Deck 6: Earth and Its Moon: Our Cosmic Backyard

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Question
The continuing rise of carbon dioxide concentration in our troposphere is leading to worldwide cooling as dry ice forms at the poles.
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Question
Greenhouse gases in our atmosphere trap just enough heat to keep the Earth's oceans liquid.
Question
The Earth's hotter, inner core is liquid and its cooler, outer core is solid.
Question
The Moon's surface gravity is only half the Earth's.
Question
Due to its larger mass, the Sun's gravitational effect on Earth's tides is greater than the Moon's.
Question
Neap tides occur at first and third quarter phases of the Moon.
Question
Compared to Earth, the Moon lacks a hydrosphere, atmosphere, and a magnetosphere.
Question
In most places on the seacoast, there are two high and two low tides a day.
Question
The Moon's lower density indicates it has a smaller concentration of iron in its core, as does the absence of a lunar magnetic field.
Question
Weather occurs in the troposphere.
Question
The Earth and Moon always keep the same side towards each other.
Question
The ozone layer lies above the troposphere and below the mesosphere.
Question
Our Earth is about four times larger than the Moon in diameter.
Question
Seismic P- waves can travel through both solid and liquid materials.
Question
The tidal pull of the Moon is an example of a differential force, as the near and far sides of the Earth do not experience the same gravitational pull of the Moon.
Question
Spring tides occur only at new Moon, when the Moon and Sun pull together.
Question
The three most abundant gases in our atmosphere are nitrogen, oxygen, and argon.
Question
The Earth's inner core is about the same temperature as the surface of the Sun.
Question
On average, the Moon orbits Earth from a distance of about 30 Earth radii.
Question
The Moon keeps one side facing the Earth because it doesn't rotate on its axis.
Question
The Van Allen belts are cloud layers in the jet streams of the stratosphere, similar to the belts that Galileo saw on Jupiter.
Question
In the past, most of the landmass on Earth was concentrated in a single, large continent.
Question
One source of the energy for volcanism and plate tectonics is radioactivity in the Earth's interior.
Question
Seismic P- waves can be detected worldwide from any strong epicenter.
Question
The lunar mare are younger than any of the craters that sit in them.
Question
The lunar highlands appear brighter than the mare, because these highlands are due to meteor impact that completely avoided the mare.
Question
Early telescopic observers thought the lunar mare were seas of water; today we know they are not liquid water but molten basalt, long ago frozen out.
Question
Which of the following layers of the Earth is unique among the terrestrial planets?

A) hydrosphere
B) mantle
C) crust
D) ionosphere
E) core
Question
Samples of the Earth's molten outer core come directly through the mantle, pour out of volcanoes, and can be studied in labs.
Question
Today most scientists favor the capture theory of the Moon's origin, since it would explain why the Moon still orbits in the ecliptic plane, as do other planets.
Question
Most lunar craters are volcanic in origin.
Question
The Moon and the crustal rocks of Earth are similar in density.
Question
When plates collide, they fuse together and come to rest.
Question
At what phase would you expect to find extremely high and low tides?

A) new moon
B) both new and full moons
C) first and third quarter
D) full moon
E) Moon phases do not impact the tides.
Question
There is no evidence for plate tectonics on the Moon today.
Question
Seismic S- waves can travel through Earth's liquid outer core.
Question
What is true of spring tides?

A) The difference between low and high tides would be greatest.
B) The third quarter moon would be high overhead at dawn.
C) There would be one high and one low tide each day.
D) The difference between low and high tides would be smallest.
E) The Moon's phase will be first quarter.
Question
The lunar mare radioactively date back to 4.6 billion years, at the origin of the Moon, hence their dark color due to this aging.
Question
The crust on the near side of the Moon is on average thinner than the crust on the far side, due to our tidal pull on the Moon.
Question
A seismograph could register P but not S waves from an epicenter on the opposite side of the Earth.
Question
The smallest high tides occur when the Moon phase is

A) new.
B) first or third quarter.
C) waxing or waning gibbous.
D) waxing or waning crescent.
E) full.
Question
The average rate of erosion on the Moon is far less than on Earth because

A) the Moon is much younger than the Earth.
B) the Moon lacks wind, water, and an atmosphere.
C) the Moon's mare long ago dried up, so there is no more wave erosion there.
D) the Moon's magnetic field protects it from the solar wind better than ours does.
E) the crust of the Moon is much denser than the Earth's crust.
Question
Which statement about seismic waves is true?

