PSC 121 NAME ______

SPRING 2005

GAGE DATE ______

QUIZ 4

I. Multiple Choice: select the best answer for each question or statement from the answers provided. (30)

____1. As seen from your current location, when will an upright flagpole cast no shadow because the Sun is directly above the flagpole?

a. Every day at noon.

b. Only on the first day of summer.

c. Only on the first day of winter.

d. On both the first days of spring and fall.

e. Never from our current location.

____ 2. When the Moon appears to completely cover the Sun (an eclipse), the Moon must be at which phase?

a. Full b. New c. First quarter d. Last quarter e. At no particular phase

____ 3. Which of the following lists is correctly arranged in order of closest-to-most distant from the Earth?

a. Stars, Moon, Sun, Pluto

b. Sun, Moon, Pluto, stars

c. Moon, Sun, Pluto, stars

d. Moon, Sun, stars, Pluto

e. Moon, Pluto, Sun, stars

____ 4. Suppose the Moon looked like this tonight.

What will it look like 6 hours later?

____ 5. The planet Venus:

a. does not rise or set

b. rises in the east and sets in the west

c. remains stationary since it is called the Evening Star

d. rises at different directions in spring compared to fall

____ 6. Imagine that the Earth’s orbit were changed to be a perfect circle about the Sun so that the distance to the Sun never changed. How would this affect the seasons?

a. We would no longer experience a difference between the seasons.

b. We would still experience seasons, but the difference would be much LESS noticeable.

c. We would still experience seasons, but the difference would be much MORE noticeable.

d. We would continue to experience seasons in the same way we do now.

_____ 7. When the Earth is located between Moon and the Sun, the phase of the Moon you see is:

a. visible from Earth at midnight

b. visible from Earth during daylight hours

c. only visible before sunset at high latitudes

d. not visible at all

_____ 8. If you wanted to determine the composition of a star you could use:

a. a sample from the star

b. the star color

c. the spectrum

d. a telescope

_____ 9. Suppose your friend in Australia saw the phase of the Moon

shown to the right. What phase would you see that night?

_____ 10. Eclipses do not occur every month because:

a. the Moon’s orbit is tipped with respect to the Sun-Earth plane

b. the Moon’s orbit is fixed in space

c. the correct phases do not occur each month

d. the Moon’s shadow is too short

_____ 11. When the Earth revolves around the Sun once, the Moon revolves around

the Earth approximately____ times

a. once

b. 12 times

c. 28 times

d. 365 times

_____ 12. When the Moon appears to completely cover the Sun (an eclipse), the

Moon must be at which phase?

a. Full b. 1st Quarter c. New d. 3rd Quarter e. Can be any phase

_____ 13. Between the first quarter and full moon the moon is said to be:

a. waxing gibbous c. waxing crescent

b. waning gibbous d. waning crescent

_____ 14. If you were at the equator you would:

a. see all stars as circumpolar

b. have no circumpolar stars

c. see stars rise in the west and set in the east

d. have several pole stars

_____ 15. Constellations consist of

a. planets that are mostly unrelated

b. stars that are mostly unrelated

c. stars that are part of a stellar cluster

d. stars that do not move in space

e. planets that form a pattern in the sky

II. Brief Constructed Responses. Answer each of the following briefly but completely.

(20)

1. Your friend tells you that we only see one side of the Moon from Earth because the Moon does not rotate. Is this true? Explain why or why not.

2. The hottest part of the day should be at noon but often it is not. Explain why I should by and why it isn’t.

3. A student says that he went out to look for the Moon last night but it wasn’t there and wants to know what happened to it. How would you explain his observation?

4. It turns out that the star Alpha Centauri contains the element nitrogen. Explain how an astronomer determines this and why the method is successful.

5. Describe three celestial objects that are not stars, planets or moons.

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