Deck 13: The Milky Way Galaxy

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Question
Motions of objects near our Galaxy's core suggest the central black hole is about 3.7 billion solar masses.
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Question
In our vicinity, the Galactic disk is about 100 times wider than it is thick.
Question
Shapley found the Sun is located about half way out the disc from the center of the disk of the Galaxy.
Question
Stars in the Galactic disk came billions of years before stars in the Galactic halo.
Question
From Earth, the center of the Milky Way lies in the direction of the constellation Cygnus.
Question
Spiral arms are regions of star formation, which accounts for their blue color.
Question
The core of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A, is a strong radio source in the sky.
Question
In structure, our Milky Way is most similar to

A) the Large Magellanic Cloud.
B) an upscale version of a globular cluster.
C) M-31, the Andromeda Galaxy.
D) the Orion nebula.
E) none of these.
Question
The infall of material in the Galactic halo to the Galactic disk stopped shortly after the formation of globular clusters.
Question
The rotation curve for our Galaxy shows stars beyond the Sun moving slower than expected.
Question
Our Milky Way Galaxy is now known to be quite similar to the nearby Andromeda Galaxy, M-31.
Question
The part of the Milky Way we are most familiar with is the

A) Corona.
B) Galactic Disk.
C) Galactic halo.
D) Galactic Bulge.
E) Galactic center.
Question
Most astronomers believe that the stars in the Galactic halo formed in dwarf galaxies or during the merger of these dwarf galaxies.
Question
The Milky Way we see in the sky is simply our edge-on view of our home Galaxy.
Question
It is harder to map the structure of the Milky Way as a whole in visible light than with any other form of electromagnetic radiation.
Question
Shapley found that globular clusters are only found in the Galactic bulge.
Question
Henrietta Leavitt first showed the relationship between the mass and luminosity of Cepheids and their period of pulsation; the brighter, the longer this period.
Question
The majority of the mass of the Milky Way lies farther out than the Sun's orbit.
Question
The Earth lies close to the center of the Galaxy.
Question
A pulsating variable star with a period of 10 days would be a Cepheid.
Question
For what type of object is the period-luminosity relation used for determining distances?

A) RR Lyrae variables
B) T Tauri variables
C) Cepheids
D) Cataclysmic variables
E) Planetary nebulae
Question
The "aspect ratio" of thickness to width of the Galactic disk is about

A) 1:2.
B) 1:5.
C) 1:10.
D) 1:100.
E) 1:1,000.
Question
The Galactic Year is the time for our solar system to orbit the Galaxy; it is about

A) 15 million years.
B) 225 million years.
C) 4.5 billion years.
D) 9.6 billion years.
E) 13.5 billion years.
Question
In the halo, we do NOT find

A) tidal streams.
B) globular clusters.
C) small satellite galaxies.
D) spiral arms.
E) old white dwarfs.
Question
From the Sun, the distance to the Galactic center is about

A) 8 pc.
B) 8,000 pc.
C) 100,000 pc.
D) 225 million pc.
E) 100 billion pc.
Question
The period-luminosity relation for Cepheid variables was discovered in 1908 by

A) William Herschel.
B) Henrietta Leavitt.
C) Harlow Shapley.
D) Heber Curtiss.
E) Edwin Hubble.
Question
It was the distribution of ________ that showed Harlow Shapley we were nowhere near the center of the Milky Way early in the 20th century.

A) planetary nebulae
B) emission nebulae
C) open clusters
D) globular clusters
E) supernova remnants
Question
Which is the correct description of the Sun's location within the Milky Way?

A) At the outer edge of the Galactic bulge but in the plane of the disc
B) In the disc but at its outer edge
C) As Herschel found, very close to the Galactic center
D) Above the disc and about one-third of the Galactic radius from the center
E) In the disc and about one-half a Galactic radius from the center
Question
Galactic disks appear blue because

A) they contain no G, K, or M dwarfs.
B) they contain only blue reflection nebulae.
C) dust obscures the longer, red, wavelengths.
D) O and B blue giants are much brighter than G, K, or M dwarfs.
E) dark matter gravitationally shifts all wavelengths towards the blue.
Question
From Earth, the view of the Milky Way is a thin band of stars across the night sky. The part of the Milky Way galaxy that is described here is the