A) Only S waves can travel through liquid.
B) On the far side of the Earth, only the S waves on the surface can be detected.
C) P waves travel faster, and thus arrive sooner than do the S waves.
D) In the shadow zones, neither type is observed.
E) S waves can travel though the outer core, but P waves cannot.
Question
Without the greenhouse effect operating in our atmosphere,

A) the Earth would have become much more like Venus long ago.
B) we would not have to worry about any warming problems in the future.
C) the ice in the polar regions would have melted long ago.
D) the ozone layer would not be weakening.
E) Earth would have an average temperature of - 23 degrees Celsius.
Question
In what part of our atmosphere do we live?

A) stratosphere
B) exosphere
C) troposphere
D) mesosphere
E) ionosphere
Question
At what phase are the tides least noticeable?

A) third quarter
B) new moon
C) waxing crescent
D) waning gibbous
E) full moon
Question
After the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) crashed into the moon, its sister spacecraft LCROSS detected an amount of water in the ejecta

A) less than is contained in desert sand on Earth.
B) comparable to soggy ground on Earth.
C) comparable to fertile soil on Earth.
D) comparable to dried- up lake beds on Earth.
E) Actually, no water was detected at all.
Question
What is true of the Moon's orbital and rotational periods?

A) The orbital period is greatest at full moon.
B) The rotational period is longer.
C) They are equal.
D) The rotational period varies with the Moon's phase.
E) The orbital period is longer.
Question
Which of these gases is least abundant in our atmosphere?

A) oxygen
B) argon
C) carbon dioxide
D) hydrogen
E) nitrogen
Question
The atmospheric gases primarily responsible for our greenhouse effect are

A) argon and water vapor.
B) hydrogen and helium.
C) water vapor and carbon dioxide.
D) carbon monoxide and methane.
E) oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Question
The major presence of water detected on the Moon is in

A) the puffs of steam seen coming from some still active lunar volcanoes.
B) the flows of mud seen on the walls of some craters.
C) the floors of deep craters in the polar regions, as ice deposits that never thaw.
D) the mare.
E) faint clouds of ice in the thin lunar atmosphere.
Question
Almost all of our atmospheric gases lie in the

A) troposphere.
B) ionosphere.
C) mesosphere.
D) stratosphere.
E) ozone layer.
Question
Today, an average lunar moonquake releases about as much energy as

A) the most powerful earthquake ever recorded.
B) a firecracker.
C) the Mount St. Helens eruption.
D) a major U.S. city uses in 1 year.
E) an atomic bomb.
Question
We determine the structure of the Earth's core using

A) radar and sonar.
B) satellite imaging.
C) magnetic resonance imaging.
D) deep mine shafts.
E) seismic wave data.
Question
The critical part of the atmosphere for protecting life on the ground from excessive ultraviolet radiation is the

A) ozone layer.
B) ionosphere.
C) hydrosphere.
D) stratosphere.
E) troposphere.
Question
The Moon's near side always faces Earth due to

A) Earth's magnetic field.
B) the Sun's gravity.
C) the solar wind.
D) conservation of angular momentum in the solar nebula.
E) Earth's tidal force.
Question
Seismic waves are most useful for mapping

A) the surface of Venus with Magellan.
B) the depths of the oceans.
C) the surface of Mars with Global Surveyor.
D) the Earth's core and mantle.
E) the density of the hydrosphere.
Question
Which of these is NOT a result of plate tectonics?

A) the San Andreas Fault
B) the Grand Canyon
C) the Andes
D) the Philippine Trench
E) the Mid- Atlantic Rift
Question
What is the average molecular speed of hydrogen (mass = 1) on Earth (temperature = 300 K)?

A) 4.71 km/s
B) 2.72 m/s
C) 2.72 km/s
D) 4.71 m/s
E) none of the above
Question
In noting that the Earth is "differentiated," we mean that

A) the radioactive heating in the core is increasing with time.
B) the Earth's magnetic field varies at different locations on the globe.
C) the Earth is very different than any other planet we study.
D) the density increases as you descend downward toward the core.
E) the density of oceanic basalt is less than that of granite on the mountain tops.
Question
The lunar mare are found

A) mainly on the near side.
B) mainly on the far side.
C) only in the dark areas of the lunar poles, where water is not boiled away.
D) only as layered rocks, since the original water was lost long ago.
E) uniformly all over the Moon.
Question
radiation is trapped close to our surface by the greenhouse effect.

