Chapter 08 Answers PDF

Title Chapter 08 Answers
Course Introduction to Astronomy I
Institution University of Windsor
Pages 31
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Chapter 8 Moons, Rings, and Plutoids: Small Worlds Among Giants 1) Two of the Galilean moons of Jupiter are the size of Mercury, and the two others are about as big as our own Moon. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 2) Besides Mars, exobiologists find Europa also a good candidate for life. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 3) The surface of Io looks most like the pack ice of the Arctic Ocean of Earth. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 4) Io's internal heat is due to tidal interactions with Jupiter and Europa. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 5) Like our Moon and most others, all four large Jovian satellites have one side constantly fixed toward Jupiter as they revolve and rotate. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 6) Like Jupiter's other icy moons, Europa is covered with craters. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 7) The Cassini probe Huygens made a soft landing on Titan. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 8) All four of Jupiter's big moons, like most moons in the solar system, revolve clockwise (retrograde) around their planet's equator. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1

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9) While Ganymede and Callisto are about the same size, the surface of Callisto is much younger, with considerable tectonic reformation. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 10) Of all the Galilean satellites, the surface of Europa is the youngest in age. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 11) Io's surface volcanism is driven by phase changes of sulfur and its compounds. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 12) Due to tidal stresses, it is likely most of Io is molten, with a relatively thin solid crust. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 13) The weak magnetic field of Europa may originate from a rapidly rotating liquid iron core. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 14) Ganymede is the largest satellite in the solar system. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 15) The processes which produced Ganymede's groove terrain are on-going, according to the latest Galileo images. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 16) The large, dark mare on Ganymede were created by water that erupted from within the moon. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 17) Alone of all the Galilean moons, Callisto shows no sign of plate tectonics. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 2

18) It appears that while they are similar in size, Ganymede is much more differentiated than Callisto. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 19) In terms of composition and density, the atmosphere of Titan is closer to our own than any other place we have found in the solar system. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 20) Triton and Pluto both probably originated in the Kuiper Belt. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 21) Because the probe came so close, Voyager 1 sent back high resolution photos of detail on the surface of Titan in 1980. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 22) Titan's surface has been mapped using Earth based visual telescopes. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 23) Methane drives the weather of Titan, for there it can be liquid, solid, or gas. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 24) Like Titan, Triton has a nitrogen atmosphere. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 25) The tectonic surface features we see on Triton are similar to the grooves of Ganymede. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2

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26) Alone among all the large moons, Triton orbits Neptune retrograde, and also at a 20 degree inclination to Neptune's equator. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 27) Spacecraft have imaged erupting volcanoes on Io and Triton. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 28) The retrograde orbit of Triton dooms it to spiral inward toward Neptune, perhaps someday to make a ring system. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 29) Cassini's probe Huygens returned images of what may have been a shoreline on Saturn. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 30) The haphazard terrain of Miranda suggests it was broken up by impact after it had differentiated, then fell back together as a jumbled maze. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 31) The surface of Saturn's moon Enceladus is the most reflective of any in the solar system, suggesting very fresh ice is exposed. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 32) The rings of Uranus were discovered when it passed in front of a star, and the dark rings occulted the star several times for brief intervals. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.4 33) Saturn's rings appear to be brighter and younger than the dirty, dark rings around Uranus and Neptune. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.4

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34) All four ring systems orbit the equators of Jovian planets outside their Roche limits. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 35) Saturn's rings are thick, perhaps a few thousand kilometers. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 36) At its equinoxes, Saturn's rings are most open and double the planet's brightness. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 37) The F-ring is held in place around Saturn by two shepherd moons. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 38) A resonance with Mimas clears out the ring particles from Cassini's Division. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 39) Two sets of rings around Jovian planets were found by Earth-based observers, while two others were first imaged by the Voyagers. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 40) Probably the next satellite to get turned into ring debris will be Neptune's backward moon, Triton. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 41) Saturn's rings are extremely old, possibly older than four billion years. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 42) The particles in Saturn's E ring probably come from volcanic eruptions on Enceladus. Answer: TRUE Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 5

