Asteroids & Comets
Famous Impacts
NEO & Defense
Black Holes
Interstellar (Movie Science)
100

What is the difference between a meteor and a meteorite?

A meteor is a streak of light in the sky (shooting star); a meteorite is the rock that actually lands on Earth.

100

What event 66 million years ago caused the dinosaurs’ extinction?

The Chicxulub asteroid impact.

100

What does NEO stand for?

Near-Earth Object.

100

What is the “point of no return” called?

The event horizon

100

In Interstellar, what environmental problem on Earth pushes humans to search for a new planet?

A global crop failure and dust storms known as “The Blight.”

200

What are comets mostly made of?

Ice, dust, and rock (often called “dirty snowballs”).

200

Where is the Chicxulub crater located?

Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico.

200

Which U.S. office is in charge of protecting Earth from hazardous asteroids?

NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office (PDCO).

200

Name the glowing disk of gas and dust around a black hole.

The accretion disk.

200

Why did the crew use a wormhole near Saturn instead of regular space travel?

A wormhole provides a shortcut through space-time, allowing them to reach distant galaxies faster.

300

Where are most asteroids in our solar system found?

In the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

300

The asteroid that created the Chicxulub crater was roughly the size of what Earth landmark?

Mount Everest.

300

In 2022, what was the first NASA mission to successfully change the path of an asteroid?

The DART mission (Double Asteroid Redirection Test).

300

“Why would an astronaut falling into a black hole see time differently compared to someone far away?”

Time slows near intense gravity because of relativity — an outside observer would see the astronaut moving in slow motion.

300

On Miller’s planet, hours equal years on Earth. What scientific concept explains this time difference?

Time dilation caused by the strong gravity of a nearby black hole (Gargantua).

400

What was ʻOumuamua, discovered in 2017?

The first known interstellar object detected passing through our solar system.

400

In 1908, what massive explosion flattened 800 square miles of forest in Siberia?

The Tunguska Event, caused by an asteroid or comet exploding in the atmosphere.

400

Why can the NEOWISE space telescope detect asteroids that ground telescopes might miss?

It detects heat (infrared light), so it can see dark asteroids that don’t reflect much visible light.

400

What are two different ways astronomers can study black holes even though they can’t be seen directly?

By observing X-rays from hot gas in accretion disks, or tracking stars orbiting around an invisible object.

400

What real-life scientist advised the filmmakers so the black hole looked scientifically accurate?

Physicist Kip Thorne.

500

Explain the difference between an asteroid and a meteoroid.

An asteroid is a large rocky body in space; a meteoroid is a much smaller rock or fragment.

500

Imagine the Tunguska explosion happened above a major city. What kinds of damage and effects would people experience?

A city would be completely destroyed, millions of deaths, shock waves, fires, and devastation across hundreds of square miles.

500

Scientists estimate they’ve discovered about what percentage of all giant (1 km or bigger) asteroids near Earth?

About 95%.

500

What unusual stretching effect would a star or planet experience if it got too close to a black hole’s gravity?

Spaghettification — the object would be stretched into long, thin strands.

500

The ending shows Cooper entering a “tesseract” inside the black hole. What does this scene represent about dimensions beyond the three we normally experience?

Higher dimensions — where time is treated like a physical dimension, allowing communication across time.