A) Ultraviolet
B) X- ray
C) Gamma ray
D) Radio
E) Infrared
Question
The most abundant gas in the Earth's atmosphere is

A) nitrogen.
B) water vapor.
C) oxygen.
D) hydrogen.
E) helium.
Question
Which of these theories seems to best explain the Moon's origin?

A) Fission Theory
B) Fusion Theory
C) Capture Theory
D) Impact Theory
E) Coformation Theory
Question
Which statement about our core is FALSE?

A) It generates a stable and permanent magnetic field much as a regular bar magnet.
B) The seismic data indicates the outer portion is liquid, the inner part solid.
C) It is almost as hot as the Sun's glowing surface, the photosphere.
D) It must be rich in both iron and nickel.
E) Its magnetic field generates the protective Van Allen radiation Belts.
Question
The far side of the Moon was first mapped

A) by the Apollo astronauts on the first orbit of the Moon with Apollo 8.
B) by Galileo in 1610 with his first telescope.
C) by NASA with its Lunar Orbiters in the 1960s.
D) by early Russian spacecraft.
E) by William Herschel with his large reflectors in the early 1800s.
Question
Weather always occurs in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the

A) stratosphere.
B) thermosphere.
C) ionosphere.
D) troposphere.
E) mesosphere.
Question
has the largest gravitational pull on Earth.

A) Mars
B) The Moon
C) Jupiter
D) Venus
E) The Sun
Question
The ozone layer blocks much of the Sun's radiation.

A) X- ray
B) ultraviolet
C) infrared
D) gamma ray
E) radio
Question
Which of these age ranges best describes the lunar maria?

A) 3.9 - 3.2 billion years
B) 100 - 65 million years
C) 2.5 - 1.0 billion years
D) 8.6 - 6.0 billion years
E) a few million years to present lava flows seen erupting
Question
The tides occur when there is little tidal variation, near first and third quarter moons.
Question
When strong solar winds are displaced poleward by our magnetic fields, we get

A) sunspots.
B) intense auroral displays.
C) the Van Allen radiation belts.
D) droughts and dust bowls in the American West.
E) hurricanes in the tropics.
Question
The region in which charged particles are trapped by our magnetic fields is the

A) ionosphere.
B) ozone layers.
C) exosphere.
D) Aurora.
E) Van Allen radiation belt.
Question
What is true of the lunar highlands?

A) They are younger than the darker mare.
B) They are the darker regions of the Moon seen with the naked eye.
C) They are less heavily cratered than the mare.
D) They are the oldest part of the lunar surface.
E) They are found on the Moon's northern hemisphere.
Question
The oldest rocks found on the Earth's surface date back about billion years.

A) one
B) two
C) three
D) four
E) four and a half
Question
Earth's magnetic field

A) is weakening the Van Allen radiation belts.
B) is the force behind plate tectonics.
C) prevents charged particles in the solar wind from reaching the surface.
D) is a remnant of the solar nebula's magnetic field.
E) lines intersect the atmosphere at the equator.
Question
The presence of a magnetic field is a good indication that

A) the Earth's interior must be completely molten to the center.
B) the Earth's interior has had time to solidify, with a rigid bar magnet created.
C) the Earth's interior is similar to Mercury's, as both have fields.
D) a huge iron meteorite lies somewhere high up in the mantle, not in the core.
E) the Earth has a liquid metal outer core, spinning rapidly as it rotates.
Question
The rate of cratering in the lunar highlands shows us that

A) the largest impacts are the youngest, such as Copernicus and Tycho.
B) most of the asteroids must have hit the Moon, not the Earth.
C) they must be younger than the older, darker mare.
D) the oldest rocks are at least as old as the mare, but some craters are much younger.
E) they range from 4.6 - 4.4 billion years old, on average.
Question
The Sun reinforces the Moon's tidal pull during tides.