43) Neptune has a single, broad ring that is extremely thin. Answer: FALSE Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 44) Like Saturn's more famous ring system, Jupiter's ring is also made of ice, just older and dirtier than the bright fresh material at Saturn. Answer: FALSE Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 45) Pluto is smaller than many moons in the solar system. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.5 46) The initial prediction by Percival Lowell of Pluto's position was close to the place it was, in fact, found by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 47) Both Pluto and Charon are tidally locked to always keep the same faces toward each other, rotating and revolving around their common center of mass every 14.2 hours. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 48) Pluto is probably one of the largest of the Kuiper Belt bodies beyond Neptune. Answer: TRUE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 49) Based on our current knowledge of the motions of Uranus and Neptune, it is obvious that Pluto's discovery was a triumph of physics, on par with Adams and Leverrier's work in finding Neptune. Answer: FALSE Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.5 50) Pluto is visible to the naked eye on extremely dark nights. Answer: FALSE Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5

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51) Pluto is no longer classified as a planet. Answer: TRUE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.5 52) Pluto has only a single moon, Charon. Answer: FALSE Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.5 53) Which element is critical to the formation of the volcanic surface of Io? A) iron B) silicon C) sulfur D) phosphorus E) carbon Answer: C Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 54) What is thought to be the cause of Io's volcanoes? A) Jupiter's magnetosphere and its charged particles B) energy emitted by Jupiter C) gravitational tidal stresses from both Jupiter and Europa D) solar radiation focused by Jupiter's gravity E) radioactive decay in Io's interior Answer: C Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 55) Which of the Galilean moons is densest and most geologically active? A) Io B) Europa C) Ganymede D) Callisto E) Titan Answer: A Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1

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56) Which are the four Galilean moons of Jupiter? A) Europa, Titan, Ganymede, and Callisto B) Io, Ganymede, Callisto, and Titan C) Europa, Ganymede, Io, and Triton D) Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto E) Io, Titan, Triton, and Charon Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 57) The surface of Europa is most like the Earth's A) tundra. B) deserts. C) Arctic Ocean. D) Himalayan peaks. E) South Pole. Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 58) The weak magnetic fields around Europa and Ganymede were found during flybys of A) Voyager 1. B) Pioneer 10. C) Cassini. D) Galileo. E) Stardust. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 59) In size and density, both Io and Europa resemble A) Mercury. B) our Moon. C) Mars. D) Pluto. E) Charon. Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1

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60) The mare on Ganymede were formed by A) basalt erupting onto the surface. B) plate tectonics. C) gravitational interactions with Callisto and Europa. D) water erupting and spreading over the surface. E) sulfur spewed from volcanoes. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 61) In terms of dark, smoother mare and cratered highlands, which Jovian moon most resembles the near side of our own? A) Io B) Europa C) Ganymede D) Triton E) Titan Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 62) Of the Jovian satellites, which shows the oldest, most cratered surface? A) Enceladus B) Callisto C) Triton D) Ganymede E) Miranda Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 63) The largest moon in the solar system, bigger but not as massive as Mercury, is A) Europa. B) Ganymede. C) Callisto. D) Titan. E) Triton. Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1

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64) A moon with a smooth, uncratered surface would imply A) meteorites have never struck the moon. B) a strong magnetic field surrounds the moon. C) the surface is very young. D) the moon lies within the planet's Roche Limit. E) the surface is completely liquid. Answer: C Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.1 65) Which of these moons has the densest atmosphere? A) Io B) Europa C) Callisto D) Titan E) Triton Answer: D Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 66) Which of these moons are most interesting to exobiologists? A) Io and Enceladus B) Europa and Titan C) Titan and Triton D) Europa and Miranda E) Triton and Charon Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 67) At Titan, the lakes are made mostly of liquid A) water. B) carbon dioxide. C) ethane. D) metallic hydrogen. E) nitrogen. Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2

