SCIENCE 10 2ND LE

Subdecks (2)

Cards (114)

  • Quasars
    luminous and far celestial objects in the universe that are detected due the large electromagnetic radiation that they emit
  • Quasars
    They are thought to be powered by supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies
  • Quasars
    (Quasi-stellar radio sources)
  • Jeans mass
    minimum mass that a clump of gas must have to collapse under its gravity
  • Quasars (Quasi-stellar radio sources)

    • Luminous and far celestial objects in the universe that are detected due to the large electromagnetic radiation that they emit
    • They are thought to be powered by supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies
  • The first stars were massive and luminous that their formation lead to the production and dispersion of heavier elements which lead to the formation of the solar system today
  • This quasar is so far from Earth that its light took billions of years to travel here
  • Protogalaxies
    Star-forming system is much smaller and less organized than the modern galaxy
  • Jeans mass
    Minimum mass that a clump of gas must have to collapse under its gravity
  • Protogalaxies do not contain significant amounts of any elements besides hydrogen and helium
  • Formation of protogalaxies
    1. Clouds of gas and dust that slowly aggregates to form more matter
    2. As they evolve, they will begin to merge with each other and form larger structures like the galaxy that we know today
  • How stars are formed
    • Microphysics
    • Macrophysics
  • Types of stars by mass
    • Less Massive Stars
    • Massive Stars
    • Most Massive Stars
  • Planetesimals
    Small objects in space that coalesce and form planet precursors
  • How planets form
    Planetesimals gather together due to common gravity and form a Planet
  • Terrestrial planets

    • Made of rocky material
    • Solid surface
    • No ring systems
    • Few moons
    • Relatively small
  • Mercury
    • Known as a shrinking planet because its iron core is slowly cooling causing it to affect the planet's overall size to decrease
    • Does not contain an atmosphere, just a thin layer of exosphere
  • Venus
    • Maxwell Montes (volcano almost as high as Mt. Everest)
    • Rain is made up of Sulfuric Acid (H2SO4)
    • Reflects 70% of all the sunlight that reaches the planet
  • Earth
    • Only planet known to sustain life
    • Because of its distance from the Sun, it is able to contain water in all of its form
    • Life on Earth first began in the oceans in the form of microorganisms
  • Mars
    • Has same seasons as the Earth but these seasons last longer
    • Gravity is weaker compared to Earth
    • Atmosphere is mostly composed of carbon dioxide
  • Jovian planets

    • Multiple moons
    • No solid surface
    • Has ring systems
    • Large in size
  • Jupiter
    • Largest planet in the solar system
    • Contains 79 moons
    • The Great Red Spot is the most iconic feature (a crimson brown storm raging for 300 years)
  • Saturn
    • Lightest planet (less dense than water)
    • Its largest storm is located on its north pole and has a hexagonal shape
    • Ring system is composed of icy remnants of comets, asteroids and moons
  • Uranus
    • Coldest planet
    • Rotates vertically along its equator
    • Contains 13 rings and 27 moons
  • Neptune
    • Surface is made up of water, ammonia, methane
    • Cold, dark and icy due to its far distance from the Sun
    • Contains 6 rings and 14 moons
  • Pluto
    • Dwarf planet
    • Contains 5 moons
  • 4 characteristics of a planet
    • Orbit the Sun
    • Not a moon
    • Enough mass to be round
    • Able to clear orbit of debris
  • Nuclear fusion
    Combination of two or more atomic nuclei to form one or more new atomic nuclei
  • Nuclear fission
    Breakdown of a nuclei into two or more separate nuclei
  • Nucleosynthesis
    The process of forming a new atomic nuclei from existing smaller nuclei