A) spring
B) ebb
C) slack
D) quarter
E) neap
Question
The bulk density of the Moon is than that of the Earth it orbits.
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Deck 6: Earth and Its Moon: Our Cosmic Backyard
1
The continuing rise of carbon dioxide concentration in our troposphere is leading to worldwide cooling as dry ice forms at the poles.
False
2
Greenhouse gases in our atmosphere trap just enough heat to keep the Earth's oceans liquid.
True
3
The Earth's hotter, inner core is liquid and its cooler, outer core is solid.
False
4
The Moon's surface gravity is only half the Earth's.
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5
Due to its larger mass, the Sun's gravitational effect on Earth's tides is greater than the Moon's.
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6
Neap tides occur at first and third quarter phases of the Moon.
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7
Compared to Earth, the Moon lacks a hydrosphere, atmosphere, and a magnetosphere.
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8
In most places on the seacoast, there are two high and two low tides a day.
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9
The Moon's lower density indicates it has a smaller concentration of iron in its core, as does the absence of a lunar magnetic field.
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10
Weather occurs in the troposphere.
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11
The Earth and Moon always keep the same side towards each other.
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12
The ozone layer lies above the troposphere and below the mesosphere.
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13
Our Earth is about four times larger than the Moon in diameter.
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14
Seismic P- waves can travel through both solid and liquid materials.
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15
The tidal pull of the Moon is an example of a differential force, as the near and far sides of the Earth do not experience the same gravitational pull of the Moon.
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16
Spring tides occur only at new Moon, when the Moon and Sun pull together.
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17
The three most abundant gases in our atmosphere are nitrogen, oxygen, and argon.
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18
The Earth's inner core is about the same temperature as the surface of the Sun.
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19
On average, the Moon orbits Earth from a distance of about 30 Earth radii.
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20
The Moon keeps one side facing the Earth because it doesn't rotate on its axis.
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21
The Van Allen belts are cloud layers in the jet streams of the stratosphere, similar to the belts that Galileo saw on Jupiter.
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22
In the past, most of the landmass on Earth was concentrated in a single, large continent.
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23
One source of the energy for volcanism and plate tectonics is radioactivity in the Earth's interior.
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24
Seismic P- waves can be detected worldwide from any strong epicenter.
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25
The lunar mare are younger than any of the craters that sit in them.
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26
The lunar highlands appear brighter than the mare, because these highlands are due to meteor impact that completely avoided the mare.
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27
Early telescopic observers thought the lunar mare were seas of water; today we know they are not liquid water but molten basalt, long ago frozen out.
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28
Which of the following layers of the Earth is unique among the terrestrial planets?

A) hydrosphere
B) mantle
C) crust
D) ionosphere
E) core
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29
Samples of the Earth's molten outer core come directly through the mantle, pour out of volcanoes, and can be studied in labs.
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30
Today most scientists favor the capture theory of the Moon's origin, since it would explain why the Moon still orbits in the ecliptic plane, as do other planets.
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31
Most lunar craters are volcanic in origin.
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32
The Moon and the crustal rocks of Earth are similar in density.
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33
When plates collide, they fuse together and come to rest.
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34
At what phase would you expect to find extremely high and low tides?

A) new moon
B) both new and full moons
C) first and third quarter
D) full moon
E) Moon phases do not impact the tides.
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35
There is no evidence for plate tectonics on the Moon today.
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36
Seismic S- waves can travel through Earth's liquid outer core.
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37
What is true of spring tides?

A) The difference between low and high tides would be greatest.
B) The third quarter moon would be high overhead at dawn.
C) There would be one high and one low tide each day.
D) The difference between low and high tides would be smallest.
E) The Moon's phase will be first quarter.
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38
The lunar mare radioactively date back to 4.6 billion years, at the origin of the Moon, hence their dark color due to this aging.
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39
The crust on the near side of the Moon is on average thinner than the crust on the far side, due to our tidal pull on the Moon.
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40
A seismograph could register P but not S waves from an epicenter on the opposite side of the Earth.
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41
The smallest high tides occur when the Moon phase is

A) new.
B) first or third quarter.
C) waxing or waning gibbous.
D) waxing or waning crescent.
E) full.
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42
The average rate of erosion on the Moon is far less than on Earth because

A) the Moon is much younger than the Earth.
B) the Moon lacks wind, water, and an atmosphere.
C) the Moon's mare long ago dried up, so there is no more wave erosion there.
D) the Moon's magnetic field protects it from the solar wind better than ours does.
E) the crust of the Moon is much denser than the Earth's crust.
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43
Which statement about seismic waves is true?