A) bulge.
B) spiral arm.
C) disk.
D) halo.
E) globular cluster.
Question
The orbits of halo and bulge stars have been compared to

A) planets around the Sun.
B) satellites around planets.
C) comets around the Sun.
D) binary stars.
E) the accretion disc around a black hole.
Question
Detailed measurements of the disk and central bulge region of our Galaxy suggest our Milky Way is a

A) dwarf galaxy.
B) spiral galaxy.
C) very flat elliptical galaxy.
D) very dusty irregular galaxy.
E) quasar.
Question
Star formation ceased first in the

A) nucleus.
B) spiral arms.
C) bulge.
D) halo.
E) Galactic disk.
Question
Most of the new star formation in the Galaxy is found in the

A) halo.
B) spiral arms.
C) bulge.
D) Galactic center.
E) globular clusters.
Question
Which is the correct description for the Sun's location in the Galaxy?

A) At the outer edge of the bulge, but along the Galactic equator
B) About 30,000 ly out in the halo
C) At the very outer edge of the disk, but in the Galactic plane
D) In the disk near the Galactic center
E) In the disk, and about half way out from the center
Question
The period-luminosity relation is critical in finding distances with

A) RR Lyrae stars.
B) trigonometric parallaxes.
C) spectroscopic parallaxes.
D) Cepheid variables.
E) pulsars.
Question
The location of the Galactic center was first found by Harlow Shapley with

A) radio emissions from Sagittarius A.
B) Cepheids of population I in the spiral arms.
C) RR Lyrae variables in the globular clusters.
D) planetary nebulae in the open clusters.
E) infrared observations of the heat from its accretion disk around the black hole.
Question
Matter belonging to the Galaxy can be traced out to ________ from the center.

A) 5 kpc
B) 8 kpc
C) 15 kpc
D) 50 kpc
E) 200 kpc
Question
Harlow Shapley found the Milky Way was

A) centered on the Earth.
B) much smaller than previously thought.
C) rapidly expanding.
D) much larger than previously thought.
E) uniformly spherical in shape.
Question
Which of these is NOT typical of the Galaxy's spiral arms?

A) Hot, young blue stars
B) Emission nebulae like M42
C) O and B stars
D) Open clusters
E) Old giant stars like orange Arcturus
Question
Spiral arms are thought to be sites of ________, based on the observations newly formed stars and interstellar dust lanes in and around these features.
Question
Using an orbit size of 8 kpc, and a period of 225 million years, the mass of our Galaxy is found to be closest to

A) 10⁶ solar masses.
B) 10⁸ solar masses.
C) 10¹⁰ solar masses.
D) 10¹¹ solar masses.
E) 10¹² solar masses.
Question
Which of the following is most like the rotation of stars in the disk of the Milky Way?

A) A DVD in a player
B) The planets in our solar system
C) Cars moving at a constant speed on a circular race track
D) The hands of an analog clock
E) The tire of a car moving
Question
Most of the mass of the Milky Way seems to exist in the form of

A) young stars in the disk.
B) old stars in the Galactic halo.
C) hydrogen gas in the disk and spiral arms.
D) dark matter out in the Galactic halo.
E) the black hole in the Galactic center.
Question
The spiral structure of the Milky Way is best revealed by ________ cm radio observations of hydrogen atoms.
Question
What use are 21 cm radio waves to Galactic astronomers?

A) They cut through the dusty cocoons to let us watch star birth.
B) We can reflect them off the core of the Galaxy.
C) Their Doppler shifts let us map the motions and locations of gas in the spiral arms.
D) They bounce off stars like our Sun to let us precisely measure their distances.
E) They pick up the cool, dark matter much better than can optical telescopes.
Question
The major problem faced by optical astronomers in trying to deduce the structure of the Milky Way Galaxy is that we can see only a small part of it because of the ________.
Question
Our solar system is in the Galactic ________ of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Question
The leading explanation for the existence of spiral arms is

A) shock waves from cyclic supernovae explosions.
B) shock wave from the quasar-like eruption of the Galactic core.
C) passages of spiral density waves through the interstellar medium.
D) passages of massive globular clusters through the Galactic plane.
E) tidal streams of small galaxies being torn up by our monster Galaxy.
Question
Between us and the Galactic center, the Milky Way has a mass of

