PHYSICS 406 - Introduction to Modern Astronomy
PRACTICE FINAL EXAM
Interactive Exam
Chose the best answer in the Table Below
each Question
Correct answers will go to the next question
Incorrect answers will send you to the course
review
1. Stars form from the collapse of cool
clouds of gases ("stellar nurseries"). The collapse is due to the force of gravity,
which tries to pull the cloud together. Why must a cloud be cool in order
to collapse?
- High temperatures would tend to resist gravity, and cause a cloud
to expand instead of collapse.
- The force of gravity depends on a particle's speed, and acts only on
slow-moving particles in the gas cloud.
- Newborn stars would be evaporated if the gas cloud were hot
- Newborn stars are clumsy and can only catch slow atoms
2. The nuclear fusion in the sun's core
consumes hydrogen fuel. With time there is less and less hydrogen available,
the fusion reactions become less likely, and the energy production will go down.
What is the reaction of the sun's core?
- Because the energy production goes down the core will cool and the energy
production will die out very rapidly.
- The energizer bunny will bring a new long life battery.
- Because of the reduced energy production the core will shrink under the
pressure of the overlying material and be heated to a higher temperature,
which increases the energy production again.
3. No stars exist with masses higher
than 60 times the mass of the sun. What is the reason?
- It is impossible to gather more mass out of the thin interstellar gas
in one place to form a star.
- The energy flux is so high that the radiation pressure of this flux would
literally blow the star apart, if it was formed.
- A larger mass than 60 solar masses would break apart due to centrifugal
forces.
4. Jupiter has about 1% of the mass
of the sun and the same composition as the sun. Why is it not shining like the
sun?
- A few photon torpedos from the Enterprise would ignite the fusion reaction;
we haven't got there yet.
- The little amount of fuel in the relatively small body of Jupiter was
burnt up already.
- The total mass of Jupiter is too small to produce a high enough temperature
and density in the center to start the fusion reaction.
- The fusion reaction inside Jupiter has not yet started, but it will within
a few million years.
5. What is the early sun paradox?
- The sun produced more energy in the past so that the Earth must have been
burnt and could not produce life.
- The sun did not have enough mass in the beginning to keep all the planets
in orbit.
- The sun produced less energy in the past so that it was much dimmer when
life begun on Earth.
6. All planets in the solar system orbit
the sun approximately in the same plane and move in the same direction. What
is the most likely explanation for these observations?
- The planets were captured when the sun passed regions with small planetary
bodies in the galaxy.
- The planets were formed out of the flat rotating disc of the material
during the formation of the solar system.
- The planets were ejected out of the rotating sun after its formation.
7. The early solar nebula rotated much
too fast so that the centrifugal force would have torn the sun apart before
it was formed. What happened with most of the excess angular momentum of this
rotation?
- The sun was slowed down by giant explosions at the beginning of its life.
- Excess angular momentum ended up in the orbital motion of the planets.
- An alien spaceship used tractor beams to slow the sun down.
- The crash of many comets into the sun caused it to slow down the rotation.
8. During a Type II supernova the interior
of the star collapses into a neutron star. Which of the following statements
on the neutron star are not true? More than one correct answers
- The neutron star spins much more rapidly than the original star.
- The neutron star is heavier than the original star.
- The neutron star has a much stronger magnetic field than the original
star.
- The neutron star is much brighter than the original star.
9. Material from a neighboring star
is falling towards a black hole. While it is closing in on the black hole the
material is gaining
- angular momentum
- gravitational energy
- kinetic energy
- magnetic energy
10. Boston Globe science page headline:
"Another candidate for a black hole found". Which of the following remarks in
the article contain the crucial information that makes astronomers believe they
found a black hole and not a neutron star?
- An X-ray emitting star was found in a gas cloud.
- It turned out that the star system is an X-ray emitting binary with a
visible and an invisible component.
- From the motion of the binary stars the mass of the invisible component
was determined to be at least 8 times the mass of the sun.
- The star seems to be in the center of an ancient supernova remnant.
11. A star is fighting a battle against
gravity. But gravity helps the star during its lifetime. How does gravity help
a star?
- Gravity makes the star slowly shrink and get dimmer, so the star conserves
its nuclear fuel.
