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Electron
Negatively charged particle found OUTSIDE the nucleus.
(slide 131)
Proton
Positively charged particle found INSIDE the nucleus.
(slide 131)
Neutron
Neutral particle found INSIDE the nucleus.
(slide 131)
massive
The neutron is slightly more ____ than the proton, and both are much more ____ than the electron.
(slide 131)
Element
A kind of atom, characterized by the number of protons in the nucleus.
(slide 133)
Atom
The smallest particle of an element that retains the properties that characterize that element.
(slide 133)
Periodic Table of Elements
A system of organization for the elements. Elements are placed based on their atomic number and type. The number of PROTONS determines the type of element an atom is.
(slide 134)
Atomic Notation
a way of representing a element by showing it's mass number and atomic number.
Mass number (top number): number of protons + neutrons
Atomic number (bottom number): number of protons
(**see slide 136)
Ion
An atom that has lost (or gained) one or more ELECTRONS
(slide 134)
Isotope
Any of two or more forms of the same element whose atoms all have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons.
(slide 134)
Apparent Brightness
How bright an object appears in the sky. A measure of the observed light received from a star or other object at the Earth.
(slide 137)
Depends on the luminosity and distance of an object
(slide 191)
Luminosity
The total amount of light emitted by an object each second (unit: Watts).
(slide 137)
Depends on the temperature and size (i.e. surface area) of an object.
(slide 191)
Inverse Square Law of Light Propagation
2x distance = 1/4 amount of light
(slide 137)
Standard Candle (bulb)
an object of known luminosity. By measuring apparent brightness of a ____________ you can determine its distance
(slide 137)
Speed of Light
300,000 km/s or about 186,000 miles/s
(slide 138)
Reflection
The return of light after striking a surface.
(slide 138)
Refraction
The bending of light when it passes from one transparent medium to another. Different colors of light ____ by different amounts.
(slide 138)
Dispersion
The act of separating the different colors of light through being refracted by different amounts.
(slide 140)
Spectrum
The array of colors obtained when light is dispersed
(slide 140)
Spectroscopy
The study of spectra
(slide 140)
Continuous Spectrum
A spectrum of light composed of radiation of a continuous range of wavelengths or colors rather than only certain discrete wavelengths.
Discovered in 1666 by Newton. Produced by heating a solid object (coal) or very dense gas until it glows.
(slide 141 - 143)
ROYGBIV
An acronym for the spectrum of light: Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet
Bright Line Spectrum (aka emission-line spectrum)
A pattern of ____ lines produced by a rarified (low density) gas whose atoms have been "excited." Discovered in 1855 by Kirchoff; produced by passing an electrical current, or otherwise 'excite' a rarified gas (gas discharge tubes)
(slide 143 -144)
Rarified
Having low density
(slide 144)
Dark Line Spectrum (aka absorption-line spectrum)
A pattern of ____ lines superposed on an otherwise continuous spectrum. Produced by passing a continuous spectrum through a very rarified (not dense) gas (Sunlight)
(slide 143 and 145)
Kirchoff's 3 laws of spectral analysis
1) a luminous solid, liquid, or hot, dense gas emits light of all colors producing a continuous spectrum
2) a rarified (low density) luminous gas emits light of certain colors only, producing an emission-line spectrum
3) If a continuous spectrum is passed through a rarified gas, the gas will absorb certain, specific, colors, so that those colors will then be missing (or diminished) in the otherwise continuous spectrum. This produce an absorption-line spectrum
(slide 147)
Particles
energy localized in a packet
(slide 152)
Wave
energy spread out being transported through a medium
(slide 152-153)
Medium
The substance through which a wave is traveling.
(slide 153)
Frequency
Number of complete wave cycles that pass a point each second. Measured in waves (or cycles) per second. Unit: Hertz (Hz)
(slide 154)
Wavelength
Distance between two identical points on successive waves. Different ____ refer to different colors.
(slide 154)
Electromagnetic radiation
Radiation consisting of waves propagated through regularly varying electric and magnetic fields.
(slide 156)
Electromagnetic Spectrum
The whole range of electromagnetic waves, from gamma rays (short wavelengths) to radio waves (long wavelength).
Gamma, X, ultraviolet (UV), visible, infrared (IR), radio
(slide 156)
Electromagnetic Waves
A form of energy that can move through the vacuum of space.
H-alpha line
The most prominent spectral feature due to hydrogen at visible wavelengths (wavelength = 6563 angstroms)
(slide 161-162)
Doppler effect
a change in wavelength/frequency due to relative motion of wave source and/or detector. Observer sees decreased wavelength (higher frequency) for approaching source, and increased wavelength (lower frequency) for receding source.
(slide 166)
Blueshift
A shift to shorter wavelengths (source is approaching)
(slide 166)
Redshift
A shift to longer wavelengths (source is receding)
(slide 166)
Radial velocity
Motion towards or away from an observer.
