Unit 3 Test Review

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List the Jovian planets in order from closest to the sun to furthest from the sun.

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1

List the Jovian planets in order from closest to the sun to furthest from the sun.

Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune

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2

List the terrestrial planets in order from closest to the sun the furthest from the sun.

Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars

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3

What are the defining characteristics of Jovian planets?

  • outer planets.

  • orbits life far apart from each other.

  • gaseous in nature.

  • all have rings.

  • many moons on most planets.

  • very dense cores.

  • much larger than terrestrial plants.

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4

What are the defining characteristics of terrestrial planets?

  • inner planets.

  • rocky in nature.

  • varying surface conditions.

  • varying atmospheres.

  • varying rotational rates.

  • only a few means (3).

  • only earth has oxygen.

  • lie close together.

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5

Of the characteristics Terrestrial/Jovian, which ones physically separated the planets into the two main categories?

Terrestrial: Rocky in nature. Jovian: Gaseous in nature.

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6

What do the Kuiper belt and astroid belt have in common?

All composed of remnants from the formation of the solar system.

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7

Asteroids

large space rocks orbiting the sun.

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8

Meteorites

Chunk of interplanetary debris prior to encountering earths atmosphere.

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9

Meteorite

any part of a meteorite that reaches the surface of the earth.

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10

Describe the nebular theory.

  • Large cloud of dust and gas called a nebula starts to collapse and rotate due to an outside influence.

  • Conservation of angular momentum says as the cloud contracts it spins faster.

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11

Describe the condensation theory.

  • Includes basic facts about conditions in the disk as the planets formed.

  • as the disk shrank, the sun began to heat the disk this allowed only objects with the high melting points to condense out of the cloud of gas.

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12

What is 1 AU (Astronomical unit) equal in kilometers?

149.6 Million km

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13

1 AU is equal The distance from the _____ to the ___

Earth to the Sun

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14

List the four layers of earths atmosphere in order from closest to the surface to further away from the surface.

Closest to Surface:

  1. Troposphere

  2. Stratosphere

  3. Mesosphere

  4. Ionosphere Farthest to Surface:

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15

Troposphere:

Where convection takes place — responsible for weather.

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16

Stratosphere:

Where you'll find the very important ozone layer. The ozone layer helps protect us from ultraviolet radiation (UV) from the sun.

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17

Ionosphere:

Ionized by solar radiation (X-ray) & y-ray, and is a good conductor; this is where the aurorae are occurring.

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18

Mesosphere:

Protects the planet Earth from the celestial rocky masses that enter the atmospheric envelope of the Earth.

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19

What is the function of ozone in our atmosphere?

Ozone layer is the upper stratosphere absorbs ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.

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20

What is the Aurora?

refers to a natural light display in the Earth's sky called the aurora polaris, or polar lights, visible only in high-latitude regions like the North and South Poles.

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21

Explain the Montreal protocol

To limit production and use of CFCs.

  • This is why our air conditioners and aerosol cans had to have their coolants changed. China, India and others still do not follow the protocol

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22

Explain the Kyoto Protocols

Kyoto protocol limits on greenhouse gas emissions.

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23

Why does the sky appear blue? What name is given for this phenomenon?

Atmosphere scatters blue, but not red light, this is called Rayleigh scattering.

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24

List the top three greenhouse gases..

  • Carbon Dioxide (CO2)

  • Carbon Monoxide (CO)

  • Methane (CH4)

  • Nitrous (N20)

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25

Describe the three types of earths atmosphere throughout its history:

  • Primary: Atmosphere was hydrogen, helium; this escaped earths gravity.

  • Secondary: atmosphere, from volcanic activity, mostly nitrogen.

  • Life: appeared creating atmospheric oxygen.

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26

Which scientist propose the idea of continental drift (Continental drift theory)?

Alfred Wegner in 1915

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27

What is a subduction zone?

Earths upper mantle, near a plate boundary; this is where one plate slides below another.

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28

Convergent:

Earths upper mantle, near a plate boundary; this is where one plate slides below another.

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29

Transform:

Plates can also slide along each other, creating faults where many earthquakes occur.

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30

Divergent:

Play can move away from each, other creating rifts.

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31

What drives crustal plate motion?

Plate motion is driven by convection currents in the mantle material.

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32

What is the name for the supercontinent that is believed to have existed 200 million years ago?

Pangaea

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33

On average how many years passed between magnetic field reversals on earth?

500,000 years

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34

What is the magnetosphere? How does it protect us?

The region around the Earth where charged particles from the Solar wind are trapped.

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35

Explain effects tides has on the planet and how it does so.

Due to gravitational force on earth from the moon.

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36

What is a neap tide?

(Lower) Earth, Sun and Moon make a right angle.

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37

What is a spring tide?

(Higher) Earth, Sun and Moon in a straight line.

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38

Explain tidal friction. What will eventually be the result?

  • our day gets longer as the mover seeds from us

  • this will continue until the earth rotates synchronously with the moon

  • so that the same side of the earth always points towards the moon

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39

What is the name given for the magnetosphere?

Van Allen belts

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