The sky
Radiation and Observation
Stellar formation and main sequence life
Stellar evolution
Galaxies and Cosmology
100

What is an AU?

The average distance from the earth to the sun

100

A continuous spectrum shows what?

Emission at all wavelengths

100
What is hydrostatic equilibrium?

It is when gravity and radiation pressure are balanced inside a star.

100

What is the end state of a G star?

White dwarf

100
Finish the sentence: Matter tells spacetime how to curve_______________

Spacetime tells matter how to move

200

What are right ascension and declination?

Parallels to longitude and latitude on the celestial sphere. 

200

What does a spectrograph do to light?

Split it into wavelengths like a rainbow.

200

What is a protoplanetary disk?

It is the disk of gas and dust that collects around a protostar and it provides the material from which a planet forms.

200

What causes a red giant to puff up?

The heat from the hydrogen shell burning.

200

Describe 3 ways we measure the distance to other galaxies. When are each of these ways applicable?

Cepheids, type Ia supernova, and the Tully-fisher relationship. Know when each of these methods apply. Cepheids are applicable when we can resolve individual stars within the galaxy. Type Ia supernova can be observed at great distances and don't need to be individually resolved because they are so bright. Tully-Fisher relates rotational speed to luminosity making it only applicable for spiral galaxies.

300

What are Kepler's 3 laws?

All orbits are elliptical.

Orbits sweep out equal area in equal time.

Period squared is proportional to semi-major axis cubed.

300

Higher temperatures mean what for the wavelength, frequency, and energy of light?

Wavelength is shorter, frequency higher, and energy higher.

300

What are the three types of energy transport and which ones are the dominant modes in the sun?

Radiation, convection, conduction. Radiation and convection are the dominant modes of energy transport in the sun.

300

What is true about the surface temperature, luminosity, and color of a red giant compared its main sequence counterpart? Why?

Cooler, brighter, and redder. Cooler because it has expanded. Brighter because more square meters on the surface to radiate light. Redder because it is cooler.

300

What is the observational evidence that the expansion of the universe is accelerating?

The distances measured via type Ia supernova are farther than those measured from redshift (which assumes a constant expansion rate).

400

What is retrograde motion?

The apparent backwards motion of celestial objects on the sky due to the differing orbital speeds of earth and the other bodies.

400

What happens when an electron in an atom goes from a higher energy level to a lower one?

It emits a photon of exactly the energy difference between the two levels.

400

What is plotted on an H-R diagram?

Luminosity vs temperature.

400

What is the lowest possible mass of a main sequence star that will end its life in a supernova?

8 solar masses

400

Why is the CMB evidence for the Big Bang?

The temperature of the CMB is exactly predicted by models of an initially hot dense universe that has been expanding for one Hubble time.
500

What is the distance that light travels in 2 minutes?

3.6e10 m

500

What is the Doppler effect?

It is when a wave is shifted to a longer wavelength when it is coming from a source moving away from the observer. The reverse is true if the source is moving towards the observer.

500

What is the primary cause of the differences that we observe in main sequence stellar spectra?

Temperature

500

What is the difference between a type Ia and a type II supernova? How are they both different from a nova?

Type II is caused by the collapse of a stellar core to a neutron star. Type Ia is caused by a white dwarf suddenly going over the Chandrasekhar limit. A nova is caused by a white dwarf slowly going over the Chandrasekhar limit and just blowing off the outer layers to get back under the limit.

500

Why is an accreting supermassive black hole the best explanation for the "engine" behind quasars?

Quasars are both incredibly energetic and physically compact. A black hole is the only object that is massive enough to speed up material fast enough that friction and loss of gravitational potential energy are large enough to explain the energy output. Black holes are also incredibly compact.