
Star Questions 2008 - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
... the temperature rises at the center of the protostar to 10 million K and initiates thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium. 2. What does it mean for a star to have a life cycle? The star proceeds through stages of birth, life on the main sequence and death. 3. Explain what it means for a star t ...
... the temperature rises at the center of the protostar to 10 million K and initiates thermonuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium. 2. What does it mean for a star to have a life cycle? The star proceeds through stages of birth, life on the main sequence and death. 3. Explain what it means for a star t ...
presentation source
... • Shine through fluorescing hydrogen gas. – Red Nebulae (HII regions) (10,000K). ...
... • Shine through fluorescing hydrogen gas. – Red Nebulae (HII regions) (10,000K). ...
ph507-16-1exo2
... material around the star Beta Pictoris bably connected with a planetary system. The disk does not start at the star. Rather, its inner edge begins around 25 AU away, farther than the average orbital distance of Uranus in the Solar System. Theoretically, this disk should have lasted for only around 1 ...
... material around the star Beta Pictoris bably connected with a planetary system. The disk does not start at the star. Rather, its inner edge begins around 25 AU away, farther than the average orbital distance of Uranus in the Solar System. Theoretically, this disk should have lasted for only around 1 ...
The Galaxy–Dark Matter Connection
... Perhaps the most natural one is starvation (or strangulation): Infalling gas is mainly accreted by the central galaxy. Satellites galaxies (slowly) starve. This is the only environmental process currently included in semi-analytical models. Is this good enough? What about the morphology-density rela ...
... Perhaps the most natural one is starvation (or strangulation): Infalling gas is mainly accreted by the central galaxy. Satellites galaxies (slowly) starve. This is the only environmental process currently included in semi-analytical models. Is this good enough? What about the morphology-density rela ...
Lecture 15 (pdf from the powerpoint)
... as temperatures in the Sun's core, where nuclear fusion ...
... as temperatures in the Sun's core, where nuclear fusion ...
notes
... What would happen to the liquid water on Earth if… • We moved it to an O-type star (T = 30,000 K) and placed it at the same distance that it currently is from our Sun (T = 5800 K) • We moved it to an M-type star (T = 3000 K) and placed it at the same distance that it currently is from our Sun • In ...
... What would happen to the liquid water on Earth if… • We moved it to an O-type star (T = 30,000 K) and placed it at the same distance that it currently is from our Sun (T = 5800 K) • We moved it to an M-type star (T = 3000 K) and placed it at the same distance that it currently is from our Sun • In ...
Final Exam Review
... • All outer planets (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto) generally appear to move eastward along the Ecliptic. • The inner planets Mercury and Venus can never be seen at large angular distance from the sun and appear only as morning or evening stars. ...
... • All outer planets (Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto) generally appear to move eastward along the Ecliptic. • The inner planets Mercury and Venus can never be seen at large angular distance from the sun and appear only as morning or evening stars. ...
The Birth of Stars Guiding Questions • Because stars shine by
... are glowing, ionized clouds of gas – Emission nebulae are powered by ultraviolet light that they absorb from nearby hot stars ...
... are glowing, ionized clouds of gas – Emission nebulae are powered by ultraviolet light that they absorb from nearby hot stars ...
The Birth of Stars
... are glowing, ionized clouds of gas – Emission nebulae are powered by ultraviolet light that they absorb from nearby hot stars ...
... are glowing, ionized clouds of gas – Emission nebulae are powered by ultraviolet light that they absorb from nearby hot stars ...
Testing
... A. It transfers energy and angular momentum to another object. B. The gravity of the other object forces the planet to move inward. C. It gains mass from the other object, causing its gravitational pull to become stronger. ...
... A. It transfers energy and angular momentum to another object. B. The gravity of the other object forces the planet to move inward. C. It gains mass from the other object, causing its gravitational pull to become stronger. ...
Scientists classify stars by
... The gravity of a passing star or the shock wave from a nearby supernova may cause the nebula to contract. 1. Matter in the gas cloud will begin to come together into a dense region called a protostar. 2. As the protostar continues to condense, it heats up. 3. Eventually, it reaches a critical mass a ...
... The gravity of a passing star or the shock wave from a nearby supernova may cause the nebula to contract. 1. Matter in the gas cloud will begin to come together into a dense region called a protostar. 2. As the protostar continues to condense, it heats up. 3. Eventually, it reaches a critical mass a ...
