Exam 11: Measuring the Stars: Giants, Dwarfs, and the Main Sequence
Exam 1: Charting the Heavens: the Foundations of Astronomy108 Questions
Exam 2: The Copernican Revolution: the Birth of Modern Science68 Questions
Exam 3: Light and Matter: the Inner Workings of the Cosmos112 Questions
Exam 4: Telescopes: the Tools of Astronomy99 Questions
Exam 5: The Solar System: Interplanetary Matter and the Birth of the Planets148 Questions
Exam 6: Earth and Its Moon: Our Cosmic Backyard149 Questions
Exam 7: The Terrestrial Planets: a Study in Contrasts132 Questions
Exam 8: The Jovian Planets: Giants of the Solar System123 Questions
Exam 9: Moons, Rings, and Plutoids: Small Worlds Among Giants161 Questions
Exam 10: The Sun: Our Parent Star124 Questions
Exam 11: Measuring the Stars: Giants, Dwarfs, and the Main Sequence154 Questions
Exam 12: The Interstellar Medium: Star Formation in the Milky Way128 Questions
Exam 13: Stellar Evolution: the Lives and Deaths of Stars167 Questions
Exam 14: Neutron Stars and Black Holes: Strange States of Matter131 Questions
Exam 15: The Milky Way Galaxy: a Spiral in Space166 Questions
Exam 16: Normal and Active Galaxies: Building Blocks of the Universe175 Questions
Exam 17: Hubbles Law and Dark Matter: the Large-Scale Structure of the Cosmos119 Questions
Exam 18: Cosmology: the Big Bang and the Fate of the Universe150 Questions
Exam 19: Life in the Universe: Are We Alone114 Questions
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How does a star's luminosity relate to its radius and surface temperature?
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Contrast finding the distances to seventh magnitude M3V and M3Ib stars.
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From coolest to hottest, the seven letters for the star types are .
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Studies of a star's position made on the same calendar date over subsequent years yield
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The mass of a newly formed star will determine its position on the main sequence.
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Why do the spectra of stars differ, if they are all chiefly hydrogen and helium?
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A star system where we observe the magnitude to increase and decrease is a(n) .
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Compared to the size of the Sun, stars of all types range from
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If a G2 star is 100 times as luminous as our Sun, it must be times the Sun's diameter.
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How much brighter will a 4th magnitude star appear than a 6th magnitude star?
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At its brightest, Venus, at magnitude - 4, is 100 times brighter than a 1st magnitude star.
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If we know the average separation and period of revolution for a binary system, we can then measure
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If a binary is detected by periodic shifts in its spectral lines, it is a(n) _ _ binary.
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Why is it difficult to directly measure the size of a star's disk from Earth?
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Deneb's estimated distance of 1400 light- years comes from spectroscopic parallax measurements.
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