Deck 17: Hubbles Law and Dark Matter: the Large-Scale Structure of the Cosmos

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Question
Galaxies contain less mass as dark matter than as visible stars.
Use Space or
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Question
The Andromeda galaxy will eventually collide with the Milky Way.
Question
In the larger clusters, colliding galaxies tend to pass through one another.
Question
The masses of most spiral galaxies, like ours, are a few billion solar masses.
Question
Because of the great masses and speeds involved, Newton's laws are useless in measuring the mass of a galaxy.
Question
Mapping the intracluster gas is largely done with red light from the ionized emission lines of hot hydrogen.
Question
Both spiral and elliptical galaxies seem to have dark halos of similar proportions relative to their visible matter.
Question
The total mass of a galaxy tends to be only slightly larger than the visible mass.
Question
As with stars, binary galaxy pairs are useful in finding their total mass.
Question
Collisions between galaxies have little effect on the individual stars.
Question
Head- tail radio galaxies reveal their motion through the intergalactic gas with a tail- like structure.
Question
For nearby galaxies, determining the rotation curve allows us to calculate the mass.
Question
Galactic collisions mostly involve interactions between gas and dust clouds rather than individual stars.
Question
Most of the matter in the universe is dark matter.
Question
There are large amounts of superhot intergalactic matter.
Question
When galaxies collide, the large- scale galactic structure is affected, but most of the individual stars are not.
Question
The stability of clusters of galaxies suggests that there is between 10 and 100 times as much dark matter as visible in the galaxies.
Question
The percentage of dark matter in galactic clusters is less than the percentage in individual galaxies.
Question
Galactic collisions are believed to be commonplace.
Question
The largest known galaxies contain about 10 billion solar masses.
Question
The rapid decline in quasars 10 billion years ago signifies a rapid decline in galactic mergers.
Question
No binary black hole has ever been detected.
Question
Virgo A (M87) is probably a dead quasar, but our Milky Way is not.
Question
Hubble reveals the most distant (first) galaxies were bluer than those of today.
Question
The brightest active galaxies are giant ellipticals.
Question
Astronomers have discovered two black holes in the process of merging.
Question
The "Great Wall" is the structure in the Large Magellanic Cloud near where Supernova 1987A occurred.
Question
The pregalactic blobs started with masses comparable to big globular clusters.
Question
Quasars may come from mergers of black holes in early galaxies.
Question
It is currently believed that superclusters lie on the surfaces of "bubbles" in space.
Question
Our theories of galaxy formation are just as well developed and tested as are our theories of star and planet formation.
Question
Most galaxies are isolated in space.
Question
There is presently no evidence for large- scale structure bigger than about 200 Mpc.
Question
The Milky Way is at the center of our Local Supercluster.
Question
Galactic evolution is due to collisions between galaxies.
Question
Like supernovae, quasars must end with a violent explosion.
Question
The more its central black hole was fed, the more likely the galaxy was to show up as a quasar.
Question
Supermassive galaxies are found at the core of rich galaxy clusters.
Question
Mergers between equally massive galaxies usually produce elliptical galaxies.
Question
In its early stages, the Milky Way was probably a quasar.
Question
Rotation curves for spiral galaxies show

A) most have dark halos.
B) most of the mass lies in the nucleus.
C) they are slowing down.
D) rotation speed drops off further from the nucleus.
E) no relation to mass.
Question
Beyond the scale of superclusters, galaxies are randomly distributed throughout the universe.
Question
As we look at larger and larger scales in the universe, we find

A) smaller and smaller masses.
B) a larger and larger percentage of the matter is visible.
C) almost exclusively visible matter.
D) a larger and larger percentage of the matter is dark.
E) an equal amount of visible and dark matter.
Question
Collisions between galaxies

A) cause large numbers of stars to collide and explode.
B) are the best explanation for gamma- ray burst events.
C) cause the gas and dust clouds to collide, leading to rapid star formation.
D) are much rarer than collisions between stars.
E) can turn elliptical galaxies into spirals.
Question
Redshift surveys are designed to find which galaxies are oldest and youngest.
Question
The pregalactic blobs had masses similar to

A) the Earth.
B) the Milky Way.
C) the Sun.
D) dwarf galaxies.
E) open clusters of stars.
Question
Collisions between galaxies are thought to

A) be commonplace.
B) have only occurred between 10 and 15 billion years ago.
C) have stopped about 5 billion years ago.
D) be extremely rare.
E) have never occurred.
Question
The Great Wall is a huge sheet of galaxies that stretches for over 100 Mpc.
Question
Which of these is the next evolutionary track for the Large Magellanic Cloud?