A) several hundred thousand suns.
B) one to two million suns.
C) 250 million suns.
D) 100 billion suns.
E) over a trillion suns.
Question
In the solar neighborhood we can map the position of spiral arms by observation of objects that are determined to be relatively ________ in age.
Question
Density waves may explain

A) the lack of blue stars in the halo.
B) the random orbits of halo stars.
C) the density of red stars in the bulge.
D) the spiral arm structure of the Galaxy.
E) the large number of open clusters in the halo.
Question
Which sequence of formation by age is correct, oldest to youngest?

A) Dark nebulae, planetary nebulae, emission nebulae
B) Spiral arms, bulge, halo
C) Halo, spiral arms, globular clusters
D) Globular clusters, emission nebulae, open clusters
Question
In the formation of our Galaxy, the ________ formed first.

A) Galactic disk
B) Galactic center
C) globular clusters
D) planetary nebulae
E) spiral arms
Question
In age, Galactic disk stars are typically much ________ than those of the Galactic halo.
Question
What observations suggest the mass of the Galaxy goes much farther out than its visible disc?

A) 21 cm maps of the spiral arms
B) The rotation curve of the outermost portions of the disc
C) The orbits of the open clusters in the disc
D) Infrared observations of distant brown dwarfs
E) X-ray images of other galaxies' discs from Chandra
Question
What two observations allow us to calculate the Galaxy's mass?

A) The Sun's mass and velocity in orbit of the Galactic center
B) The Sun's age and period of the Galactic Year
C) The Sun's orbital velocity and its distance from the Galactic center
D) The Sun's mass and its age
E) The Sun's composition and luminosity
Question
Which method relies on the mass of a dark object revealing its presence?

A) Asteroidal occultations
B) Ring occultations
C) Stellar eclipses
D) Temporary brightening of a distant star by a gravity lens
E) Pulsars slowing down irregularly
Question
The radio source ________ is located in a place consistent with the center of our Galaxy.

A) Cygnus X-1
B) 3C 273
C) 47 Tucanae
D) M-8, the Lagoon Nebula
E) Sgr A*
Question
Henrietta Leavitt's period-luminosity relation for ________ indicates that longer periods mean more luminosity.
Question
What features of the telescopic view of the Andromeda Galaxy, M-31, are also visible to the naked eye for our similar Galaxy?
Question
What is the evidence to support the existence of a black hole at the center of the Milky Way?
Question
What do the orbits of halo and disk stars tell us about the formation of the Milky Way?
Question
Why were globular clusters so vital to Harlow Shapley's success?
Question
Arcturus shows a large proper motion, almost perpendicular to the Galactic plane. What Population does it belong to, and why?
Question
Why is a variable star so convenient for measuring distances to very remote objects?
Question
Who was Henrietta Leavitt, and what did she do to help map the universe?
Question
Who discovered the period-luminosity relationship, and why was it so critical?
Question
We can estimate the mass of the Galaxy from observations of its ________ curve.
Question
Although astronomers refer to the Galaxy's disk as rotating, the motion is really due to the ________ motion of each of the objects in the disk.
Question
List at least one naked-eye observation that is consistent with the ancient idea that Earth is at the center of the Milky Way. List at least one naked-eye observation that is inconsistent with the notion that Earth is at the center of the Milky Way.
Question
How can Kepler's Third Law be used to estimate the mass of the galaxy?
Question
Of what is the Galactic halo presumed to be composed? What evidence supports this conclusion?
Question
Compare the speed of spiral density waves with the orbital speeds of stars in the visible part of the Galactic disk.
Question
How old is the Galaxy? How do we know this?
Question
Why is visible light a bad choice for studying the core of the Galaxy? What is better?
Question
What are the observational pieces of evidence that confirm the existence of a three-part structure (bulge, disk, halo) to the Milky Way Galaxy?
Question
How does content of elements heavier than helium vary between young and old stars? Why?
Question
Describe our location in the Milky Way.
Question
The Galactic center in ________ is best studied using radio and infrared observations.
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Deck 13: The Milky Way Galaxy
1
Motions of objects near our Galaxy's core suggest the central black hole is about 3.7 billion solar masses.
False
2
In our vicinity, the Galactic disk is about 100 times wider than it is thick.
True
3
Shapley found the Sun is located about half way out the disc from the center of the disk of the Galaxy.
True
4
Stars in the Galactic disk came billions of years before stars in the Galactic halo.
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k this deck
5
From Earth, the center of the Milky Way lies in the direction of the constellation Cygnus.
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k this deck
6
Spiral arms are regions of star formation, which accounts for their blue color.
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7
The core of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A, is a strong radio source in the sky.
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8
In structure, our Milky Way is most similar to

