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Exam 2 Review This review sheet serves as a reminder of the material covered in the lectures. It should be noted that some items from lecture may not be included on this review sheet, but will still be referenced on the exam. As such, use these questions as a reminder of the material that was covered in the lectures while studying from the textbook and the notes you took during lectures. Questions for the exam will focus on classroom lecture/discussion, which may include additional material not found within this review sheet. Matter/Light Properties Can you describe the structure of an atom? Do you know what makes one element different from another? What is an isotope? What is a molecule? Do you understand how the concept of temperature is related to the motion of atoms/molecules? Do you understand how changing the temperature of a substance will change the excitation state (ground, excited, ionized) of atoms as well as the state of matter? Can you define the wave properties of light (wavelength, frequency, speed of light)? Do you understand how light can be described as a particle (photon)? Are you familiar with differences between the classical model of light and quantum mechanics model? Do you know the basic principles of the reflection and refraction of light? Do you know how to compare the different parts of the EM spectrum with regards to wavelength, frequency, and energy? Do you know how light and matter interacts to form an absorption spectrum? Star Properties: Are you familiar with how astronomers use solar units as a way of describing physical qualities of other stars? Do you know the surface temperature, total lifespan, and general composition of the Sun? How is the process of stellar parallax used to determine the distance to a star? Do you understand how the brightness of a star depends on the star’s luminosity and the distance an observer is away from the star? Are you familiar with how the magnitude system is used to rank stars according to brightness (apparent magnitude) and luminosity (absolute magnitude)? Can you use the magnitude system to obtain the relative distances to stars? Do you know how the order of spectral classes is arranged? Can you tell a star’s relative temperature, color, and luminosity based on its designated spectral classification? Are you familiar with the properties of the Interstellar Medium (ISM)? Do you understand how the star formation process begins? How well you understand what processes are going on during the proto-star stage of a star’s life? What needs to happen for a proto-star to become a main sequence star? What are the properties of a main sequence star? How does a star’s mass affect the Luminosity, Temperature, Size, and lifespan of a star’s life? What are the properties of each of the Sun’s different layers? How is energy produced in the Sun’s core? How does the Sun’s magnetic field influence each type of solar activity discussed in class (sunspots, plages, prominences, solar flares, coronal mass ejections)? Why is it important for us to be able to predict such events? What causes the Sun to leave the Main Sequence stage of its life and how does the Sun change when that happens? What are the properties of the Sun during its Giant stage? How will the Sun die and what object will be left behind? How does a star that is more massive than the Sun evolve and die out differently from the Sun? What determines what object will be left behind after a star dies out? What are the properties of each of those objects? How does Einstein’s model of gravity differ from Newton’s description? Why Einstein’s description taken to be “more complete” than Newton’s? What are the effects an outside observer would notice as a “volunteer” falls toward the event horizon of a black hole? Key Terms to Know The following is a list of terms that you should be comfortable with for the upcoming exam. This list should be used as a guide and might not include every term that was covered in class. For completeness, you should refer to the notes you took in class or the notes that are posted on the web page. Black Hole Brown Dwarf Chromosphere Convection Zone Corona Coronal Mass Ejection Event Horizon Gravitational Redshift Hydrostatic Equilibrium Instability Strip Neutron Star Photosphere Photospheric Granulation Plage Planetary Nebula Prominence Proto-planetary Disk Proto-star Pulsar Pulsating Variable Stars Radiation Zone Schwarzschild Radius Singularity Solar Flare Solar Wind Space-time Sunspot Supernova Time Dilation Wormhole ANSWERS TO ODD NUMBERED QUESTIONS: CHAPTER 15 Odd Number 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 Chapter 15 A D B A D C E E A D D D