Integrative Studies 410 Our Place in the Universe
... • core continues to cool and contract • Size ~ Earth • Density: a million times that of Earth – 1 cubic cm has 1000 kg of mass! ...
... • core continues to cool and contract • Size ~ Earth • Density: a million times that of Earth – 1 cubic cm has 1000 kg of mass! ...
Nobel Prize in Physics for Accelerating Universe
... water similar to the water we find on Earth. • “Similar” means that the fraction of heavy water is same as in our oceans. • Heavy water is D2O instead of H2O, where D is deuterium which has a nucleus with one proton and one neutron. • The comet comes from the Kupier belt (30-50 AU) while most comets ...
... water similar to the water we find on Earth. • “Similar” means that the fraction of heavy water is same as in our oceans. • Heavy water is D2O instead of H2O, where D is deuterium which has a nucleus with one proton and one neutron. • The comet comes from the Kupier belt (30-50 AU) while most comets ...
astr100_finalexam
... [23] Current evidence indicates the Universe’s expansion ____. A) is speeding up B) is slowing down C) has stopped D) is constant [24] Where are we? A) At the exact center of an expanding Universe, as shown by the universal expansion away from us in all directions. B) Near, although probably not rig ...
... [23] Current evidence indicates the Universe’s expansion ____. A) is speeding up B) is slowing down C) has stopped D) is constant [24] Where are we? A) At the exact center of an expanding Universe, as shown by the universal expansion away from us in all directions. B) Near, although probably not rig ...
Unit 5
... recognize that inner planets tend to be orbited by few or no moons, while outer planets tend to be orbited by several moons ...
... recognize that inner planets tend to be orbited by few or no moons, while outer planets tend to be orbited by several moons ...
What`s Tugging on our Solar System?
... storms that are generated a hemisphere away can easily reform the beaches, ocean bottom, and large sections of a coastline, if the storms are strong enough, and if the oversized waves continue for a long period of time. So it may be with gravity waves. Theoretically they are generated by all large b ...
... storms that are generated a hemisphere away can easily reform the beaches, ocean bottom, and large sections of a coastline, if the storms are strong enough, and if the oversized waves continue for a long period of time. So it may be with gravity waves. Theoretically they are generated by all large b ...
Answers to Coursebook questions – Chapter E5
... hydrogen of the star is used up in nuclear fusion reactions. The core of the star collapses and this releases gravitational potential energy that warms the core to sufficiently high temperatures for fusion of helium in the core to begin. The suddenly released energy forces the outer layers of the st ...
... hydrogen of the star is used up in nuclear fusion reactions. The core of the star collapses and this releases gravitational potential energy that warms the core to sufficiently high temperatures for fusion of helium in the core to begin. The suddenly released energy forces the outer layers of the st ...
The search for exoplanets
... Since the 19th century many scientists claimed to have found new planets outside our solar system. First reports occurred in 1855 by Captain W.S. Jacob from the East Indian Observatory in Madras. He thought, that he had found signs of an exoplanet around the doublestar 70 Ophiuchi. But like many oth ...
... Since the 19th century many scientists claimed to have found new planets outside our solar system. First reports occurred in 1855 by Captain W.S. Jacob from the East Indian Observatory in Madras. He thought, that he had found signs of an exoplanet around the doublestar 70 Ophiuchi. But like many oth ...
Stellar Evolution and our Sun (Song “The Sun” from “Severe Tire
... Dust in the disk forms km sized bodies: planetesimals (104 y) In inner regions of solar system, too hot for organic molecules or ice, so you get only silicate grains aggregating > terrestrial planets HIGHER density In outer regions of the solar system, organics and ice grains condense. Large planets ...
... Dust in the disk forms km sized bodies: planetesimals (104 y) In inner regions of solar system, too hot for organic molecules or ice, so you get only silicate grains aggregating > terrestrial planets HIGHER density In outer regions of the solar system, organics and ice grains condense. Large planets ...
Test#3
... 1. A measurement of the parallax of a star allows us directly to determine the star's a) rotation rate, b) temperature, c) distance, d) age 2. How much brighter would a star be if an observer moved from 3 to 1 parsec from the star? a) 3 times, b) 9 times, c) 27 times, d) 81 times 3. The difference b ...
... 1. A measurement of the parallax of a star allows us directly to determine the star's a) rotation rate, b) temperature, c) distance, d) age 2. How much brighter would a star be if an observer moved from 3 to 1 parsec from the star? a) 3 times, b) 9 times, c) 27 times, d) 81 times 3. The difference b ...