes the sunspots to occur on this regular cycle? (+4pts) a) Sunspots are dark because they are regions of the Sun that are cooler. b) In these regions, intense magnetic field lines loop out of the photosphere and suppress the hot gas from rising causing the spots to be cooler (dark) compared to the rest of the Sun. c) 11 years Note: Some of you put 1 month. This is the time it takes for the Sun to rotate, not the sunspot cycle (which is the cycle it takes for the Sun to have maximum number of sunspots). Describe the process that allows a star to produce the energy that allows it to shine. Please be specific in your description. (+2pts) They shine by the nuclear reactions that occur in the core of the star. The type of nuclear reaction in a main sequence star is hydrogen fusion. The net result of this fusion is the 4 hydrogen fuse together to form one helium atom and in the process releases energy that allows the star to shine. It releases energy during this process because the mass of 4 hydrogen is a little more than 1 helium atom. That extra mass gets converted to energy according to Einstein’s equation: E=mc2 . a) What caused dinosaurs (and 2/3 of all species) all over the world to become extinct. To earn full credit, please be specific. b) When did this extinction occur? (+3pts) a) Dinosaurs became extinct when a large asteroid impacted the Earth. The debris from the impact was circulated all around the Earth by the Earth’s atmosphere, which blocked out sunlight for several months causing the Earth to cool down. B) 65 million years ago. Note: Many of you confused the word asteroid with meteors and meteor showers. a) What is the adult stage of a star called? b) Describe two properties of this adult star. Please be specific in your description. (+3pts) a) Main Sequence b) They are in hydrostatic equilibrium (stable in size) and produce light by nuclear reactions. Essay (+8 pts) 48. a) What will happen to a low mass star like our Sun after it uses up all its hydrogen in the core? (to earn full credit, you need to describe the properties of and name the old age and elderly stage of the star) b) Contrast this with what will happen to a high mass star after it uses up all its hydrogen in the core?(to earn full credit, you need to describe the properties of and name the old age and elderly stage of the star) a) During the old age stage of a low mass star like our Sun, hydrogen fusion stops when the hydrogen runs out in the core. When nuclear fusion stops in the core, there is no outward force to oppose the inward force due to gravity. This causes the core to contract. As the core contracts, the temperature in the core rises. This temperature rise in the core causes the gas in the outer envelope of the star to expand up to 200 times its previous size. As the outer envelope expands, the star cools down and its color changes to red. When it cools down, it turns into a red giant. Inside the core the temperature now rises to 100 million K. At this high temperature, helium starts to fuse into carbon and oxygen which allows the star a new lifeline and allows it to be stable again for a short time. But eventually the helium runs out in the core and there is only carbon and oxygen. The core collapses again and shrinks to be about the size of the Earth. This object which represents the elderly stage of a low mass star is called a white dwarf. At this point the star is white hot, but it never reaches high enough temperature for the fusion of carbon and oxygen so the star starts to cool down and fade without any energy source. Eventually the star will dim and become a black dwarf. In the meanwhile, the outer envelope continues to expand and cool as it expands away from the star. The outer envelope becomes a planetary nebula, which is about the size of a Solar System. Note: This is what will happen to our Sun more than 5 billion years from now when it runs out of fuel. When it becomes a planetary nebula, it will be as large as the entire Solar System. b) The old age stage of a high mass star starts out similar to a high mass star except that when it runs out of hydrogen in its core, it has many lifelines and the core contracts many times. Each time the core contracts, it produces heavier and heavier elements until iron is produced in the core. Iron is the heaviest element that can be produced in a high mass star. With each envelope contraction, there is an envelope expansion. Since the envelope has expanded multiple times, it has enlarged to be up to 1000 times its previous size and is now a red super giant. When there is iron in the core of the star, nuclear fusion stops, and the core tries to contract further, but since there is so much mass being compressed in so little space (like trying to compress too much clothing in a small luggage), there is a resistance to the contraction due to all the atoms crowded together. The star then explodes. This explosion is called a supernova. However when the star explodes, it leaves behind an ultra-dense core. If the core is less than 2 times the mass of our Sun, it is called a neutron star because in the core, the atoms are so compressed together that the electrons do not have room to orbit around the nucleus; instead they combine with the protons in the nucleus to form neutrons. If the core is more than 2 times the mass of our Sun, the gravity of this core is so strong that it will collapse past the neutron star stage, become infinitely dense, and swallow up its own light. This object is called a black hole.