Chapter 5 Questions

Question How would the supernova of a star near the Sun affect the Earth?
Answer

Supernovae put out a huge quantity of high energy radiation and particles. A nearby supernova could produce enough radiation to be dangerous to life. The high energy particles could destroy the ozone layer, leaving the Earth vulnerable to the Sun's ultraviolet radiation.

Question The Earth has a lot of water. Where did that come from? All the other planets seem to lack water.
Answer

Water is a basic constituent of the solar system and occurs throughout it. Comets are nearly all water, as are some of the moons of the outer planets, but in the cold of the farther reaches of the solar system, the water is frozen. Mercury is too close to the Sun and any water it may have had quickly boiled away. Venus probably began with water but lost it due to its great heat. Mars lost much of its water because of its weak gravity, but retains some frozen into a permafrost.

Question Why does one star in Orion blink red, green and white?
Answer Twinkling of starlight is due to turbulent cells of air in the upper atmosphere acting like lenses. You probably have seen the air shimmer above a hot pavement or a heat radiator, for instance. Different wavelengths of the light are affected by different amounts as the twinkling takes place, and so the color seems to change. If you were in space above the atmosphere the stars wouldn't appear to twinkle as you looked at them.
question How old is the light coming to us from stars we can see with the naked eye? Wouldn't it be cool to bet someone $100 that you could look 100 years into the past and then just point up to the sky?
Answer The nearest star is about 4 light years distant. The farthest object you can see without a telescope or binoculars is the Andromeda galaxy, located some 2 million light years away, which is visible in very dark skies as a faint, fuzzy patch of light in the constellation Andromeda. Most bright visible stars in the sky are several hundred light years away. You can always bet with someone, but collecting is often more difficult.
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Copyright © 2005 John F. Hawley