
Astro 101 Final F15 - Nicholls State University
... d. The force from the planets’ fast rotation rates made them fly off. ____ 24. It would be difficult for humans to survive on the surface of Mars for long periods of time because: a. there is not enough oxygen in the atmosphere. b. the range in temperature between day and night is too large. c. ther ...
... d. The force from the planets’ fast rotation rates made them fly off. ____ 24. It would be difficult for humans to survive on the surface of Mars for long periods of time because: a. there is not enough oxygen in the atmosphere. b. the range in temperature between day and night is too large. c. ther ...
Detecting individual argon atoms
... them as a group, and ask questions about planet formation. What fraction of stars have planets? Does it depend on mass or other properties? Are earth-like planets common? Are they commonly found in the “habitable ...
... them as a group, and ask questions about planet formation. What fraction of stars have planets? Does it depend on mass or other properties? Are earth-like planets common? Are they commonly found in the “habitable ...
Impact of Protostellar Outflow on Star Formation: Effects of Initial
... estimate the mass ejection rate from the host cloud or star formation efficiency, we need to calculate the evolution of the protostellar outflow from the prestellar core stage because a wide-opening-outflow appears before protostar formation. In addition to the wide-opening-angle outflow, well collimated ...
... estimate the mass ejection rate from the host cloud or star formation efficiency, we need to calculate the evolution of the protostellar outflow from the prestellar core stage because a wide-opening-outflow appears before protostar formation. In addition to the wide-opening-angle outflow, well collimated ...
Cosmic variance in [O/Fe] in the Galactic disk
... Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE). We minimize systematic errors by considering groups of stars with similar atmospheric parameters. The APOGEE measurements in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12 reveal that the square root of the star-to-star cosmic variance in the oxygen-to-iron rati ...
... Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE). We minimize systematic errors by considering groups of stars with similar atmospheric parameters. The APOGEE measurements in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12 reveal that the square root of the star-to-star cosmic variance in the oxygen-to-iron rati ...
Extra-solar planets
... which case the region begins to contract (the Jeans instability criterion). The details, including effects such as stellar rotation and magnetic fields, are complex and incompletely known, and the early phases are considered particularly uncertain (Adams and Fatuzzo 1996, Elmegreen 1999). The most m ...
... which case the region begins to contract (the Jeans instability criterion). The details, including effects such as stellar rotation and magnetic fields, are complex and incompletely known, and the early phases are considered particularly uncertain (Adams and Fatuzzo 1996, Elmegreen 1999). The most m ...
First Visible-Light Image of an Extrasolar Planet
... First Visible-Light Image of an Extrasolar Planet When the Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990, one of its most ambitious goals was to take a snapshot of a planet orbiting another star. Astronomers have now achieved that dream, capturing the first visible-light image of an extrasolar planet ...
... First Visible-Light Image of an Extrasolar Planet When the Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990, one of its most ambitious goals was to take a snapshot of a planet orbiting another star. Astronomers have now achieved that dream, capturing the first visible-light image of an extrasolar planet ...
Lectures 19-20 The Milky Way Galaxy
... (~2 micron) to help see through the dust. This is helpful because there are large number of K and M giant stars (T ~ 4000 K) in the central part of the galaxy, and these are brightest in at 2-micron. Note that the nearest star to the Sun is ~1 pc away. The density of stars is much higher in the Gala ...
... (~2 micron) to help see through the dust. This is helpful because there are large number of K and M giant stars (T ~ 4000 K) in the central part of the galaxy, and these are brightest in at 2-micron. Note that the nearest star to the Sun is ~1 pc away. The density of stars is much higher in the Gala ...
ch19
... Interstellar matter moves around the galactic center rapidly (shown by the red arrows) and is compressed as it passes through the slow-moving spiral arms (whose motion is shown by the blue arrows). This compression triggers star formation in the interstellar matter, so that new stars appear on the “ ...
... Interstellar matter moves around the galactic center rapidly (shown by the red arrows) and is compressed as it passes through the slow-moving spiral arms (whose motion is shown by the blue arrows). This compression triggers star formation in the interstellar matter, so that new stars appear on the “ ...
There are four terrestrial and four jovian planets.
... — Galactic recycling built the elements from which planets formed. — We can observe stars forming in other gas clouds. ...
... — Galactic recycling built the elements from which planets formed. — We can observe stars forming in other gas clouds. ...
Sample pages 1 PDF
... which now takes place in a shell around the inert hydrogen core rather than throughout the core, as in its previous incarnation. Over time the star will continue to expand and cool until it becomes a red giant. It is now large, luminous and has an extensive solar wind, which is driving the material ...