- Gravity is responsible for the high pressure in the star's core, which
makes it hot and dense enough to keep nuclear fusion going.
- Shrinkage due to gravity is the only energy source of a star.
- Gravity attracts photons that are reflected on the star's surface and
thus makes it shine.
12. The color of a star is determined
by its
- Its distance
- Its temperature
- Its size
- Its Age
13. In the Hertzsprung -Russell diagram
below, where are the youngest stars?

14. If the Hertzsprung -Russell diagram
above were that of a star cluster at the age of 2 billion years, there would
be
- no stars in the lower right portion of the main sequence.
- no stars in the upper right corner.
- stars along the entire main sequence.
- no stars in the upper left corner of the main sequence.
15. Stars on the main sequence that
have a small mass are found
- in the upper left.
- in the center of the main sequence.
- in the lower right.
- throughout the entire main sequence, because the position on the main
sequence only tells us the star's age.
16. A star has a temperature of 40,000K.
(The sun's surface temperature is 5,800K. ) Most of the star's energy is emitted
at
- ultraviolet wavelengths.
- infrared wavelengths.
- radio wavelengths.
17. The detection of a White Dwarf
with a mass of 2 times the mass of the sun has been announced in a newspaper.
What is your response to the article?
- Oh this is the most massive White Dwarf that has been found.
- Not interesting, there are millions of White Dwarfs with similar masses.
- They got it wrong. White Dwarfs cannot hold more than 1. 4 solar masses.
- This is the smallest White Dwarf that has ever been found.
18. What will happen to our Earth when
the sun turns into a red giant?
- It will become cold on Earth since the sun runs out of fuel and turns
red, i.e. cooler on its surface.
- There will be many earthquakes and volcano eruptions because the rapid
growth of the sun shakes the Earth violently.
- The Earth will become a hot desert because of the increased luminosity
of the sun and finally may be swallowed by the giant sun.
- The Earth will be pushed farther away from the sun when it expands into
a red giant.
19. What are planetary nebulae?
- Clouds of planetary material around stars.
- Interplanetary gas clouds orbiting a star at a great distance.
- Dust storms observed on planets.
- Gas clouds, which are ejected from stars in the late stage of their life.
20. The supernova is the end of a heavy
star, which has exhausted all its available nuclear fuel. What is the energy
source of the tremendous event?
- Nuclear fission energy as in a uranium atomic bomb.
- The energy of the gravitational field of the star when it collapses to
a tiny body.
- Energy from annihilation of matter and antimatter.
- Supernovae get their energy from gigantic space battles with phasers and
photon torpedos.
21. The composition of heavy elements
found in planets, meteorites, the stars and the interplanetary gas can be explained
by
- how many times protons collided with other protons during the beginning
of the universe.
- chemical reactions in the interstellar gas.
- the sequence of nuclear reactions during the life of the stars and recycling
of some of the stars' material.
- the horrendous nuclear reactions inside massive black holes in the centers
of galaxies.
22. The gravity of a white dwarf and
therefore pressure of its material in the center is enormous. What keeps it
from collapsing?
- Centrifugal force, due to its rapid rotation.
- Intense nuclear fusion throughout the star.
- The huge degeneracy pressure exerted by electrons.
- A White Dwarf is all iron, and iron is stable enough to keep the star
from collapsing.
23. Channel 11 broadcasts "How to squeeze
Mt. Washington into a sugar cube?". What will the broadcasting probably be about?
- A very efficient food packing technique.
- The formation of the sun out of the interstellar gas.
- The formation of a neutron star.
- The formation of a white dwarf
24. A pulsar, although a dead star,
radiates an enormous energy in its pulses. What is its energy source?
- The decay of its strong magnetic field is the energy source.
- All pulsars will shrink further under their gravity and send pulses until
they turn into black holes.
- The slowing down of the fast rotation of the pulsars through magnetic
braking feeds the radiation of pulsars.
- Pulsars are strong radio transmitters of other civilizations in the galaxy
that use energy techniques yet unknown to us.
25. The space ship in the following
figure soars through space at 50% of the speed of light.
All four scientists can directly measure the speed
of the light that comes from the light source inside the space ship. Who will
find the slowest speed?

e. Nonsense, all four will measure the same speed.