A) collision with the Milky Way
B) It will become a satellite galaxy of Andromeda.
C) expansion into a giant elliptical
D) contraction into a spiral
E) It will be free of our Local Group.
Question
Based on galactic rotation curves and cluster dynamics, we think dark matter

A) comprises over 90% of the entire mass of the universe.
B) is best detected from the X- rays it produces in the intergalactic medium.
C) is a minor component of the entire mass of the universe.
D) will doom the universe to collapse, overcoming the redshifts we now observe.
E) will have no effect on the fate of the universe.
Question
The type of radio galaxy that reveals its motion through the intergalactic medium is called a

A) dual lobe.
B) head- tail.
C) quasar.
D) Seyfert.
E) bipolar jet.
Question
A radio galaxy whose lobes are swept back as if forming a tail probably indicates

A) the galaxy is isolated, not part of a cluster.
B) evidence for intergalactic matter.
C) the galaxy is moving towards Earth.
D) the galaxy is about to evolve into a spiral.
E) there must be another galaxy nearby.
Question
When we see a doubling of the image of single quasar, the body creating the gravity lens is just a brown dwarf close to us.
Question
What is true of spiral galaxies?

A) They evolve from giant ellipticals.
B) They are much less common at larger redshifts.
C) They are relatively rare in regions of high galaxy density.
D) They have never been seen to have large redshifts.
E) They are only found in the center of rich galaxy clusters.
Question
How massive are the largest known galaxies?

A) a few million solar masses
B) a hundred million solar masses
C) a few billion solar masses
D) a trillion solar masses
E) hundreds of trillions of solar masses
Question
The greater the mass of the foreground cluster of galaxies, the more warped the images of the distant galaxies are when they undergo gravitational lensing.
Question
Quasars were used to determine the size of the Local Supercluster.
Question
Astronomers believe that a spiral galaxy may form

A) from a collision between a small and a large galaxy.
B) from the collision of two giant elliptical galaxies.
C) due to a quasar shutting down.
D) from the sudden contraction of an elliptical galaxy.
E) from the explosion of a dwarf irregular galaxy.
Question
The absorption lines we find in quasar redshifts that arise from intervening gas clouds show even larger redshifts than the quasar spectra, due to dust absorption.
Question
Mapping the intracluster gas is best done with

A) the Arecibo radio dish.
B) the COBE satellite in microwaves.
C) the HST with hydrogen alpha light.
D) the Chandra X- ray Observatory in space.
E) the Keck telescope in the infrared.
Question
The largest presently known redshifts of quasars are close to

A) 0.96.
B) 3.
C) 7.
D) 10.
E) 65.
Question
In its most energetic phase, a quasar can probably only last

A) a few days.
B) a few years.
C) a few thousand years.
D) a few million years.
E) a few billion years.
Question
According to the HST data, very distant (and early) galaxies tend to be

A) larger and bluer that modern galaxies.
B) very well formed into clusters of nothing but spirals.
C) nothing but quasars.
D) redder, due to the recession of the universe.
E) smaller, bluer, and more irregular than modern ones.
Question
The galaxies that reveal their motion through the intergalactic medium are called
.
Question
Clusters appear to have dark matter than their individual galaxies.
Question
The primary factor for galactic evolution is .
Question
From studies of the rotations of galaxies and dynamics of clusters, we now think that about
of the mass of the universe is composed of dark matter.
Question
A galaxy that was once a quasar is likely to

A) have burned all its fuel by now and be dark.
B) now be a dwarf irregular.
C) have a black hole at its nucleus.
D) be less than 5 billion years old.
E) still be a quasar.
Question
There is no obvious evidence for large- scale structure greater than about

A) 200 kpc.
B) 600 kpc.
C) 200 Mpc.
D) 600 Mpc.
E) 2000 Mpc.
Question
What is true of galaxies at the larger redshifts compared to ones nearby?

