Exploring The Universe Test Review
Jan 17, 2016
Exploring The Universe
Test Review
1. Draw and label the phases of the moon Explain what causes them.
New moonWaxing Crescent1st quarterWaxing GibbousFull moonWaning Gibbous3rd quarterWaning Crescent
1. Draw and label the phases of the moon Explain what causes them.
• The moons phases are caused by it’s revolutions around the Earth (and therefore the part of it which we see).
2. Explain why it is colder at the North Pole than the Equator
• The energy from sunlight is more direct and concentrated at the equator
sun
3. Draw and label neap and spring tides What are the phases of the moon are related to each? Explain the affect on tides caused by spring and neap tides
sun Earth
New moon
Spring tide
full moon
High tides are higher and low tides are lower
3. Draw and label neap and spring tides What are the phases of the moon are related to each? Explain the affect on tides caused by spring and neap tides
• Neap tide
Sun Earth
Third Quarter
First Quarter
High tides and low tides similar in height
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Black hole
Neutron star
Black Dwarf
Super nova
Red Giant
Super Giant
Giant
White Dwarf
Nebula
Proto Star
Main Sequence
Star
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Nebula: A giant cloud of gas of dust
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
protostar: as the nebula condenses down due to gravity, the center begins to heat up
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Main Sequence Star: Regular star, burns for millions of years. Most stars fall in this category.
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Red Giant: as a star runs our of fuel, the outter layers begin to “swell and escape.”
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
White Dwarf: Medium and smaller stars lose those outter layers and all that is left is a glowing white-hot core of the old star.
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Black Dwarf: the cooled-down remains of a white dwarf.
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Super Nova: Large stars ultimately explode into a massive super nova.
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Neutron star: The remaining, pulsating dense core left after a super-nova explosion.
4. Sketch and label the life cycle of a star. Give a short phrase description of what is going on at each stage.
Black Hole: The largest of all super novas result in a remaining core so dense and with so much gravity that not even light can escape it’s pull!
5. Explain what a light year is and why it is used.
• The distance light travels in a year.
• It is used because distances in space are so large that we can’t realistically measure them in meters or kilometers.
6. What is a galaxy?
A galaxy is a giant structure that contains dust, gasses and hundreds of billions of stars.
7. Draw and label the three types of galaxies
spiral elliptical irregular(like our galaxy, theMilky Way)
8. Draw the type of galaxy our solar system is found in and label the place where our solar system is found.
THE MILKY WAY!!!
8. Continued: Draw the type of galaxy our solar system is found in and label the place where our solar system is found.
9. Describe the Big Bang Theory and the evidence that supports it.
The Big Bang Theory states that the universe began with an enormousexplosion about 10 to 15 billion years ago. One of the evidences is the “red shift” of stars moving away from us. Tracing their paths backwards allows scientists to estimate the “starting point” and how long ago the Big Bang occurred.
10. Diagram our solar system showing the relative motions of the sun, moon, earth and at least one inner and one outer planet
Note the planets circling the sun whilethe moon is circling Earth!
the moon is right here!
11. How are the follwing thing related: galaxy, planet, universe, solar system? Put ‘em in order from largest to smallest.
The universe is everything everywhere.
The universe contains many (billions!) of galaxies!
A galaxy is made up of billions of stars.One such star system is our solar system.
Planets circle the stars. Most likely, thereare lots-n-lots of planets out there…we arejust starting to discover them!
11. How are the follwing thing related: galaxy, planet, universe, solar system? Put ‘em in order from largest to smallest.
Largest
Universe
Galaxy
Solar System
Planet
Smallest
12. What are the four main groups of stars on the HR diagram? What does the HR Diagram compare/graph (three things)? What are the trends on the H-R Diagram?
The four main groups on the HR Diagram are the white dwarfs, giants, super giants and main sequence.
white dwarfs
giants
super giantsm a i n s e q u e n c e
12. What are the four main groups of stars on the HR diagram? What does the HR Diagram compare/graph (three things)? What are the trends on the H-R Diagram?
The HR Diagram shows the relationshipbetween temperature, brightness and color.
T E M P E R A T U R E
B R
I G
H T
N E
S S
12. What are the four main groups of stars on the HR diagram? What does the HR Diagram compare/graph (three things)? What are the trends on the H-R Diagram?
The HR Diagram shows the relationshipbetween temperature, brightness and color.
T E M P E R A T U R E
B R
I G
H T
N E
S S
HOTTER
BRIGHTER
13. What are apparent magnitude and absolute magnitude? Give some examples (made up stars are ok) and compare them.
Apparent Magnitude – the brightness of a star as seen from earth.
Absolute Magnitude – the actual brightness of a star as compared to other stars when they are all viewed from the same distance.
13. What are apparent magnitude and absolute magnitude? Give some examples (made up stars are ok) and compare them.
The yellow star appears much “brighter” to me because it is so much closer to earth. If I could put them the same distance away, I would discover that the red star is actually much brighter!
14. What is the difference between weight and mass?
Mass – A measure of how much matter an object contains. It is a property of the object andnot affected by gravity. Your mass is the same,no matter where you are in the universe!
Weight – The resulting force of the gravitationalpull on an object. You will weigh less on the moonbecause there is less gravity….and more on thesun because there is more gravity…