The Cosmic Perspective (9th Edition)
The Cosmic Perspective (9th Edition)
9th Edition
ISBN: 9780134874364
Author: Jeffrey O. Bennett, Megan O. Donahue, Nicholas Schneider, Mark Voit
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 17, Problem 53EAP
To determine

To Compare: This year with the year in which the supernova that produced the nebula was actually observed

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The telescope and CCD camera described in question 2 are scheduled to observe the star cluster M67 at 22:00 GMT on 02/03/2022. Using Stellarium, determine whether or not this is a good time to observe the cluster. Choose the answer below that best matches your conclusions. a. No - the cluster is not visible from London at this date and time. b. The cluster is visible but the full Moon is close by and so will interfere with the observations. c. The cluster is visible but is very close to the horizon and so will be difficult to observe. d. The cluster M67 is never visible in the sky from London so we should abandon any plans to observe it. e. Yes this is a good time to observe the cluster as it is well placed in the sky for viewing and the moon is not visible.
Place the following events in the formation of stars in the proper chronological sequence, with the oldest first and the youngest last. w. the gas and dust in the nebula flatten to a disk shape due to gravity and a steadily increasing rate of angular rotation x. a star emerges when the mass is great enough and the temperature is high enough to trigger thermonuclear fusion in the core y. the rotation of the nebular cloud increases as gas and dust concentrates by gravity within the growing protostar in the center z. some force, perhaps from a nearby supernova, imparts a rotation to a nebular cloud y, then z, then w, then x z, then y, then w, then x w, then y, then z, then x z, then x, then w, then y x, then z, then y, then w MacBook Air on .H. O O O O
True or False 8. Almost all stars are in binary systems. The book says: "So far you have been considering the deaths of stars as if they were all single objects that never interact, but more than half of all stars are members of binary star systems."From this, I would not necessarily say that almost all stars are in binary systems based on this alone, but some other information I am finding says up to 85%. However, the numbers seem to be all over the map outside the course material, and I can not find a solid figure in it from what I have looked at. If it helps, Stars and Galaxies, 10th Edition by Seeds and Beckman is my reference material.
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