660 likes | 827 Views
Ch 26 The Sun & the Solar System Review. Name & describe the location of the layers of the sun. What happens in each layer? How does the temperature change? Describe the sun’s rotation. What are sunspots? Why do they appear dark? How long is one cycle? What is solar wind?
E N D
Name & describe the location of the layers of the sun. What happens in each layer? How does the temperature change? • Describe the sun’s rotation. • What are sunspots? Why do they appear dark? How long is one cycle? • What is solar wind? • What happens during fusion? How many hydrogen nuclei are needed? How many helium nuclei form? What is released? Where does fusion occur in the sun? • What happens to charged nuclei in plasma? Why? • Know how to calculate eccentricity. • What is the “celestial sphere”? • Who developed the geocentric model of the universe? What does the geocentric model state? • Who developed the heliocentric model of the universe? What does the heliocentric model state? • What is retrograde motion? Why do we observe retrograde motion? • Who came up with the 3 laws of planetary motion? What does each law state/describe? • What shape are the planets’ orbits? Who discovered this? • Who described gravity & its effects on the planets? Which two factors affect the gravitation attraction between objects? How do they affect gravitational attraction? • What is aphelion? What is perihelion?
Ptolemy developed the _________________ model of the universe.
Copernicus described the ________________ model of the solar system.
When a planet appears to move westward in the sky instead of eastward, we call this ___________________________?
Ancient observers believed that the stars traveled around earth on a transparent _________________________________.
The Earth was in the center of the universe in the _________________ model.
The ____________ was in the center of the solar system in the heliocentri model.
___________ proposed 3 laws of planetary motion based on the work of his predecessor Tycho Brahe. • A. Newton • B. Galileo • C. Kepler • D. Copernicus • E. Brahe • F. Ptolemy
______________ determined that gravity kept planets in their orbits. • A. Newton • B. Galileo • C. Kepler • D. Copernicus • E. Brahe • F. Ptolemy
_______________ determined that planetary orbits were actually elliptical. • A. Newton • B. Galileo • C. Kepler • D. Copernicus • E. Brahe • F. Ptolemy
When Earth is closest to the sun it is called ___________. • A. Aphelion • B. Perihelion
When Earth is farthest from the sun it is called ___________. • A. Aphelion • B. Perihelion
Which layer of the sun is visible & radiates the light that we see? • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
The ________ is the outermost layer of the sun. • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
The _________ is the innermost layer of the sun. • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
The ________ is the inner layer of the sun’s atmosphere & lies above the photosphere. • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
The lies around the core, is in the plasma state, & is cooler than the core. • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
In the ______________ rising & falling currents of plasma carry energy to the sun’s surface where it is radiated out into space as sunlight. • A. core • B. radiative zone • C. convection zone • D. photosphere • E. chromosphere • F. corona
The corona gives off a stream of electrically charged particles called ____________. • A. granules • B. sun spots • C. solar wind • D. solar flares • E. solar prominences
Sunspots are dark spots on the photosphere. The reason they appear dark is because they are (cooler/hotter) than the surrounding area.
On average, sunspot activity is at it’s peak every _________ years.
Dense clouds of material suspended above the sun’s surface by magnetic fields that can erupt off the sun in a few minutes or hours, extending 1000s of km before falling back to the sun’s surface are ________________. • A. granules • B. sun spots • C. solar wind • D. solar flares • E. solar prominences
____________ are otbursts of light that suddenly rise from areas of sunspot activity & can last minutes to hours & increase in # with an increase in the # of sunspots. • A. granules • B. sun spots • C. solar wind • D. solar flares • E. solar prominences
In the photosphere ____________ which are the tops of the convection currents & May be 1,000 km wide & may last 20 minutes. • A. granules • B. sun spots • C. solar wind • D. solar flares • E. solar prominences