A) Only S waves can travel through liquid.
B) On the far side of the Earth, only the S waves on the surface can be detected.
C) P waves travel faster, and thus arrive sooner than do the S waves.
D) In the shadow zones, neither type is observed.
E) S waves can travel though the outer core, but P waves cannot.
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44
Without the greenhouse effect operating in our atmosphere,

A) the Earth would have become much more like Venus long ago.
B) we would not have to worry about any warming problems in the future.
C) the ice in the polar regions would have melted long ago.
D) the ozone layer would not be weakening.
E) Earth would have an average temperature of - 23 degrees Celsius.
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45
In what part of our atmosphere do we live?

A) stratosphere
B) exosphere
C) troposphere
D) mesosphere
E) ionosphere
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46
At what phase are the tides least noticeable?

A) third quarter
B) new moon
C) waxing crescent
D) waning gibbous
E) full moon
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47
After the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) crashed into the moon, its sister spacecraft LCROSS detected an amount of water in the ejecta

A) less than is contained in desert sand on Earth.
B) comparable to soggy ground on Earth.
C) comparable to fertile soil on Earth.
D) comparable to dried- up lake beds on Earth.
E) Actually, no water was detected at all.
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48
What is true of the Moon's orbital and rotational periods?

A) The orbital period is greatest at full moon.
B) The rotational period is longer.
C) They are equal.
D) The rotational period varies with the Moon's phase.
E) The orbital period is longer.
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49
Which of these gases is least abundant in our atmosphere?

A) oxygen
B) argon
C) carbon dioxide
D) hydrogen
E) nitrogen
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50
The atmospheric gases primarily responsible for our greenhouse effect are

A) argon and water vapor.
B) hydrogen and helium.
C) water vapor and carbon dioxide.
D) carbon monoxide and methane.
E) oxygen and carbon dioxide.
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51
The major presence of water detected on the Moon is in

A) the puffs of steam seen coming from some still active lunar volcanoes.
B) the flows of mud seen on the walls of some craters.
C) the floors of deep craters in the polar regions, as ice deposits that never thaw.
D) the mare.
E) faint clouds of ice in the thin lunar atmosphere.
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k this deck
52
Almost all of our atmospheric gases lie in the

A) troposphere.
B) ionosphere.
C) mesosphere.
D) stratosphere.
E) ozone layer.
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k this deck
53
Today, an average lunar moonquake releases about as much energy as

A) the most powerful earthquake ever recorded.
B) a firecracker.
C) the Mount St. Helens eruption.
D) a major U.S. city uses in 1 year.
E) an atomic bomb.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
We determine the structure of the Earth's core using

A) radar and sonar.
B) satellite imaging.
C) magnetic resonance imaging.
D) deep mine shafts.
E) seismic wave data.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
The critical part of the atmosphere for protecting life on the ground from excessive ultraviolet radiation is the

A) ozone layer.
B) ionosphere.
C) hydrosphere.
D) stratosphere.
E) troposphere.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
The Moon's near side always faces Earth due to

A) Earth's magnetic field.
B) the Sun's gravity.
C) the solar wind.
D) conservation of angular momentum in the solar nebula.
E) Earth's tidal force.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Seismic waves are most useful for mapping

A) the surface of Venus with Magellan.
B) the depths of the oceans.
C) the surface of Mars with Global Surveyor.
D) the Earth's core and mantle.
E) the density of the hydrosphere.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
Which of these is NOT a result of plate tectonics?

A) the San Andreas Fault
B) the Grand Canyon
C) the Andes
D) the Philippine Trench
E) the Mid- Atlantic Rift
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59
What is the average molecular speed of hydrogen (mass = 1) on Earth (temperature = 300 K)?

A) 4.71 km/s
B) 2.72 m/s
C) 2.72 km/s
D) 4.71 m/s
E) none of the above
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60
In noting that the Earth is "differentiated," we mean that

A) the radioactive heating in the core is increasing with time.
B) the Earth's magnetic field varies at different locations on the globe.
C) the Earth is very different than any other planet we study.
D) the density increases as you descend downward toward the core.
E) the density of oceanic basalt is less than that of granite on the mountain tops.
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61
The lunar mare are found

A) mainly on the near side.
B) mainly on the far side.
C) only in the dark areas of the lunar poles, where water is not boiled away.
D) only as layered rocks, since the original water was lost long ago.
E) uniformly all over the Moon.
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62
radiation is trapped close to our surface by the greenhouse effect.