26. Why can't we ever get an object
to move faster than the speed of light?
- When an object is moving almost at the speed of light, any added energy
goes into increasing the object's mass, rather than its speed.
- When an object is moving almost at the speed of light we can't see it,
so we don't know where to push.
- When an object is moving almost at the speed of light, all the light,
which it reflects, exerts such high radiation pressure that we can't get it
faster.
- When an object is moving almost at the speed of light, it generates strong
gravitational waves that it looses all the additional energy immediately.
It therefore is not accelerated any further.
27. In the age of widespread interstellar
travel a biologist experiments with turtles which normally live for about 300
years. To extend his life in order to see the results of his experiments at
the end of the turtles' lives the scientist decides to make use of the relativistic
time effects at high speeds. What does he do?
- He takes his turtles along on an extended space trip, since then he will
live as long as the turtles.
- He sends the turtles on an extended space trip, since the time and the
life of the turtles will be accelerated at high speeds.
- He goes on an extended space trip, since his time and thus his life span
will be stretched at high speeds.
28. The mass provides an object with
inertia, i.e. its ability to resist a force that tries to accelerate
it, and with gravitation, i.e. its ability to attract other objects or
to be attracted. Einstein's theory of general relativity is based upon the principle
that
- the gravitational mass is greater than the inertial mass of an object
- the gravitational mass is less than the inertial mass of an object
- the gravitational and the inertial mass of an object are the same
- the gravitational mass is positive and the inertial mass is negative
29. A test of Einstein's theory of
general relativity was first performed
- on the extended space flights of the Voyagers to the outer solar system.
- by observing the deflection of starlight in the gravitational field of
the sun during a solar eclipse.
- by observing the rotation of the sun.
- by experiments with rockets in the earth's gravitational field.
30. An object in space from which even
light cannot escape is called a
- Planetary Nebulae
- Black Hole
- Neutron Star
31. How can we ever hope to detect
the presence of a black hole?
- Gamma rays are the most energetic radiation. We will still find gamma
rays coming out of the black hole.
- The strong gravity of the black hole affects objects in its vicinity.
That is what we will see.
- Neutrinos will escape from the black hole, since they do not interact
with matter.
- We have to search for absolutely black spots in the sky.
32. Consider that photons are bunches
of energy and that energy is equivalent to mass. Note that
high energy of photon <-> short wavelength
low energy of photon <-> long wavelength
If you take a spectrum of a white dwarf (very strong gravity),
how would you see the spectral lines?
- The spectral lines are in the same location in the spectrum as in the
laboratory.
- The lines are blue-shifted, since the photons gain energy in the gravity
field.
- The lines are red-shifted, since the photons loose energy in the gravity
field.
- No light escapes from a white dwarf.
33. What kind of galaxy is our Milky
Way galaxy?
- Elliptical.
- Spiral.
- Irregular.
- Dwarf.
- Unknown, since we can't see it from outside.
34. How do we know that we live in
a disc shaped galaxy?
- We see that all the other galaxies are disc shaped.
- All globular clusters of the Milky Way galaxy are arranged in a band across
the sky.
- We see the stars of the Milky Way arranged in a band across the sky.
- Astronomers have observed our Milky Way galaxy from all sides during a
full orbit of the solar system about the center of the galaxy.
35. Where is the center of our Milky
Way galaxy in the following figure? (Click on the appropriate point in the image)

36. What was the reason that Herschel
and Kapteyn came to the wrong conclusion that we are in the center of the Milky
Way?
- They saw that all stars in the galaxy were orbiting around the sun.
- They had the religious belief that our solar system was the center of
the universe.
- Stars beyond a certain distance are obscured by interstellar dust and
cannot be seen.
- Their distance measurements of the stars were wrong.
37. Cepheid variables are important
to us in calculating
- the ages of globular clusters.
- the distances to galaxies.
- the sizes of stars.
- the composition of the interstellar medium.
- the masses of stars.
38. The Hubble team in the press announces
the observation of two supernovae of Type I in two different galaxies. You read
that the supernova in galaxy A reached 4 times the brightness than the supernova
in galaxy B. You conclude:
- The supernova in galaxy A is 4 times more luminous than the one in galaxy
B.