A) They appear smaller and more irregular.
B) They are mostly giants.
C) They are redder.
D) They are almost all ellipticals.
E) They appear larger and more regular.
Question
Some quasars show absorption spectra with a smaller redshift than their emission spectra. This indicates that

A) they are much closer than previously thought.
B) we still don't understand redshifts.
C) there is cooler gas between us and the quasar.
D) their black holes are still contracting.
E) their black holes are still expanding.
Question
If the merger theory is correct, the brightest active galactic nuclei should

A) contain the youngest stars.
B) contain the least mass.
C) contain supermassive black holes.
D) form small irregular galaxies.
E) be in the smallest elliptical galaxies.
Question
Gravitational lensing of distant, faint irregular galaxies may be the key to

A) determining galactic redshifts.
B) quasar energy production.
C) mapping dark matter.
D) understanding active galactic nuclei.
E) understanding galactic rotation curves.
Question
Redshift surveys give us

A) an idea of how turbulent the intergalactic gas is.
B) a better value of the speed of light.
C) a more accurate census of the Local Group.
D) the total mass of the universe.
E) a 3- D layout of galaxies in space.
Question
The height of the quasar epoch was

A) before mass had a chance to accumulate at the nucleus.
B) less than 1 billion years ago.
C) 5 billion years ago.
D) before the formation of galaxies.
E) when there was still sufficient mass to fuel the supermassive black holes at their center.
Question
images of galactic clusters reveal large amounts of hot, intracluster gas.

A) Infrared
B) Ultraviolet
C) Radio
D) X- ray
E) Gamma ray
Question
The greatest redshifts yet observed for quasars is about

A) 0.1.
B) 0.7.
C) 1.4.
D) 7.0.
E) 14.0.
Question
In size and mass, irregular galaxies tend to be than spirals.
Question
According to our HST deep surveys, which of the below are NOT less common now than in the early universe?

A) active galaxies
B) elliptical galaxies
C) quasars
D) spiral galaxies
E) irregular galaxies
Question
Using binary galaxies to find their masses assumes that, like double stars, their orbits obey laws of Planetary Motion.

A) Einstein's
B) Galileo's
C) Kepler's
D) Schwarzchild's
E) Newton's
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Deck 17: Hubbles Law and Dark Matter: the Large-Scale Structure of the Cosmos
1
Galaxies contain less mass as dark matter than as visible stars.
False
2
The Andromeda galaxy will eventually collide with the Milky Way.
True
3
In the larger clusters, colliding galaxies tend to pass through one another.
True
4
The masses of most spiral galaxies, like ours, are a few billion solar masses.
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k this deck
5
Because of the great masses and speeds involved, Newton's laws are useless in measuring the mass of a galaxy.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Mapping the intracluster gas is largely done with red light from the ionized emission lines of hot hydrogen.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
7
Both spiral and elliptical galaxies seem to have dark halos of similar proportions relative to their visible matter.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
8
The total mass of a galaxy tends to be only slightly larger than the visible mass.
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k this deck
9
As with stars, binary galaxy pairs are useful in finding their total mass.
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10
Collisions between galaxies have little effect on the individual stars.
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11
Head- tail radio galaxies reveal their motion through the intergalactic gas with a tail- like structure.
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12
For nearby galaxies, determining the rotation curve allows us to calculate the mass.
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13
Galactic collisions mostly involve interactions between gas and dust clouds rather than individual stars.
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14
Most of the matter in the universe is dark matter.
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15
There are large amounts of superhot intergalactic matter.
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16
When galaxies collide, the large- scale galactic structure is affected, but most of the individual stars are not.
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17
The stability of clusters of galaxies suggests that there is between 10 and 100 times as much dark matter as visible in the galaxies.
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18
The percentage of dark matter in galactic clusters is less than the percentage in individual galaxies.
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19
Galactic collisions are believed to be commonplace.
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20
The largest known galaxies contain about 10 billion solar masses.
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21
The rapid decline in quasars 10 billion years ago signifies a rapid decline in galactic mergers.
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22
No binary black hole has ever been detected.
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23
Virgo A (M87) is probably a dead quasar, but our Milky Way is not.
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24
Hubble reveals the most distant (first) galaxies were bluer than those of today.
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25
The brightest active galaxies are giant ellipticals.
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26
Astronomers have discovered two black holes in the process of merging.
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27
The "Great Wall" is the structure in the Large Magellanic Cloud near where Supernova 1987A occurred.
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28
The pregalactic blobs started with masses comparable to big globular clusters.
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29
Quasars may come from mergers of black holes in early galaxies.
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30
It is currently believed that superclusters lie on the surfaces of "bubbles" in space.
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31
Our theories of galaxy formation are just as well developed and tested as are our theories of star and planet formation.
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k this deck
32
Most galaxies are isolated in space.
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33
There is presently no evidence for large- scale structure bigger than about 200 Mpc.
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34
The Milky Way is at the center of our Local Supercluster.
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35
Galactic evolution is due to collisions between galaxies.
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36
Like supernovae, quasars must end with a violent explosion.
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37
The more its central black hole was fed, the more likely the galaxy was to show up as a quasar.
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38
Supermassive galaxies are found at the core of rich galaxy clusters.
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39
Mergers between equally massive galaxies usually produce elliptical galaxies.
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40
In its early stages, the Milky Way was probably a quasar.
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41
Rotation curves for spiral galaxies show

