astronomy 5 quiz

अब Quizwiz के साथ अपने होमवर्क और परीक्षाओं को एस करें!

Observations show that dark matter must also be present in other galaxies (whose outer regions also orbit too fast "for their own good"—they also have flat rotation curves). Perhaps as much as _______ of the mass in our Galaxy (and many other galaxies) is not only invisible, but we do not even know what it is made of.

95%

In about 3 billion years, the Milky Way Galaxy and ___________ Galaxy will begin a long process of colliding, separating, and then coming back together to form an elliptical galaxy

Andromeda

Which of the following statements about dark matter is FALSE?

Astronomers have a pretty good idea what the dark matter is made of

Which of the following statements about the early universe (standard model of cosmology) is FALSE?

At the very beginning, the energies were so great that the universe was actually contracting for a while

Today, we believe that only a small number of elements were actually formed during the Big Bang. Which of the following was NOT one of these

Carbon

_________ is causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate; the source of this energy is not yet understood.

Dark energy

Recent observations indicate that the universe is expanding faster today than it was a few billion years ago (that the universe is accelerating). What kind of observations have led astronomers to this surprising conclusion?

Measurements of galaxy distances using Type Ia supernovae

The Sun is located in the __________.

Orion arm

The satellite that has given us the most recent and precise measurements of the characteristics of the CMB is?

Planck

The name of the supermassive black hole at the center of our Milky Way Galaxy

Sagittarius A*

The type of galaxy that sometimes has a distinct bar of stars running across the central region is

Spiral

Very low heavier-element abundance

Stellar Halo (Excludes Dark Matter)

~13 billion years

Stellar Halo (Excludes Dark Matter)

The band of light encircling the sky, which is due to the many stars and diffuse nebulae lying near the plane of the Milky Way Galaxy

The Milky Way Galaxy

Intermediate heavier-element abundance

Thick Disk

~11 bllion years

Thick Disk

1 to ~10 billion years

Thin Disk

High heavier-element abundance

Thin Disk

Local Group is the small cluster of galaxies to which our Galaxy belongs.

True

merger

a collision between galaxies (of roughly comparable size) that combine to form a single new structure

spiral galaxy

a flattened, rotating galaxy with pinwheel-like arms of interstellar material and young stars, winding out from its central bulge

starburst

a galaxy or merger of multiple galaxies that turns gas into stars much faster than usual

elliptical galaxy

a galaxy whose shape is an ellipse and that contains no conspicuous interstellar material

irregular galaxy

a galaxy without any clear symmetry or pattern; neither a spiral nor an elliptical galaxy

supercluster

a large region of space (more than 100 million light-years across) where groups and clusters of galaxies are more concentrated; a cluster of clusters of galaxies

The expansion of the universe, according to astronomers, is:

a piece of established observational evidence which any theory of cosmology must include

galactic cannibalism

a process by which a larger galaxy strips material from or completely swallows a smaller one

void

a region between clusters and superclusters of galaxies that appears relatively empty of galaxies

The reciprocal of the Hubble constant (1/H0), also known as the Hubble Time (T0) is

a rough estimate of the age of the universe

spiral arm

a spiral-shaped region, characterized by relatively dense interstellar material and young stars, that is observed in the disks of spiral galaxies

population I star

a star containing heavy elements; typically young and found in the disk

population II star

a star with very low abundance of heavy elements; found throughout the Galaxy

One of the most important observations in the history of astronomy was the one by Edwin Hubble that established that there are other galaxies, quite removed from the Milky Way. How did Hubble show this?

by observing a Cepheid variable in a nearby galaxy and using it to get the distance

evolution (of galaxies)

changes in individual galaxies over cosmic time, inferred by observing snapshots of many different galaxies at different times in their lives

slow-moving massive particles, not yet identified, that don't absorb, emit, or reflect light or other electromagnetic radiation

cold dark matter

In the "closed" universe model, the universe will end by

coming together in a "big crunch"

The assumption that, on the large scale, the universe at any given time is the same everywhere—isotropic and homogeneous

cosmological principle

The fact that different parts of the Galaxy turn at different rates, since the parts of the Galaxy follow Kepler's third law: more distant objects take longer to complete one full orbit around the center of the Galaxy

differential galactic rotation

The Hubble constant is a constant of proportionality in the law relating the velocities of remote galaxies to their ___________.

distances

Our Milky Way Galaxy is what type of galaxy?

spiral

What causes the expanding universe to decelerate in many of our cosmological models?

the mutual gravity of the galaxies pulls them together

halo

the outermost extent of our Galaxy (or another galaxy), containing a sparse distribution of stars and globular clusters in a more or less spherical distribution

The reason type I supernovae are useful to astronomers for determining distances to other galaxies is that

they are very bright, and generally reach the same peak luminosity.

The explosion of a white dwarf in a binary system that reaches a luminosity of about 4.5 × 109 LSun; it can be used to determine distances to galaxies on a large scale.

type Ia supernova

Hubble's law is a rule that the radial velocities of remote galaxies are proportional to their distances from ________.

us

According to our studies of the ages of the oldest stars and the CMB, the age of the universe must be:

13.8 billion years

Studies of the motions of the most remote globular clusters and the small galaxies that orbit our own Galaxy show that the total mass of the Galaxy is at least 2 × 1012 MSun, which is about ______ times greater than the amount of luminous matter, which astronomer have come to call dark matter.

20

The stars in the halo are old, have low abundances of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, and have ____________ orbits randomly oriented in direction.

highly elliptical

__________ means having a consistent and even distribution of matter that is the same everywhere.

homogeneouse

___________ means having a consistent and even distribution of matter that is the same everywhere.

homogeneouse

fast-moving massive particles, not yet identified, that don't absorb, emit, or reflect light or other electromagnetic radiation.

hot dark matter

Where do you find the oldest star in the Milky Way Galaxy?

in the galactic halo

__________ means the same in all directions.

isotropic

Which of the following is pretty good evidence that the universe begin with a Big Bang?

the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB)

nuclear bulge

the central (round) part of the Milky Way or a similar galaxy

In which model (theory) of the universe will all the galaxies eventually show a blue shift in their spectrum instead of a redshift?

the closed universe


संबंधित स्टडी सेट्स

MCAT organic chemistry discrete practice questions

View Set

OB:(Intrapartum Assessment and Interventions)

View Set

SIE Chapter 1: Equity Securities

View Set

Human Senses and Energy - EMS Spectrum & RRA

View Set

Chapter 31: Skin Integrity & Wound Care

View Set