- Galaxy B is 4 times farther away than galaxy A.
- Galaxy B is 2 times farther away than galaxy A.
39. A new galaxy is observed with the
Hubble space telescope. It has no gas and dust, and it contains no young stars.
Which type is this galaxy?
- spiral galaxy
- barred spiral galaxy
- elliptical galaxy
- irregular galaxy
40. During a collision of 2 galaxies
a lot of things may happen in this turmoil. What will happen to the stars in
this region?
- Because the density of stars is increased during the galaxy collision,
many stars will collide.
- Because the stars of one galaxy feel the gravity of the many stars of
the other galaxy, they will be drawn into the other galaxy.
- Because the distances between stars in a galaxy are so large, the stars
will travel through the other galaxy unharmed and stay with their own galaxy.
41. Here is a view of a spiral galaxy
seen edge-on. Photons from one side of the galaxy are red-shifted, while
photons from the other side of the galaxy are blue-shifted, as shown. What do
you conclude?

- The galaxy is moving away from us.
- The galaxy is expanding.
- There is more dust on the right side than the left side.
- The galaxy is rotating.
42. Astronomers have concluded that
there is a missing mass problem in galaxy clusters. What is the reason for this
conclusion?
- The galaxy clusters do not have enough mass to produce the energy they
emit.
- All galaxy clusters are moving away from us, and this indicates that there
is not enough mass to keep them from flying away from us.
- The velocities of the individual galaxies in the clusters are so high
that the sum of the masses of all individual galaxies would not be enough
to keep the galaxy clusters together.
43. Clusters with only elliptical galaxies
show a bright X-ray emission, homogeneously distributed over the entire cluster
region. This is evidence for
- black holes in each of the galaxy centers.
- the young age of the galaxies which then were extremely hot.
- collisions between galaxies, which have driven all gas and dust out of
the galaxies and left behind a huge cloud of extremely hot gas.
- galactic star wars which must have wiped out all the civilizations in
the member galaxies of these clusters.
44. In their survey of the structure
of the universe Margret Geller and John Huchra found that distant galaxies are
- evenly distributed throughout the universe with no obvious structuring.
- concentrated around the Milky Way galaxy and that much less are found
farther away.
- concentrated along the surfaces of giant bubbles that seem to be empty
in their interior.
- only found in one direction, namely the center of the universe.
45. Why do we believe there are very
massive objects (possibly super-massive black holes) at the centers of galaxies?
- The centers of galaxies are very dark.
- Stars have been observed to disappear from view.
- Doppler measurements show that there are very rapid motions around the
centers of galaxies, and a very massive object is needed to keep things from
flying away.
- Recently astronomers have been able to detect the black hole in the center
of our galaxy on an infrared picture.
46. With the Big Bang model scientists
describe
- the explosion of a supernova.
- the cataclysmic end of the universe.
- the supersonic bang of the Earth's bow shock in the solar wind.
- the formation and the evolution of the entire universe.
47. You want to compute the distance
of a celestial object by the use of a "Standard Ruler" method. Which
parameters of the object do you have to determine?
- the size and the mass of the object
- the actual size of the object and the angular size in the sky
- the mass and the velocity of the object
- the velocity of the object and the angular size in the sky
- the luminosity and the apparent magnitude of the object
48. Quasars were found as the objects
with the largest red shift in the universe. From this we can conclude
- that they are objects of the early universe because large red shift means
a large distance and thus their light traveled for a long time.
- that they must be much more massive than galaxies because they move away
from us so fast.
- nothing, because this is not enough information.
49. Quasars produce the energy of several
100 galaxies, i.e. greater than 1013 suns in a region the size of
the solar system. What is the most likely energy source?
- A star with the mass of 10000 suns can produce this luminosity with nuclear
fusion according to the mass-luminosity relationship of stars.
- The reconnection of strong magnetic fields provides the energy.
- The accretion of enormous amounts of mass into a giant black hole with
the speed of light provides the most efficient energy source for this purpose.
- The quasars are giant wormholes out of which the energy from other universes
flows into our universe.
50. Which observation taken from quasars
tells us that the size of the energy-emitting region must be smaller than the
size of our solar system?
- Hubble space telescope has measured the size of the quasar centers directly.