A) the Large Magellanic Cloud.
B) an upscale version of a globular cluster.
C) M-31, the Andromeda Galaxy.
D) the Orion nebula.
E) none of these.
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9
The infall of material in the Galactic halo to the Galactic disk stopped shortly after the formation of globular clusters.
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k this deck
10
The rotation curve for our Galaxy shows stars beyond the Sun moving slower than expected.
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11
Our Milky Way Galaxy is now known to be quite similar to the nearby Andromeda Galaxy, M-31.
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12
The part of the Milky Way we are most familiar with is the

A) Corona.
B) Galactic Disk.
C) Galactic halo.
D) Galactic Bulge.
E) Galactic center.
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13
Most astronomers believe that the stars in the Galactic halo formed in dwarf galaxies or during the merger of these dwarf galaxies.
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k this deck
14
The Milky Way we see in the sky is simply our edge-on view of our home Galaxy.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
15
It is harder to map the structure of the Milky Way as a whole in visible light than with any other form of electromagnetic radiation.
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k this deck
16
Shapley found that globular clusters are only found in the Galactic bulge.
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17
Henrietta Leavitt first showed the relationship between the mass and luminosity of Cepheids and their period of pulsation; the brighter, the longer this period.
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k this deck
18
The majority of the mass of the Milky Way lies farther out than the Sun's orbit.
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k this deck
19
The Earth lies close to the center of the Galaxy.
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20
A pulsating variable star with a period of 10 days would be a Cepheid.
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21
For what type of object is the period-luminosity relation used for determining distances?

A) RR Lyrae variables
B) T Tauri variables
C) Cepheids
D) Cataclysmic variables
E) Planetary nebulae
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
The "aspect ratio" of thickness to width of the Galactic disk is about

A) 1:2.
B) 1:5.
C) 1:10.
D) 1:100.
E) 1:1,000.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The Galactic Year is the time for our solar system to orbit the Galaxy; it is about

A) 15 million years.
B) 225 million years.
C) 4.5 billion years.
D) 9.6 billion years.
E) 13.5 billion years.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In the halo, we do NOT find

A) tidal streams.
B) globular clusters.
C) small satellite galaxies.
D) spiral arms.
E) old white dwarfs.
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25
From the Sun, the distance to the Galactic center is about

A) 8 pc.
B) 8,000 pc.
C) 100,000 pc.
D) 225 million pc.
E) 100 billion pc.
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26
The period-luminosity relation for Cepheid variables was discovered in 1908 by

A) William Herschel.
B) Henrietta Leavitt.
C) Harlow Shapley.
D) Heber Curtiss.
E) Edwin Hubble.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
It was the distribution of ________ that showed Harlow Shapley we were nowhere near the center of the Milky Way early in the 20th century.

A) planetary nebulae
B) emission nebulae
C) open clusters
D) globular clusters
E) supernova remnants
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which is the correct description of the Sun's location within the Milky Way?