The greater blue- (red-) shift, the greater radial velocity of the object.
(slide 168)
Extrasolar planet ("exoplanet")
A planet orbiting a star other than the sun. Over 400 have been found and nearly all of these were discovered by observing the Doppler shifts
(slide 170)
Proper motion
Motion of a celestial object across the sky.
(slide 172)
Photon
An individual particle of light, a packet of energy. Amount of energy contained in a ____ is determined by its color, which is set by its frequency or wavelength.
(slide 174-175)
Quantum mechanics
The branch of physics that deals with the structure of atoms and their interactions with light.
(slide 178)
Quantize
to limit the possible values of
(slide 179)
Emit
According to quantum mechanics, for an electron to jump from a higher orbit to a lower one, it must ____ a photon.
(slide 179)
Absorb
According to quantum mechanics, for an electron to jump from a lower orbit to a higher one, it must ____ a photon.
(slide 179)
Ionization energy
The minimum amount of energy required to remove an electron from an atom in its ground state.
(slide 183)
Color
The ____ of a star tells us its surface temperature. The absorption lines tell us which elements are in its outer atmosphere.
(slide 189)
Sunspot
A region of the Sun's surface that is cooler, and thus darker, than the surrounding regions.
(slide 190)
Photosphere
The visible "surface" of a star (e.g., the Sun) The region in a star's atmosphere from which visible light escapes into space.
(slide 190)
Blackbody radiation
The spectrum radiated by a "perfect" absorber and emitter of radiation.
Color of a _____ depends ONLY on temperature; it does not depend on the object's size or distance.
(slide 191)
Conservation of Energy
Energy can not be created or destroyed, it can only be transformed from one type to another
(slide 198)
E=mc^2
Einstein's equation proposing that energy has mass; E is energy, m is mass, and c is the speed of light
(slide 200)
Strong force
A very short-range but powerful force that binds nucleons (protons and neutrons) together
(slide 201)
Thermonuclear reaction
a nuclear reaction that results from encounters between particles that are given high velocities by heating them
(slide 201)
Fundamental Forces of Nature
The basic forces that are known to exist in Nature
-gravity
-electricity
-magnetism
-strong nuclear force
(slide 202)
Antimatter
A type of matter in which each particle is opposite in charge, and certain other properties, to a corresponding particle of the same mass.
(slide 206)
Neutrino (v)
undercharged elementary particles with very little mass that rarely interact with other particles
(slide 207)
Neutrino oscillations
the transformation of one neutrino type into another
(slide 210)
Gas pressure
the pressure resulting from the thermal motions of gas particles
(slide 213)
Radiation pressure
The pressure resulting from the impact of photons on a surface of gas
(slide 213)
Hydrostatic equilibrium
A state of equilibrium in which the inward pull of gravity in a star is just balanced by the outward forces of gas and radiation pressure.
(slide 214)
Nucleosynthesis
The building up of heavier elements from lighter ones by nuclear fusion
(slide 215)
Nuclear fusion
The building up of heavier atomic nuclei from lighter ones
Elements "lighter" than Fe release energy through _________
(slide 216)
Nuclear fission
The break up of heavier atomic nuclei into two or more lighter ones
Elements "heavier" than Fe release energy through _________
(slide 216)
Interstellar Matter
Gas and dust between the stars
(slide 220)
Interstellar gas
consists primarily of hydrogen; presence is inferred by light it EMITS (emission-line spectrum)
(slide 220-221)
Interstellar dust
consists of tiny solid grains in interstellar space. presence inferred (mainly) by light it ABSORBS. Dust blocks light coming from behind it.
(slide 220-221)
Main-sequence star
a MAJORITY of a star's life is spent as a ______________: A star that is fusing hydrogen (H) into helium (He) in its core
(slide 222)
Stellar evolution
The changes in a star's properties as it ages
(slide 222)
Red giant star
a large, cool star of a high luminosity in its late stages of life.
(slide 225)
Low mass star
Those stars that are born with less than 8 times the mass of the sun. The core temperature is not high enough to fuse heavier elements
(slide 227-228)
High mass star
Those stars that are born with greater than 8 times the mass of the sun. Iron (26 protons in nucleus) is produced. Fusion of heavier elements requires energy - it does not release energy
(slide 227-228)
Mass loss
The loss of material during the life of a star
(slide 230)
Planetary nebula
A shell of gas ejected by and expanding away from an extremely hot low-mass star that is nearing the end of its life
(slide 231)
Binary star
Two stars that orbit each other, bound together by gravity
(slide 236)
Center of mass
For binary star system: the point between the two stars about which they both orbit
(slide 237)
White dwarf
The final stage of evolution for a low-mass star, in which it is collapsed to a very small size
(slide 240)
Fate of low-mass star
(slide 250)
Electron degeneracy pressure
A force arising from the laws of quantum mechanics through which closely packed electrons strongly resist further compression
(slide 241)
Chandrasekhar limit
the theoretical upper limit to the mass that a which dwarf can have, of 1.4 mass of sun
(slide 241)
Neutron star
A star of extremely high density composed almost entirely of neutrons.
