PLANETS
SMALL BODIES OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM
GALAXIES
SPACE EXPLORATION
THE SUN
TIDES AND SEASONS
The Moon
Solar & Lunar Eclipses
100

What are terrestrial planets?

Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars—small, rocky planets.

100

What is a dwarf planet? Give an example.

A body that orbits the Sun but hasn’t cleared its orbit of debris; example: Pluto.

100

What is the Kuiper Belt?

A region beyond Neptune filled with icy bodies, comets, and dwarf planets.

100

Why is space exploration important for understanding the universe?

It provides direct evidence and data about celestial bodies, their materials, and cosmic phenomena.

100

What is the corona of the Sun?

  1. The outermost layer of the Sun’s atmosphere, visible during a solar eclipse.

100

What is an equinox?

When the Sun is directly above the equator, and day and night are equal in length.

100

What causes the phases of the Moon?

The changing positions of the Moon, Earth, and Sun, altering how much of the Moon’s lit side we see.

100

What is a lunar eclipse?

When Earth passes between the Sun and the Moon, casting a shadow on the Moon.

200

What are gas giants?

Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—large planets made mostly of gas.

200

What is an asteroid?

A rocky body orbiting the Sun, mostly found in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

200

What is the Oort Cloud?

A distant spherical shell of icy bodies thought to be the source of long-period comets.

200

What was the first artificial satellite launched into space, and who launched it?

Sputnik 1, launched by the Soviet Union in 1957.

200

What layer of the Sun produces light?

The photosphere.

200

What is a solstice?

When the Sun is at its farthest point north or south of the equator, marking the longest or shortest day.

200

What is the Moon’s surface covered with?

Regolith—dust and rocky debris.

200

Why don’t solar and lunar eclipses happen every month?

Because the Moon’s orbit is tilted about 5° relative to Earth’s orbit, so the Sun, Earth, and Moon don’t line up perfectly each month.

300

Which planet has the most moons?

Jupiter

300

What is a comet made of?

Ice, dust, and rock; sometimes called a “dirty snowball.”

300

What are the three main shapes of galaxies?

Spiral, elliptical, and irregular.

300

Who was the first American astronaut to orbit Earth?

John Glenn, in 1962 aboard Friendship 7.

300

What effect do solar flares have on Earth?

They can disrupt satellites, radio signals, and power grids.

300

What causes Earth’s seasons?

The tilt of Earth’s axis as it orbits the Sun.

300

What are impact craters?

Depressions formed when meteoroids strike the Moon’s surface.

300

What is a solar eclipse?

When the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, blocking the Sun’s light.

400

Why does Venus have such high surface temperatures?

It has a thick atmosphere of carbon dioxide, causing a strong greenhouse effect.

400

What is the difference between a meteoroid, meteor, and meteorite?

Meteoroid: space rock in space; Meteor: burns up in Earth’s atmosphere (“shooting star”); Meteorite: reaches Earth’s surface.

400

What holds galaxies together?

Gravity, along with the presence of dark matter, which provides additional mass not seen directly.

400

What U.S. space program was responsible for landing astronauts on the Moon?

The Apollo program.

400

What is the solar wind?

A stream of charged particles released from the Sun’s corona.

400

What are neap tides?

Lower high tides and higher low tides caused when the Sun and Moon are at right angles to Earth.

400

Why does the Moon always show the same face to Earth?

It is tidally locked, rotating once for every orbit around Earth.

400

During a lunar eclipse, why does the Moon often appear reddish in color?

Earth’s atmosphere bends and filters sunlight, allowing red light to reach and illuminate the Moon.

500

Why is Mars often called the “Red Planet”?

Because its surface contains iron oxide (rust), which gives it a reddish appearance.

500

What is Ceres, and where is it located in the solar system?

Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt, located between Mars and Jupiter and is classified as a dwarf planet.

500

What is a supercluster?

A massive group of galaxy clusters bound together by gravity, forming some of the largest structures in the universe.

500

What was the first space shuttle to fly into orbit?

Columbia, in 1981.

500

What process produces the Sun’s energy?

Nuclear fusion of hydrogen into helium in the core.

500

What causes tides on Earth?

The gravitational pull of the Moon and Sun on Earth’s oceans.

500

What causes the Moon’s surface to have so many craters compared to Earth?

The Moon lacks an atmosphere to burn up meteoroids and has little geologic activity to erase impacts, so craters remain visible.

500

What is the difference between the umbra and the penumbra during an eclipse?

The umbra is the darkest part of the shadow where the Sun is completely blocked, while the penumbra is the lighter outer shadow where the Sun is only partially blocked.