A) At the outer edge of the Galactic bulge but in the plane of the disc
B) In the disc but at its outer edge
C) As Herschel found, very close to the Galactic center
D) Above the disc and about one-third of the Galactic radius from the center
E) In the disc and about one-half a Galactic radius from the center
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Galactic disks appear blue because

A) they contain no G, K, or M dwarfs.
B) they contain only blue reflection nebulae.
C) dust obscures the longer, red, wavelengths.
D) O and B blue giants are much brighter than G, K, or M dwarfs.
E) dark matter gravitationally shifts all wavelengths towards the blue.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
30
From Earth, the view of the Milky Way is a thin band of stars across the night sky. The part of the Milky Way galaxy that is described here is the

A) bulge.
B) spiral arm.
C) disk.
D) halo.
E) globular cluster.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The orbits of halo and bulge stars have been compared to

A) planets around the Sun.
B) satellites around planets.
C) comets around the Sun.
D) binary stars.
E) the accretion disc around a black hole.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Detailed measurements of the disk and central bulge region of our Galaxy suggest our Milky Way is a

A) dwarf galaxy.
B) spiral galaxy.
C) very flat elliptical galaxy.
D) very dusty irregular galaxy.
E) quasar.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Star formation ceased first in the

A) nucleus.
B) spiral arms.
C) bulge.
D) halo.
E) Galactic disk.
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34
Most of the new star formation in the Galaxy is found in the

A) halo.
B) spiral arms.
C) bulge.
D) Galactic center.
E) globular clusters.
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k this deck
35
Which is the correct description for the Sun's location in the Galaxy?

A) At the outer edge of the bulge, but along the Galactic equator
B) About 30,000 ly out in the halo
C) At the very outer edge of the disk, but in the Galactic plane
D) In the disk near the Galactic center
E) In the disk, and about half way out from the center
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The period-luminosity relation is critical in finding distances with

A) RR Lyrae stars.
B) trigonometric parallaxes.
C) spectroscopic parallaxes.
D) Cepheid variables.
E) pulsars.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The location of the Galactic center was first found by Harlow Shapley with

A) radio emissions from Sagittarius A.
B) Cepheids of population I in the spiral arms.
C) RR Lyrae variables in the globular clusters.
D) planetary nebulae in the open clusters.
E) infrared observations of the heat from its accretion disk around the black hole.
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k this deck
38
Matter belonging to the Galaxy can be traced out to ________ from the center.

A) 5 kpc
B) 8 kpc
C) 15 kpc
D) 50 kpc
E) 200 kpc
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39
Harlow Shapley found the Milky Way was

A) centered on the Earth.
B) much smaller than previously thought.
C) rapidly expanding.
D) much larger than previously thought.
E) uniformly spherical in shape.
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Which of these is NOT typical of the Galaxy's spiral arms?

A) Hot, young blue stars
B) Emission nebulae like M42
C) O and B stars
D) Open clusters
E) Old giant stars like orange Arcturus
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41
Spiral arms are thought to be sites of ________, based on the observations newly formed stars and interstellar dust lanes in and around these features.
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Unlock Deck
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42
Using an orbit size of 8 kpc, and a period of 225 million years, the mass of our Galaxy is found to be closest to

A) 10⁶ solar masses.
B) 10⁸ solar masses.
C) 10¹⁰ solar masses.
D) 10¹¹ solar masses.
E) 10¹² solar masses.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which of the following is most like the rotation of stars in the disk of the Milky Way?

A) A DVD in a player
B) The planets in our solar system
C) Cars moving at a constant speed on a circular race track
D) The hands of an analog clock
E) The tire of a car moving
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Most of the mass of the Milky Way seems to exist in the form of

A) young stars in the disk.
B) old stars in the Galactic halo.
C) hydrogen gas in the disk and spiral arms.
D) dark matter out in the Galactic halo.
E) the black hole in the Galactic center.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The spiral structure of the Milky Way is best revealed by ________ cm radio observations of hydrogen atoms.
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46
What use are 21 cm radio waves to Galactic astronomers?

A) They cut through the dusty cocoons to let us watch star birth.
B) We can reflect them off the core of the Galaxy.
C) Their Doppler shifts let us map the motions and locations of gas in the spiral arms.
D) They bounce off stars like our Sun to let us precisely measure their distances.
E) They pick up the cool, dark matter much better than can optical telescopes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The major problem faced by optical astronomers in trying to deduce the structure of the Milky Way Galaxy is that we can see only a small part of it because of the ________.
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48
Our solar system is in the Galactic ________ of the Milky Way Galaxy.
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49
The leading explanation for the existence of spiral arms is

A) shock waves from cyclic supernovae explosions.
B) shock wave from the quasar-like eruption of the Galactic core.
C) passages of spiral density waves through the interstellar medium.
D) passages of massive globular clusters through the Galactic plane.
E) tidal streams of small galaxies being torn up by our monster Galaxy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Between us and the Galactic center, the Milky Way has a mass of