(slide 245)
Supernova
The explosion of a star, with the resulting release of a tremendous amount of light
(slide 246)
Fate of high-mass star
(slide 250)
SN 1987A
the closest supernova (only 160,000 LY away) of the last 400 years
Confirmed that our basic understanding of the core-collapsed supernova phenomenon is correct
(slide 256)
Core-collapse (type II) supernova
Results from the core collapse and subsequent envelope ejection of massive stars, produces a tremendous optical display
Producing a luminosity of up to 10 billion times the luminosity of the Sun
Leaves behind a very compact objects, the dense corpse of the core of the once-massive star. This object is thought to be either a neutron star or a black hole.
(slide 251)
Neutron degeneracy pressure
a force arising from the laws of quantum mechanics through which closely packed neutrons very strongly resist further compression.
(slide 252)
Black hole
a completely gravitationally collapsed object; a region of space from which neither matter nor light can escape. Thought to be produced by stars with initial mass > Msun
(slide 252)
Neutron bombardment
____ ____ of iron (and other) nuclei at early times in the expanding "ejecta" (ejected stellar material) of supernovae.
(slide 258)
Pulsar
A rotating neutron star emitting pulses of radio waves
(slide 261)
Mass transfer
The transfer of material from one object to another
(slide 267)
Accretion disk
disk of matter spiraling in toward the compact object
(slide 267)
Thermonuclear (Type Ia) supernova
complete destruction of white dwarf due to a thermonuclear runaway initiated at the center of the star
(slide 273)
Nova
A star that experiences a sudden outburst of radiant energy, temporarily increasing its luminosity by hundreds to thousands of times.
(slide 273)
Seasons are the result of
A) the changing distance between the Earth and the Sun as the Earth travels on its elliptical orbit
B) the 23.5 degrees tilt of the Earth's equator relative to its rotation axis
C) the tilt of the equinox axis relative to the perihelion
D) a planet's spin axis not being parallel to its orbital axis
a planet's spin axis not being parallel to its orbital axis
Kepler's 3rd law is an powerful tool that enables us to measure the size of an orbit ("a") based on the time it takes to complete one orbit ("P"). What exactly is the semimajor axis "a" of an ellipse?
A) the distance from one focus to any point on the ellipse
B) the distance from one focus to the center of the ellipse
C) half of the largest diameter of the ellipse
D) half of the distance between the foci of the ellipse
half of the largest diameter of the ellipse
On 2023 October 14th, an annular solar eclipse occurred that was visible from several western states in the US. Which of the following is TRUE about an annular eclipse?
A) the phase of the Moon must be full
B) the Moon's orbit is not circular, and the Moon is further from the Earth during an annular eclipse than during a total eclipse
C) the Moon's orbit is not circular, and the Moon is closer to the Earth during an annular eclipse than during a total eclipse
D) annular eclipse can only occur when the Moon is not on the ecliptic
the Moon's orbit is not circular, and the Moon is further from the Earth during an annular eclipse than during a total eclipse
Nearly all of what we know is astronomy comes from the analysis of light. But recently there is another way to learn about the universe: We can now use __________
A) gravitational waves
B) obliquity radiation
C) the Boltzmann effect
D) Kelvan-Kirchhoff radiation
gravitational waves
Knowing the peak emission wavelength of a blackbody (in other words, where the intensity is maximum for thermal radiation) allows you to determine its ________.
A) temperature
B) distance
C) luminosity
D) mass
temperature
What is meant in astronomy by the phase "active" of "adaptive" optics?
A) Vibration-free mounts activity compensate for wind and ground shake
B) The optical elements are actively heated to maintain the proper temperature
C) the telescope is continuously adjusted to keep it pointed toward the target object
D) Rapid modifications of the mirror correct for effects of atmospheric distortion
Rapid modifications of the mirror correct for effects of atmospheric distortion
Which of the following is NOT a true statement (FALSE) about atomic structure?
A) The number of photons (atomic number) defines an element
B) An ion is an atom that has either gained or lost electrons
C) Transitions to levels higher OR lower in energy can occur from the ground state
D) Transitions between two energy levels can occur only at one specific photon energy
Transitions to levels higher OR lower in energy can occur from the ground state
The Doppler Effect allows us to measure an object's ___________.
A) temperature
B) chemical composition
C) radius
D) line-of-sight speed (radial velocity)
line-of-sight speed (radial velocity)