A) most have dark halos.
B) most of the mass lies in the nucleus.
C) they are slowing down.
D) rotation speed drops off further from the nucleus.
E) no relation to mass.
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42
Beyond the scale of superclusters, galaxies are randomly distributed throughout the universe.
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k this deck
43
As we look at larger and larger scales in the universe, we find

A) smaller and smaller masses.
B) a larger and larger percentage of the matter is visible.
C) almost exclusively visible matter.
D) a larger and larger percentage of the matter is dark.
E) an equal amount of visible and dark matter.
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Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
44
Collisions between galaxies

A) cause large numbers of stars to collide and explode.
B) are the best explanation for gamma- ray burst events.
C) cause the gas and dust clouds to collide, leading to rapid star formation.
D) are much rarer than collisions between stars.
E) can turn elliptical galaxies into spirals.
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k this deck
45
Redshift surveys are designed to find which galaxies are oldest and youngest.
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k this deck
46
The pregalactic blobs had masses similar to

A) the Earth.
B) the Milky Way.
C) the Sun.
D) dwarf galaxies.
E) open clusters of stars.
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k this deck
47
Collisions between galaxies are thought to

A) be commonplace.
B) have only occurred between 10 and 15 billion years ago.
C) have stopped about 5 billion years ago.
D) be extremely rare.
E) have never occurred.
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48
The Great Wall is a huge sheet of galaxies that stretches for over 100 Mpc.
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k this deck
49
Which of these is the next evolutionary track for the Large Magellanic Cloud?

A) collision with the Milky Way
B) It will become a satellite galaxy of Andromeda.
C) expansion into a giant elliptical
D) contraction into a spiral
E) It will be free of our Local Group.
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k this deck
50
Based on galactic rotation curves and cluster dynamics, we think dark matter

A) comprises over 90% of the entire mass of the universe.
B) is best detected from the X- rays it produces in the intergalactic medium.
C) is a minor component of the entire mass of the universe.
D) will doom the universe to collapse, overcoming the redshifts we now observe.
E) will have no effect on the fate of the universe.
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k this deck
51
The type of radio galaxy that reveals its motion through the intergalactic medium is called a

A) dual lobe.
B) head- tail.
C) quasar.
D) Seyfert.
E) bipolar jet.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
A radio galaxy whose lobes are swept back as if forming a tail probably indicates

A) the galaxy is isolated, not part of a cluster.
B) evidence for intergalactic matter.
C) the galaxy is moving towards Earth.
D) the galaxy is about to evolve into a spiral.
E) there must be another galaxy nearby.
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k this deck
53
When we see a doubling of the image of single quasar, the body creating the gravity lens is just a brown dwarf close to us.
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k this deck
54
What is true of spiral galaxies?

A) They evolve from giant ellipticals.
B) They are much less common at larger redshifts.
C) They are relatively rare in regions of high galaxy density.
D) They have never been seen to have large redshifts.
E) They are only found in the center of rich galaxy clusters.
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k this deck
55
How massive are the largest known galaxies?