A) several hundred thousand suns.
B) one to two million suns.
C) 250 million suns.
D) 100 billion suns.
E) over a trillion suns.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
In the solar neighborhood we can map the position of spiral arms by observation of objects that are determined to be relatively ________ in age.
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k this deck
52
Density waves may explain

A) the lack of blue stars in the halo.
B) the random orbits of halo stars.
C) the density of red stars in the bulge.
D) the spiral arm structure of the Galaxy.
E) the large number of open clusters in the halo.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Which sequence of formation by age is correct, oldest to youngest?

A) Dark nebulae, planetary nebulae, emission nebulae
B) Spiral arms, bulge, halo
C) Halo, spiral arms, globular clusters
D) Globular clusters, emission nebulae, open clusters
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Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
In the formation of our Galaxy, the ________ formed first.

A) Galactic disk
B) Galactic center
C) globular clusters
D) planetary nebulae
E) spiral arms
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
In age, Galactic disk stars are typically much ________ than those of the Galactic halo.
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k this deck
56
What observations suggest the mass of the Galaxy goes much farther out than its visible disc?

A) 21 cm maps of the spiral arms
B) The rotation curve of the outermost portions of the disc
C) The orbits of the open clusters in the disc
D) Infrared observations of distant brown dwarfs
E) X-ray images of other galaxies' discs from Chandra
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57
What two observations allow us to calculate the Galaxy's mass?

A) The Sun's mass and velocity in orbit of the Galactic center
B) The Sun's age and period of the Galactic Year
C) The Sun's orbital velocity and its distance from the Galactic center
D) The Sun's mass and its age
E) The Sun's composition and luminosity
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58
Which method relies on the mass of a dark object revealing its presence?

A) Asteroidal occultations
B) Ring occultations
C) Stellar eclipses
D) Temporary brightening of a distant star by a gravity lens
E) Pulsars slowing down irregularly
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59
The radio source ________ is located in a place consistent with the center of our Galaxy.

A) Cygnus X-1
B) 3C 273
C) 47 Tucanae
D) M-8, the Lagoon Nebula
E) Sgr A*
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60
Henrietta Leavitt's period-luminosity relation for ________ indicates that longer periods mean more luminosity.
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61
What features of the telescopic view of the Andromeda Galaxy, M-31, are also visible to the naked eye for our similar Galaxy?
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62
What is the evidence to support the existence of a black hole at the center of the Milky Way?
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63
What do the orbits of halo and disk stars tell us about the formation of the Milky Way?
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64
Why were globular clusters so vital to Harlow Shapley's success?
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65
Arcturus shows a large proper motion, almost perpendicular to the Galactic plane. What Population does it belong to, and why?
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66
Why is a variable star so convenient for measuring distances to very remote objects?
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67
Who was Henrietta Leavitt, and what did she do to help map the universe?
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68
Who discovered the period-luminosity relationship, and why was it so critical?
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69
We can estimate the mass of the Galaxy from observations of its ________ curve.
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70
Although astronomers refer to the Galaxy's disk as rotating, the motion is really due to the ________ motion of each of the objects in the disk.
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71
List at least one naked-eye observation that is consistent with the ancient idea that Earth is at the center of the Milky Way. List at least one naked-eye observation that is inconsistent with the notion that Earth is at the center of the Milky Way.
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72
How can Kepler's Third Law be used to estimate the mass of the galaxy?
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73
Of what is the Galactic halo presumed to be composed? What evidence supports this conclusion?
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74
Compare the speed of spiral density waves with the orbital speeds of stars in the visible part of the Galactic disk.
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75
How old is the Galaxy? How do we know this?
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76
Why is visible light a bad choice for studying the core of the Galaxy? What is better?
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77
What are the observational pieces of evidence that confirm the existence of a three-part structure (bulge, disk, halo) to the Milky Way Galaxy?
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78
How does content of elements heavier than helium vary between young and old stars? Why?
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79
Describe our location in the Milky Way.
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80
The Galactic center in ________ is best studied using radio and infrared observations.
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