Exam 2: Gravitation and the Motion of the Planets
Exam 1: Discovering the Night Sky374 Questions
Exam 2: Gravitation and the Motion of the Planets356 Questions
Exam 3: Light and Telescopes275 Questions
Exam 4: Atomic Physics and Spectra223 Questions
Exam 5: Exoplanets and the Formation of Planetary Systems98 Questions
Exam 6: Formation of the Solar System121 Questions
Exam 7: Earth and the Moon305 Questions
Exam 8: The Other Terrestrial Planets265 Questions
Exam 9: The Outer Planets360 Questions
Exam 10: Vagabonds of the Solar System198 Questions
Exam 11: The Sun: Our Extraordinary Star248 Questions
Exam 12: Characterizing Stars254 Questions
Exam 13: The Lives of Stars From Birth Through Middle Age325 Questions
Exam 14: The Death of Stars235 Questions
Exam 15: Black Holes: Matters of Gravity178 Questions
Exam 16: The Milky Way Galaxy157 Questions
Exam 17: Galaxies207 Questions
Exam 18: Quasars and Other Active Galaxies118 Questions
Exam 19: Cosmology217 Questions
Exam 20: Astrobiology71 Questions
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In science, if new and reliable observations disagree with a well-established theory, then the
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Comet Halley returns to the Sun's vicinity approximately every 76 years in an elliptical orbit. According to Kepler's third law, what is the semimajor axis of this orbit?
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According to Galileo's observations of Venus, when Venus is at full phase, its angular size
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The first person to realize that the force holding us onto Earth is the same force that holds the solar system together was apparently
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The International Space Station is in orbit around Earth. If an astronaut aboard the station releases an object in mid-air, it will
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Which of these planetary configurations is impossible for an inferior planet?
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The angular momentum of an object depends on which of these sets of factors?
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Two of Kepler's laws of planetary motion applied to Earth are that the line from the Sun to Earth sweeps out equal areas in equal times and that Earth's orbit is an ellipse with the Sun at one focus. One consequence of these laws is that the
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Where and when would Jupiter be seen from Earth when it is at opposition?
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Light from fires that were lit at the time of the Battle of Hastings in England in A.D. 1066 has traveled out into space at the speed of light. How far out into space has this light now reached, compared to the distances to the 20 brightest stars?
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The simplified version of Kepler's third law of planetary motion relates the period P (in sidereal years) to the length of the semimajor axis a (in astronomical units) in which way?
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The time period between two successive passages of a planet through the position of opposition is
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When viewed from Earth, the celestial sphere (the background of stars) moves east to west on a daily basis. This motion is caused by the
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When observing planetary motions from Earth, the phrase "retrograde motion" refers to the
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As seen by an observer on Saturn (or one of its moons), which of these planets can never pass through inferior conjunction?
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