Craters by radiation/Quiz

Crater astronomy is a lecture included as a quiz-section minilecture in the radiation astronomy course on the principles of radiation astronomy.

This satellite photograph is of the summit caldera on Fernandina Island in the Galapagos archipelago. Credit: unnamed NASA astronaut, 7/6/2002.

You are free to take this quiz based on crater astronomy at any time.

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Quiz

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1 Which of the following is not a radiation phenomenon associated with a crater?

strata
elongated dust particles
high albedo
olivine
Rayleighs
volcanoes

2 Radiation phenomena associated with craters include?

catena
secondary craters
checking equations about complex systems
deformed strata
electric arcs
explosions

3 Which of the following are phenomena associated with the orange system?

titanium
yttrium
navels
a number of emission lines very close together
many impact craters on Io
ScO

4 Phenomena associated with some meteorites?

have a gaseous surface
long nickel-iron crystals
octahedrite
kamacite
taenite
plessite

5 Observations of Io have benefited greatly from what phenomenon?

a dense, opaque atmosphere
lightning
extensive meteorite cratering
a flattening out
liquid hydrocarbon lakes
the reflected light of allotropes and compounds of sulfur

6 The term astrogeography is often more restricted because of what?

the relationship between outer-space geography and geographic position
military space strategy
extensive meteorite cratering
a flattening out
evaluating strategy
military operations

7 True or False, Mars may have suffered asteroid impacts.

TRUE
FALSE

8 Which of the following is not a natural phenomenon associated with the planet Mars?

iron oxide
the MESSENGER spacecraft
water
meteorites on Earth
Olympus Mons
climate

9 Which of the following is not a phenomenon associated with the planet Mars?

iron oxide
silicates
helium in its atmosphere
meteorites on Earth
methane in its atmosphere
weather

10 Meteorites found on Earth may be from which of the following?

Saturn
Mercury
the Moon
the asteroid belt
Jupiter
Mars

11 Usually associated with clouds filling the sky, thunder and lightning, wind and what water based meteorites

12 Which of the following is a phenomenon associated historically with Titania?

Jupiter
a large, trenchlike feature
a relatively light surface
few or no canyons and scarps
very few impact craters
helium ice

13 The first source of odor when the terminator passes at the beginning of daylight may be which of the following?

the Sun
a meteorite impact
flowers that open their blooms at sunrise
a late-summer rainstorm
the Moon

14 Which of the following are theoretical radiation astronomy phenomena associated with a planet?

possible orbits
a hyperbolic orbit
nuclear fusion at its core
nuclear fusion in its ionosphere
near the barycenter of its stellar system
accretion
electric arcs
impact craters

15 When the Earth is viewed from space using X-ray astronomy what characteristic is readily observed?

the magnetic north pole
the Hudson Bay meteorite crater
the South Atlantic Anomaly
the Bermuda Triangle
solar positron events
electrons striking the ionosphere

16 Which of the following is not an astronomical entity?

Johannes Kepler
the coronal cloud very near the Sun
the Moon
the question mark (?)
the Barrington Meteor Crater
Johannes Hevelius

17 True or False, Callisto's surface is uniformly colored but is not uniform in craters.

TRUE
FALSE

18 Which of the following are theoretical radiation astronomy phenomena associated with a star?

possible orbits
a hyperbolic orbit
nuclear fusion at its core
nuclear fusion in its chromosphere
near the barycenter of its planetary system
accretion
electric arcs
impact craters
radar signature

19 Which of the following radiation astronomy phenomena are associated with the rocky object Mercury?

apparent impact craters
an excess brightness at or near the edge
the iron XIV line
neutron emission
polar coronal holes
meteor emission
changes in the line-blanketing

20 Which of the following are radiation astronomy phenomena associated with the rocky-object Io?

surface regions reflecting or emitting violet or purple
an excess brightness at or near the edge
red regions that may be phosphorus
neutron emission
polar coronal holes
meteor emission
rotation

21 Which of the following are radiation astronomy phenomena associated with the apparent liquid-object Earth?

rain
snow
hail
neutron emission
polar coronal holes
meteor emission
rotation

22 True or False, There are blue or blue mineral containing meteorites.

TRUE
FALSE

23 Which of the following are radiation astronomy phenomena associated with the gaseous-object Neptune?

Voyager 2
blue rays
clouds
neutron emission
polar coronal holes
meteor emission
rotation

24 Yes or No, There are violet or violet mineral containing meteorites.

Yes
No

25 Moldavite is a mineral that may be associated with what radiation astronomy phenomenon?

predicting the end of the Earth
determining the accuracy of local computers
meteorite impacts
demonstrating that Venus was once a comet
predicting when currently dormant volcanoes will erupt
fireballs

26 Why is much of the surface of Mars covered with red iron oxide dust when the rocks that compose much of its surface are blue or violet?

Mars has been systematically bombarded with small iron-nickel meteorites or micrometeorites that oxidize in its atmosphere
Mars has been frequently bombarded with hematite containing micrometeorites
asteroid impacts on Mars may have forced iron from near its core into the atmosphere and onto the surface as hematite dust that oxidized
Mars is like Earth in surface hematite composition, but Earth has much more water
precipitation from iron-rich water

27 Which of the following are radiation astronomy phenomena associated with the Sun?

the color of the upper rim as seen from Earth
an excess brightness at or near the edge of the Sun
the iron XIV green line
neutron emission
polar coronal holes
meteor emission
changes in the line-blanketing

28 True or False, A metallic or stony object that is the remains of a meteor is called a meteoroid.

TRUE
FALSE


Hypotheses

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  1. Craters may have an equal probability of having a meteorite origin or an electric current arc origin.

See also

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{{Radiation astronomy resources}}