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68) The Huygens probe of the ESA made a successful landing on A) Mars. B) Europa. C) Saturn. D) Titan. E) Triton. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 69) The atmosphere of Titan is composed mostly of A) oxygen. B) methane. C) carbon dioxide. D) hydrogen. E) nitrogen. Answer: E Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 70) The grooves and ridges on Ganymede are thought to A) be due to crustal tectonics motion (plate tectonics) B) have formed within the last thousand years. C) have grown considerably larger since the Voyager spacecraft discovered them. D) be part of an ongoing volcanic process. E) be due to the moon's rapid rotation. Answer: A Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2 71) What is true of Titan's atmosphere? A) It is similar to Earth's in composition and density. B) It is primarily hydrogen. C) It is oxygen rich. D) It was discovered by the Voyager 1 spacecraft. E) It has produced a runaway greenhouse effect. Answer: A Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2

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72) The erupting geysers of nitrogen gas on Triton A) can be viewed by the Hubble Space Telescope. B) are caused by a not yet determined internal energy source. C) produced the large liquid oceans. D) are increasing the moon's rotation rate. E) produced the frozen nitrogen surface. Answer: B Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2 73) Voyager 1 was unable to image Titan's surface because A) of "smog" in Titan's atmosphere. B) of Titan's high reflectivity. C) the moon was in shadow during the mission. D) the cameras were damaged by Saturn's magnetic field. E) volcanic activity spewed sulfur clouds, obscuring the surface. Answer: A Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2 74) The brightest and probably youngest surface of any moon of Saturn belongs to A) Titan. B) Tethys. C) Mimas. D) Enceladus. E) Iapetus. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 75) Which Jovian moon shows the most diverse terrain, suggesting a violent impact broke it into many pieces, some of which reformed it as a jumbled puzzle? A) Io B) Ganymede C) Enceladus D) Miranda E) Triton Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3

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76) What statistic below has changed the most in the last decade? A) the masses of the Galilean moons B) the compositions of moons of Uranus C) the rotational period of the Jovian moons D) the densities of the larger moons E) the number of known Jovian moons Answer: E Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 77) Which moon of Saturn shows the largest impact crater, relative to its size? A) Titan B) Callisto C) Mimas D) Miranda E) Enceladus Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 78) For a moon the same density as its planet, the Roche limit lies at ________ times the radius of its planet. A) 1.4 B) 2.5 C) 3.6 D) 5.2 E) 7 Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 79) Why are the rings of Saturn so bright? A) They are made of frozen metallic hydrogen. B) They are made of glassy beads expelled by the volcanoes of Enceladus. C) They are made of metallic iron, never rusted by exposure to oxygen. D) Light reflected off of gigantic Titan reinforces the sunlight. E) They are made of young, fresh water ice. Answer: E Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4

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80) Which statement about Jupiter's rings is true? A) They are larger than Saturn's, but darker. B) They lie inside Jupiter's Roche Limit. C) They are made, in part, of material ejected by Europa's volcanoes. D) They are dark because their ices are dirtier than Saturn's. E) They were discovered by Galileo at the same time he discovered the moons. Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 81) When Saturn is at Equinox, its rings will A) double the planet's brightness. B) lie in the plane of the ecliptic. C) contract closer to the planet's surface. D) appear face-on to the earth. E) lie perpendicular to the plane of the ecliptic. Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 82) What best explains the darkness of the rings beyond Saturn's? A) The sunlight is much fainter out there. B) old, sooty debris and radiation darkening C) Water ice reflects light poorly at the low temperatures beyond Saturn. D) Rocky debris doesn't reflect as well as water ice. E) They are pieces of captured comets. Answer: B Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 83) The Cassini Division is a gap in Saturn's rings caused by A) Saturn's excess heat. B) two shepherding moons. C) Saturn's magnetic field. D) gravitational interaction with Mimas. E) the icy ring particles melting. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4

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84) Inside the Roche Limit A) large moons are torn apart. B) is where large moons form. C) ring systems cannot exist. D) there is a gap in a planet's magnetic field. E) hydrogen can only exist in its liquid metallic form. Answer: A Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.4 85) If Saturn takes about 30 years to orbit the Sun, and its rings were seen edge-on in 1995, when did they next appear most open at solstice? A) 1998 B) 2002 C) 2005 D) 2007 E) 2010 Answer: B Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 86) If Uranus takes 84 years to orbit the Sun, and Voyager 2 found its rings wide open at solstice in 1989, when will or did they next appear edge on, as seen from Earth? A) 1995 B) 2003 C) 2010 D) 2025 E) They can never appear edge on, due to Uranus' 98 degree axial tilt. Answer: C Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 87) Which was not a Voyager discovery about the rings of Saturn? A) They have dark spokes that defy gravity. B) They are made of tens of thousands of narrow ringlets. C) There are hundreds of smaller moons imbedded in them, creating the gaps. D) The F ring particles are herded by two shepherd moons. E) The E ring may have been made by volcanic eruptions from Enceladus. Answer: C Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4

