
Review
... D) The orbits of Pluto and the other distant dwarf planets are tilted in different directions. 30) Planets orbiting other stars are hard to detect because they A) only reflect light, are very small B) are far away, are very small C) are far away, only reflect light D) all three 31) Planets orbiting ...
... D) The orbits of Pluto and the other distant dwarf planets are tilted in different directions. 30) Planets orbiting other stars are hard to detect because they A) only reflect light, are very small B) are far away, are very small C) are far away, only reflect light D) all three 31) Planets orbiting ...
PPT
... Inner disk is hot from extra contraction Young sun very luminous and heating the inner disk Astronomy majors: look out for this in your star formation courses - T Tauri stage ...
... Inner disk is hot from extra contraction Young sun very luminous and heating the inner disk Astronomy majors: look out for this in your star formation courses - T Tauri stage ...
File - Etna FFA Agriculture
... Earth is 94 million miles (150 million km) from the Sun. Ideal gravity which makes moving about easy without the difficulty of heavy gravity and low gravity. Earth's diameter is 7,926 miles (12,756 km). ...
... Earth is 94 million miles (150 million km) from the Sun. Ideal gravity which makes moving about easy without the difficulty of heavy gravity and low gravity. Earth's diameter is 7,926 miles (12,756 km). ...
The Family of Stars
... • Need very close to edge-on systems, usually within a degree given planet sizes, separations, and geometry. • More than a thousand candidates here or coming (Kepler ...
... • Need very close to edge-on systems, usually within a degree given planet sizes, separations, and geometry. • More than a thousand candidates here or coming (Kepler ...
The star is born
... The reddish glowing object in the middle is a protostar: A star that didn’t yet reach the main sequence where it will power itself fully from nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium. These stars are only about 150,000 years old. ...
... The reddish glowing object in the middle is a protostar: A star that didn’t yet reach the main sequence where it will power itself fully from nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium. These stars are only about 150,000 years old. ...
October 3
... Unlike all the other planets Venus rotates backward. How would the diurnal and yearly motion of the Sun differ on Venus compared to that of the Earth? ...
... Unlike all the other planets Venus rotates backward. How would the diurnal and yearly motion of the Sun differ on Venus compared to that of the Earth? ...
The Prospective Aspect of the Cosmogonic Models in Laozi and T
... • Silent—amorphous—it stood alone and unchanging. • Round and tireless in its workings; we may call it Mother of heaven and earth. • Not knowing its name, I style it the “Way (Dao)”; if forced to name it, I would call it “great.” • “Great” comes from “disengaging”, “disengaging” is followed by “goin ...
... • Silent—amorphous—it stood alone and unchanging. • Round and tireless in its workings; we may call it Mother of heaven and earth. • Not knowing its name, I style it the “Way (Dao)”; if forced to name it, I would call it “great.” • “Great” comes from “disengaging”, “disengaging” is followed by “goin ...
Asteroids • Small, rocky objects in orbit around the Sun. +
... The Oort Cloud & the Kuiper Belt • No comets have orbits coming from interstellar space. • Strong tendency for aphelia at ~ 50,000 AU • No preferential direction from which comets come ...
... The Oort Cloud & the Kuiper Belt • No comets have orbits coming from interstellar space. • Strong tendency for aphelia at ~ 50,000 AU • No preferential direction from which comets come ...
The Sun and the Solar System
... The circularity of Neptune’s orbit, the outermost and thus least strongly bound of all the major planets (Pluto, Eris, and other “dwarf planets” excepted from this category), is especially ...
... The circularity of Neptune’s orbit, the outermost and thus least strongly bound of all the major planets (Pluto, Eris, and other “dwarf planets” excepted from this category), is especially ...
Sample exam 2
... sentence/paragraph format or a drawing, depending on what is asked. 11. The Sun started off its trajectory on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram by initially moving down and to the left as it organized into a protostar. Explain this behavior in terms of temperature and luminosity, and give a reason for ...
... sentence/paragraph format or a drawing, depending on what is asked. 11. The Sun started off its trajectory on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram by initially moving down and to the left as it organized into a protostar. Explain this behavior in terms of temperature and luminosity, and give a reason for ...
Document
... • How to explain the existence of hot Jupiters? – formation in the outer system followed by migration towards the inner system (gravitational interactions in the disk or with other planets) – during migration: probable ejection of smaller planets → probably no telluric planets in these systems ...