A) a few million solar masses
B) a hundred million solar masses
C) a few billion solar masses
D) a trillion solar masses
E) hundreds of trillions of solar masses
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56
The greater the mass of the foreground cluster of galaxies, the more warped the images of the distant galaxies are when they undergo gravitational lensing.
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57
Quasars were used to determine the size of the Local Supercluster.
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k this deck
58
Astronomers believe that a spiral galaxy may form

A) from a collision between a small and a large galaxy.
B) from the collision of two giant elliptical galaxies.
C) due to a quasar shutting down.
D) from the sudden contraction of an elliptical galaxy.
E) from the explosion of a dwarf irregular galaxy.
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k this deck
59
The absorption lines we find in quasar redshifts that arise from intervening gas clouds show even larger redshifts than the quasar spectra, due to dust absorption.
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k this deck
60
Mapping the intracluster gas is best done with

A) the Arecibo radio dish.
B) the COBE satellite in microwaves.
C) the HST with hydrogen alpha light.
D) the Chandra X- ray Observatory in space.
E) the Keck telescope in the infrared.
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Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
The largest presently known redshifts of quasars are close to

A) 0.96.
B) 3.
C) 7.
D) 10.
E) 65.
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k this deck
62
In its most energetic phase, a quasar can probably only last

A) a few days.
B) a few years.
C) a few thousand years.
D) a few million years.
E) a few billion years.
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k this deck
63
According to the HST data, very distant (and early) galaxies tend to be

A) larger and bluer that modern galaxies.
B) very well formed into clusters of nothing but spirals.
C) nothing but quasars.
D) redder, due to the recession of the universe.
E) smaller, bluer, and more irregular than modern ones.
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k this deck
64
The galaxies that reveal their motion through the intergalactic medium are called
.
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65
Clusters appear to have dark matter than their individual galaxies.
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k this deck
66
The primary factor for galactic evolution is .
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67
From studies of the rotations of galaxies and dynamics of clusters, we now think that about
of the mass of the universe is composed of dark matter.
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Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
A galaxy that was once a quasar is likely to

A) have burned all its fuel by now and be dark.
B) now be a dwarf irregular.
C) have a black hole at its nucleus.
D) be less than 5 billion years old.
E) still be a quasar.
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69
There is no obvious evidence for large- scale structure greater than about

A) 200 kpc.
B) 600 kpc.
C) 200 Mpc.
D) 600 Mpc.
E) 2000 Mpc.
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70
What is true of galaxies at the larger redshifts compared to ones nearby?

A) They appear smaller and more irregular.
B) They are mostly giants.
C) They are redder.
D) They are almost all ellipticals.
E) They appear larger and more regular.
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71
Some quasars show absorption spectra with a smaller redshift than their emission spectra. This indicates that

A) they are much closer than previously thought.
B) we still don't understand redshifts.
C) there is cooler gas between us and the quasar.
D) their black holes are still contracting.
E) their black holes are still expanding.
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Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
If the merger theory is correct, the brightest active galactic nuclei should

A) contain the youngest stars.
B) contain the least mass.
C) contain supermassive black holes.
D) form small irregular galaxies.
E) be in the smallest elliptical galaxies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Gravitational lensing of distant, faint irregular galaxies may be the key to

A) determining galactic redshifts.
B) quasar energy production.
C) mapping dark matter.
D) understanding active galactic nuclei.
E) understanding galactic rotation curves.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Redshift surveys give us

A) an idea of how turbulent the intergalactic gas is.
B) a better value of the speed of light.
C) a more accurate census of the Local Group.
D) the total mass of the universe.
E) a 3- D layout of galaxies in space.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
The height of the quasar epoch was

A) before mass had a chance to accumulate at the nucleus.
B) less than 1 billion years ago.
C) 5 billion years ago.
D) before the formation of galaxies.
E) when there was still sufficient mass to fuel the supermassive black holes at their center.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
images of galactic clusters reveal large amounts of hot, intracluster gas.

A) Infrared
B) Ultraviolet
C) Radio
D) X- ray
E) Gamma ray
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77
The greatest redshifts yet observed for quasars is about

A) 0.1.
B) 0.7.
C) 1.4.
D) 7.0.
E) 14.0.
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78
In size and mass, irregular galaxies tend to be than spirals.
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79
According to our HST deep surveys, which of the below are NOT less common now than in the early universe?

A) active galaxies
B) elliptical galaxies
C) quasars
D) spiral galaxies
E) irregular galaxies
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80
Using binary galaxies to find their masses assumes that, like double stars, their orbits obey laws of Planetary Motion.

A) Einstein's
B) Galileo's
C) Kepler's
D) Schwarzchild's
E) Newton's
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 119 flashcards in this deck.