- The luminosity of some quasars varies strongly within one day. Thus their
size can only be as large as the distance light can travel in one day.
- Quasars are so bright that we can measure their angular sizes with a good
telescope on Earth.
- Radiotelescopes have been used to measure the size of quasars with a radar
technique by bouncing strong radio pulses off a quasar.
51. Which age problem of the universe
has emerged through recent observations?
- The oldest rocks are 4. 5 billion years old, but bible interpreters say
the Earth can only be 4500 years old
- Stars cannot have enough fuel to be still seen for a universe several
billion years old.
- Derived from Hubble space telescope observations the expansion of the
universe seems to be younger than the oldest stars.
52. The early universe was
- dark and cold, since there were no stars yet.
- very hot, because everything must have been very compressed, and compressed
material is hot.
- empty, since nothing had been created yet.
- looked the same as today, since the universe can never change.
53. The age of the universe can be
derived from Hubble's Law. In which way?
- From the velocity and distance of galaxies in Hubble's Law we can compute
the time it took for the galaxies to reach their present distance. This is
close to the age of the universe.
- The galaxies with the largest red shift must be the oldest things in
the universe. Knowing their distance in light years give the age of the universe
in years.
- From the distance, mass and velocity of the galaxies we can calculate
how much time was needed to accelerate them to the present velocity. This
is close to the age of the universe.
54. If the average density of the universe
is higher than the critical density, the universe
- will expand forever.
- will eventually collapse.
- is a steady state universe.
- violates the laws of mass conservation.
55. The stuff of the early universe
was very compressed. What was the state of the original stuff of the universe?
- Since it was incredibly compressed, it must have been like a neutron star.
- Since compressed material had to be very hot, material was completely
disintegrated into energy. There was only radiation.
- Since it was incredibly compressed, it must have been like a white dwarf.
56. Which question is the "Anthropic
Principle" related to?
- The formation of the planets.
- The question why the universe is exactly the way that we are able to exist
in it.
- The evolution of the life on Earth.
- The evolution of our Milky Way galaxy.
- The search for extraterrestrial intelligence in the universe.
57. What do we mean by the "Horizon
Problem" of the universe?
- We cannot see beyond the edge of our universe and cannot get any information
from beyond the horizon of the universe.
- The background radiation is exactly the same in opposite directions, but
when the radiation was released no information could have made it from horizon
to horizon of the universe yet to make it the same.
- The universe is infinitely large. Therefore, it cannot have a horizon.
58. The 2. 7K background radiation is
extremely smooth, i.e. is the same from all directions. What does this tell
us?
- It shows that the universe looked the same all the time and that the Steady
State model of the universe is correct.
- It was quiet in the early universe and there was no explosion.
- There were so many stars in the early universe that their light was blurred
into one smear.
- The early universe was very uniform everywhere.
59. The 25% helium in the typical interstellar
material stems from
- nuclear fusion in stars
- nuclear reactions in the interstellar gas
- the exhaust of starships
- nuclear reactions during the first 3 minutes of the universe
60. Olbers' Paradox of the universe
refers to the fact that
- the universe expands, although gravity is pulling the galaxies together
- the sun is still shining, although it should have already used up its
energy sources
- the night sky is dark, although there is the same density of galaxies
everywhere in the universe and no limit to their distances had been found
yet
Bonus Question 1:
Why do have all the new planets that were found around other
stars, so far, have masses that are comparable to or are higher than that of
Jupiter?
- There are no planets smaller than Jupiter in orbit around other stars.
- These planets are so large that they could be directly seen through available
telescopes.
- Planets with such large masses are the easiest to detect, because they
cause the center star to move most visibly.
- Planets of the size of Jupiter emit their own light and thus can be seen
easily.
Bonus Question 2:
In a spiral arm of a galaxy a stream of material approaches
a region where the gravity is stronger, because the density of matter (interstellar
gas and stars) is higher here. What will happen to the stream of material while
it is passing this region?
- The density of the material remains constant, since no material can be
lost.
- The density of the material is lowered in the region with strong gravity,
since the material is slowed down and therefore the material flux is reduced.
- The density of the material is increased in the region with strong gravity,
since the material is slowed down, but the total flux of the material must
remain constant.