Astronomy 15 and 16
Astronomers have concluded that the Sun's activity varies in an 11-year cycle. Which of the following statements about this cycle is TRUE:
The number of sunspots gets larger and smaller over the course of 11 years
When did scientist begin to understand how the Sun produces all the energy that it does?
The process was not well understood until the 1930's
Which of the following is NOT a product of the first step in the p-p chain of nuclear fusion?
a form of helium
At the end of the p-p chain of nuclear fusion in the Sun, hydrogen nuclei have been converted into:
a helium nucleus
According to the formula E=mc2
a little bit of mass can be converted into a substantial amount of energy
Who pays the bill for the energy generated by nuclear fusion in the Sun? In other words, where does the energy pouring out of the Sun come from ultimately?
a little bit of mass is lost in each fusion reaction and is turned into energy (the Sun is losing mass
Which of the following particles has the lowest mass?
a neutrino
Which of the following, produced at the core of the Sun, will take the shortest time to emerge from the Sun's photosphere (surface)?
a neutrino
Physicists Kelvin and Helmholtz in the last century proposed that the source of the Sun's energy could be:
a slow contraction
Solar wind particles can be captured by the Earth's magnetosphere. When these particles spiral down along the magnetic field into the atmosphere, they are responsible for:
aurorae (northern and southern lights)
Astronomers first detected the presence of a wind of particles coming from the Sun by
by noting the wind's effects on the tails of comets
Coronal Mass Ejections from the Sun have many serious effects on or near the Earth. Which of the following is NOT one of these effects?
causing huge cyclones around the equator of the Earth
The hotter region directly above the Sun's visible surface is called the
chromosphere
When great currents of hot material rise inside the Sun (and cooler material sinks downward), energy is being transferred by a process known as:
convection
The hottest zone in the Sun is the
core
Which part of the Sun's atmosphere has the lowest density (number of atoms per unit volume)?
corona
Which part of the Sun's atmosphere is the hottest?
corona
The Sun's chromosphere and corona were discovered
during total eclipses of the Sun
Recently, some engineers and scientists have proposed building spaceships with enormous "sails" that catch the solar wind and use it to move the ship. What kinds of particles would be hitting this sail (i.e., what is the solar wind mostly made of):
electrons and protons
In the Sun, when a positron and an electron collide, they will produce:
energy in the form of a gamma ray
Astronomers have found that the level of the Sun's activity varies over the centuries. How did they come to realize that this is so:
historical records of the number of sunspots seen on the Sun measuring the amount of radioactive carbon in tree rings historical records of auroral activity
The granulation pattern that astronomers have observed on the surface of the Sun tells us that:
hot material must be rising from the Sun's hotter interior
The most common element in the Sun is
hydrogen
As astronomers have learned more about the structure of the Sun, they have found that it
is made entirely of hot gas
What happens to the positron created during the p-p chain of nuclear reactions inside the Sun?
it quickly collides with an electron and turns into gamma-ray energy
Astronomers now realize that active regions on the Sun are connected with
loops of magnetic field emerging from the surface of the Sun
The Global Oscillations Network Group (GONG) Project is engaged in:
measuring the pulsations of the Sun from stations around the world
When a large nucleus breaks apart (or is broken apart) into two smaller pieces, this is called
nuclear fission (you got this wrong)
Today we realize that the source of energy for the Sun is a process called
nuclear fusion
When we use the light of atoms such as hydrogen and calcium to examine the Sun's outer layers, we can see bright "clouds" in the chromosphere right around the location of sunspots. These bright clouds are given the name:
plages
The antimatter version of an electron is called a
positron
Which of the following is NOT one of the fundamental particles that we find inside atoms
positrons
Which of the following is a way for astronomers to learn more about the interior of the Sun?
study the oscillations (pulsations) witnessed on the Sun's surface
Which part of the Sun has the greatest density?
the core
The strongest force we know of in physics is
the nuclear force which holds nuclei together
The Sun s photosphere is
the part of the Sun from which the light comes that we see when we look at the Sun with our eyes
In the formula E=mc2, the letter c stands for
the speed of light
Sunspots are darker than the regions of the Sun around them because
they are cooler than the material around them (although still very hot compared to Earth temperatures)
The process of fusion that keeps our Sun shining begins with which building blocks?
two protons