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88) Which of the following rings of Saturn lies closest to the planet? A) the A ring B) the B ring C) the C ring D) the E ring E) the F ring Answer: C Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.4 89) Which moon orbits a body only twice as big as it is? A) Triton B) our Moon C) Charon D) Miranda E) Mimas Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 90) Pluto's density is most similar to A) the terrestrial planets. B) the jovian planets. C) the moons of the jovian planets. D) Mercury, but not Venus, Earth, or Mars. E) Saturn, but not Jupiter, Uranus, or Neptune. Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 91) Pluto was discovered in A) ancient times. B) 1789. C) 1859. D) 1930. E) 1992. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5

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92) The two names most associated with the discovery of Pluto are A) Adams and Leverrier. B) Herschel and Bode. C) Kuiper and Whipple. D) Lowell and Tombaugh. E) Shoemaker and Levy. Answer: D Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 93) Charon's orbit A) lies exactly in Pluto's orbital plane. B) is highly inclined to Pluto's orbital plane. C) is perpendicular to Pluto's equator. D) is retrograde. E) has not been determined yet. Answer: B Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.5 94) Pluto is most similar to A) Europa. B) Miranda. C) Triton. D) our Moon. E) Mercury. Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 95) What is so unusual about Pluto's orbit? A) It lies exactly on the ecliptic. B) It has the lowest eccentricity of any planet's orbit. C) It is more inclined to the ecliptic than any of the eight planets. D) It has an unexpectedly short orbital period. E) Its orbital period is exactly twice that of Neptune's. Answer: C Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.5 96) Ganymede and Callisto have densities suggesting they are made of rocky cores and mantles of ________. Answer: water and/or ice Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1

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97) In general, the less cratered a moon's surface, the ________ it is. Answer: younger Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.1 98) To explain its magnetic field, Europa must have an ocean of ________. Answer: (salty) liquid water Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 99) As we go outward from Io to Ganymede, the density of the moons ________. Answer: decreases Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 100) The Galilean moon of most interest to exobiologists is ________. Answer: Europa Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 101) The element erupting from the volcanoes of Io is ________. Answer: sulfur Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 102) Europa is covered with an ocean of ________. Answer: liquid water (under ice). Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 103) A moon whose surface is smooth, with no craters, is probably ________. Answer: active. Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 104) Compared to the size of Mercury, Ganymede is ________. Answer: larger. Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.1 105) The tidal stresses that create Io's volcanism come from Jupiter and ________. Answer: Europa Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.1

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106) The atmosphere of Titan is chiefly ________. Answer: nitrogen Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 107) The atmospheres of both Titan and Triton are mainly ________. Answer: nitrogen Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 108) The orbit of Triton is ________, very different from all other major moons. Answer: retrograde (or clockwise) Diff: 1 Section Ref.: 8.2 109) The lakes of Titan consist of liquid ________. Answer: ethane, methane, or just hydrocarbons Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 110) On Neptune's moon ________, geysers of liquid nitrogen rise 10 km high. Answer: Triton Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 111) The only Jovian moon to orbit its planet retrograde and out of the equatorial plane is ________. Answer: Triton Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 112) The Saturnian moon of most interest to exobiologists is ________. Answer: Titan Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.2 113) The next moon likely to be broken up into a ring is ________. Answer: Triton Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2 114) The cantaloupe skin terrain of Triton is thought to be due to ________. Answer: faulting and deformation, or tectonic activity. Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.2

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115) One hemisphere of Enceladus may have the youngest surface of any of the jovian moons, with volcanoes spewing "ash" and "lava flows" of ________. Answer: Water Diff: 2 Section Ref.: 8.3 116) The moon ________ may have erupted to create the E rings around Saturn. Answer: Enceladus Diff: 3 Section Ref.: 8.3 117) All four ...


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