... • How to explain the existence of hot Jupiters? – formation in the outer system followed by migration towards the inner system (gravitational interactions in the disk or with other planets) – during migration: probable ejection of smaller planets → probably no telluric planets in these systems ...
Exoplaneter & Venuspassagen
... 0.5% if the star has a planet at a distance of 1 AE. If 10% of the stars have a planet at a distance of 1 AE, the light from about 2000 stars need to be monitored continuoiusly during one year if the stars are of the same size as the Sun – to find one single ...
... 0.5% if the star has a planet at a distance of 1 AE. If 10% of the stars have a planet at a distance of 1 AE, the light from about 2000 stars need to be monitored continuoiusly during one year if the stars are of the same size as the Sun – to find one single ...
Student notes part 2
... superheated to nearly 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit and stretched into a football shape by enormous tidal forces. The atmosphere has ballooned to nearly three times Jupiter's radius and is spilling material onto the star. The planet is 40 percent more massive than Jupiter.” http://www.science20.com/news_ ...
... superheated to nearly 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit and stretched into a football shape by enormous tidal forces. The atmosphere has ballooned to nearly three times Jupiter's radius and is spilling material onto the star. The planet is 40 percent more massive than Jupiter.” http://www.science20.com/news_ ...
the california planet survey. i. four new giant exoplanets
... correction and the parallax from Hipparcos. * From the effective temperature and the luminosity one determines the stellar mass, radius, age estimate (from stellar models) and so on. * For the star GJ 179 other methods were used, since its not hot enough for the SME. ...
... correction and the parallax from Hipparcos. * From the effective temperature and the luminosity one determines the stellar mass, radius, age estimate (from stellar models) and so on. * For the star GJ 179 other methods were used, since its not hot enough for the SME. ...
NASA has discovered 7 Earth-like planets orbiting a
... Telescope, set to launch in 2018, will have the ability to measure the chemical composition of exoplanet atmospheres. If the atmospheres contain telltale gases like ozone, oxygen, or methane, life could exist there. “We can expect that in a few years, we will know a lot more about these [seven] plan ...
... Telescope, set to launch in 2018, will have the ability to measure the chemical composition of exoplanet atmospheres. If the atmospheres contain telltale gases like ozone, oxygen, or methane, life could exist there. “We can expect that in a few years, we will know a lot more about these [seven] plan ...
A Question of Planets - Vanderbilt University
... and had an extremely good time before giving the bike away and heading home. When he returned, Weintraub landed a job teaching astronomy at Santa Monica Community College and discovered that he enjoyed teaching. However, he also decided that he only wanted to do this kind of teaching if he combined ...
... and had an extremely good time before giving the bike away and heading home. When he returned, Weintraub landed a job teaching astronomy at Santa Monica Community College and discovered that he enjoyed teaching. However, he also decided that he only wanted to do this kind of teaching if he combined ...
An Assessment: Think Pair Share
... The cosmic background radiation is visible in all directions at a temperature of 3 degrees absolute zero. Almost every galaxy has a red-shift, with more distant galaxies having the highest red-shift. The closest galaxies are all blue-shifted, showing that our universe is slowing down. ...
... The cosmic background radiation is visible in all directions at a temperature of 3 degrees absolute zero. Almost every galaxy has a red-shift, with more distant galaxies having the highest red-shift. The closest galaxies are all blue-shifted, showing that our universe is slowing down. ...
Lecture 5: Planetary system formation theories o Topics to be covered:
... 1. Slowly rotating, collapsing gas and dust sphere. 2. An oblate spheroid, flattened along the spin axis. 3. The critical lenticular form - material in equatorial region is in free orbit. 4. Rings left behind in equatorial plane due to further collapse. “Spasmodic” process leads to annular rings ...
... 1. Slowly rotating, collapsing gas and dust sphere. 2. An oblate spheroid, flattened along the spin axis. 3. The critical lenticular form - material in equatorial region is in free orbit. 4. Rings left behind in equatorial plane due to further collapse. “Spasmodic” process leads to annular rings ...
Chapter 7
... 1. According to the core-accretion model of planetary formation, planets start as small chunks of rock, dust, and debris and grow through accretion and collisions. However, planets like Jupiter would take longer to form than the lifespan of the accretion disk around the star. 2. According to the dis ...
... 1. According to the core-accretion model of planetary formation, planets start as small chunks of rock, dust, and debris and grow through accretion and collisions. However, planets like Jupiter would take longer to form than the lifespan of the accretion disk around the star. 2. According to the dis ...