A) Ultraviolet
B) X- ray
C) Gamma ray
D) Radio
E) Infrared
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63
The most abundant gas in the Earth's atmosphere is

A) nitrogen.
B) water vapor.
C) oxygen.
D) hydrogen.
E) helium.
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64
Which of these theories seems to best explain the Moon's origin?

A) Fission Theory
B) Fusion Theory
C) Capture Theory
D) Impact Theory
E) Coformation Theory
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65
Which statement about our core is FALSE?

A) It generates a stable and permanent magnetic field much as a regular bar magnet.
B) The seismic data indicates the outer portion is liquid, the inner part solid.
C) It is almost as hot as the Sun's glowing surface, the photosphere.
D) It must be rich in both iron and nickel.
E) Its magnetic field generates the protective Van Allen radiation Belts.
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66
The far side of the Moon was first mapped

A) by the Apollo astronauts on the first orbit of the Moon with Apollo 8.
B) by Galileo in 1610 with his first telescope.
C) by NASA with its Lunar Orbiters in the 1960s.
D) by early Russian spacecraft.
E) by William Herschel with his large reflectors in the early 1800s.
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67
Weather always occurs in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, the

A) stratosphere.
B) thermosphere.
C) ionosphere.
D) troposphere.
E) mesosphere.
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68
has the largest gravitational pull on Earth.

A) Mars
B) The Moon
C) Jupiter
D) Venus
E) The Sun
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69
The ozone layer blocks much of the Sun's radiation.

A) X- ray
B) ultraviolet
C) infrared
D) gamma ray
E) radio
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70
Which of these age ranges best describes the lunar maria?

A) 3.9 - 3.2 billion years
B) 100 - 65 million years
C) 2.5 - 1.0 billion years
D) 8.6 - 6.0 billion years
E) a few million years to present lava flows seen erupting
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71
The tides occur when there is little tidal variation, near first and third quarter moons.
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72
When strong solar winds are displaced poleward by our magnetic fields, we get

A) sunspots.
B) intense auroral displays.
C) the Van Allen radiation belts.
D) droughts and dust bowls in the American West.
E) hurricanes in the tropics.
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73
The region in which charged particles are trapped by our magnetic fields is the

A) ionosphere.
B) ozone layers.
C) exosphere.
D) Aurora.
E) Van Allen radiation belt.
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74
What is true of the lunar highlands?

A) They are younger than the darker mare.
B) They are the darker regions of the Moon seen with the naked eye.
C) They are less heavily cratered than the mare.
D) They are the oldest part of the lunar surface.
E) They are found on the Moon's northern hemisphere.
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75
The oldest rocks found on the Earth's surface date back about billion years.

A) one
B) two
C) three
D) four
E) four and a half
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76
Earth's magnetic field

A) is weakening the Van Allen radiation belts.
B) is the force behind plate tectonics.
C) prevents charged particles in the solar wind from reaching the surface.
D) is a remnant of the solar nebula's magnetic field.
E) lines intersect the atmosphere at the equator.
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77
The presence of a magnetic field is a good indication that

A) the Earth's interior must be completely molten to the center.
B) the Earth's interior has had time to solidify, with a rigid bar magnet created.
C) the Earth's interior is similar to Mercury's, as both have fields.
D) a huge iron meteorite lies somewhere high up in the mantle, not in the core.
E) the Earth has a liquid metal outer core, spinning rapidly as it rotates.
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78
The rate of cratering in the lunar highlands shows us that

A) the largest impacts are the youngest, such as Copernicus and Tycho.
B) most of the asteroids must have hit the Moon, not the Earth.
C) they must be younger than the older, darker mare.
D) the oldest rocks are at least as old as the mare, but some craters are much younger.
E) they range from 4.6 - 4.4 billion years old, on average.
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79
The Sun reinforces the Moon's tidal pull during tides.

A) spring
B) ebb
C) slack
D) quarter
E) neap
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80
The bulk density of the Moon is than that of the Earth it orbits.
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