... which now takes place in a shell around the inert hydrogen core rather than throughout the core, as in its previous incarnation. Over time the star will continue to expand and cool until it becomes a red giant. It is now large, luminous and has an extensive solar wind, which is driving the material ...
Does size matter (in the SFRs)?
... SFR vs.surface density plot for normal disk galaxies. The solid line corresponds to the correlation from Kennicutt (98) while the slash lines show the dispersion in such correlation. The two galaxies presented here are plotted as stars. ...
... SFR vs.surface density plot for normal disk galaxies. The solid line corresponds to the correlation from Kennicutt (98) while the slash lines show the dispersion in such correlation. The two galaxies presented here are plotted as stars. ...
The physico-chemical history of Falling Evaporating Bodies around
... want to model here are thought to originate from nearly circular orbits further away from the star, typically between 4 and 16 AU. At such distances, refractory material does not evaporate (the limit for dust evaporation is ∼0.4 AU; see Beust et al. 1998). Consequently, in our approach, we need only ...
... want to model here are thought to originate from nearly circular orbits further away from the star, typically between 4 and 16 AU. At such distances, refractory material does not evaporate (the limit for dust evaporation is ∼0.4 AU; see Beust et al. 1998). Consequently, in our approach, we need only ...
ph507weeks1
... units such as in feet, km, light years, parsecs etc. It has been excrutiatingly difficult to measure astronomical distances until this century. Unfortunately most stars are so far away that it is impossible to directly measure the distance using the classic technique of triangulation. Trignometric p ...
... units such as in feet, km, light years, parsecs etc. It has been excrutiatingly difficult to measure astronomical distances until this century. Unfortunately most stars are so far away that it is impossible to directly measure the distance using the classic technique of triangulation. Trignometric p ...
STABILITY OF SATELLITES AROUND CLOSE
... planet, eventually crashing into it. This moon reverses direction at the critical semimajor axis (the outermost stable orbit point) because doing so maximizes its orbital lifetime. The dashed lines indicate a planet orbital semimajor axis of 0.25 AU. The star’s tidal torques on the planet have less ...
... planet, eventually crashing into it. This moon reverses direction at the critical semimajor axis (the outermost stable orbit point) because doing so maximizes its orbital lifetime. The dashed lines indicate a planet orbital semimajor axis of 0.25 AU. The star’s tidal torques on the planet have less ...
Astronomy Assignment #8 Exoplanets II
... to the perihelion distance of one of its other planets (assume it is of Jovian mass). This is a very unstable situation and the assumedly smaller Earth-like planet would be either destroyed or ejected by the larger Jovian mass planet as it swung into perihelion. Simply put, no terrestrial planets co ...
... to the perihelion distance of one of its other planets (assume it is of Jovian mass). This is a very unstable situation and the assumedly smaller Earth-like planet would be either destroyed or ejected by the larger Jovian mass planet as it swung into perihelion. Simply put, no terrestrial planets co ...
ASPEN WORKSHOP 2003
... requires unfamiliar physics: Rossby vortex mechanism for transporting angular momentum in accretion disks—it has the huge advantage of moving matter over distances of a radius rather than thickness. Pressure jump [he doesn’t say where this perturbation comes from] produces corotating vortices in the ...
... requires unfamiliar physics: Rossby vortex mechanism for transporting angular momentum in accretion disks—it has the huge advantage of moving matter over distances of a radius rather than thickness. Pressure jump [he doesn’t say where this perturbation comes from] produces corotating vortices in the ...
Chapter 16 - Astronomy
... nucleus, it wasn’t until the development of IR/radio and X-ray/gamma-ray astronomy that we could “look” at the Galactic nucleus. 3. The observed number density of stars increases as we get closer to the Galactic center, down to about 2 pc from the center. For distances closer than 2 pc, observations ...
... nucleus, it wasn’t until the development of IR/radio and X-ray/gamma-ray astronomy that we could “look” at the Galactic nucleus. 3. The observed number density of stars increases as we get closer to the Galactic center, down to about 2 pc from the center. For distances closer than 2 pc, observations ...
Lecture 12: Evolution of the Galaxy
... • As ISM is slowly used up to form stars, star formation rate declines, and so does the supernova rate and hence rate of metal enrichment of ISM by supernovae • Stars retain the metallicity and kinematics conferred on them at birth. However, gas clouds collide with each other and settle into regular ...
... • As ISM is slowly used up to form stars, star formation rate declines, and so does the supernova rate and hence rate of metal enrichment of ISM by supernovae • Stars retain the metallicity and kinematics conferred on them at birth. However, gas clouds collide with each other and settle into regular ...