A) organic materials, such as amino acids
B) more metal than any other meteorite
C) large flecks of gold
D) radioactive elements which we do not have on the Earth
E) the decomposed bodies of small yellow aliens who were clearly intelligent
Section 14.3: Formation of the Solar System
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Multiple Choice
A) Mt. Everest on Earth
B) Mt. Maxwell on Venus
C) the ring of mountains surrounding Copernicus crater on the Moon
D) the ice mountains on Titan
E) Olympus Mons (Mt. Olympus) on Mars
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Multiple Choice
A) those in the inner solar system were much larger than those in the outer solar system
B) those in the outer solar system included far more metal and rock, and thus the outer planets could be denser
C) those in the outer solar system were in a place where ice, not just rock, condensed and thus could grow larger
D) those in the outer solar system did not have enough planetesimals nearby
E) you can't fool me, there were no differences between the inner and outer protoplanets; only the planets that finally formed are different.
Section 14.3: Comparison with Other Planetary Systems
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Multiple Choice
A) photographing the planets using infrared waves
B) looking for the decrease of light from the star during a transit of the planet across its disk
C) sending a very small spacecraft to the exoplanet to take close-up images
D) measuring changes in the radial velocity (Doppler shift) of the star caused by the pull of orbiting planets
E) simply taking a visible light photo of the planet around the nearest star; it wasn't that hard
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Multiple Choice
A) Venus
B) Mars
C) Mercury
D) the Moon
E) all of the above are equally active these days
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Multiple Choice
A) patrol the block on which you live carefully each night for a few years
B) look for a bright comet in the sky and look where its tail is pointing
C) search the area beneath or close to the point where a bright fireball was seen to burn out
D) look near the Earth's equator where our planet's magnetic attraction is the greatest
E) taste the meatloaf in the college cafeteria late in the week
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Multiple Choice
A) Earth
B) Venus
C) Jupiter
D) Pluto
E) Neptune
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Multiple Choice
A) Mars
B) Venus
C) Europa
D) Titan
E) none of the above
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Multiple Choice
A) something your mom would not approve of, involving streams of dirty water
B) the closest approach of an active bright comet to the Earth
C) a once-in-a-lifetime experience at the end of which you will be completely covered with dust particles from space
D) watching the left-over dirt from a comet burn up by friction as the pieces hit the Earth's atmosphere
E) something quite dangerous where you are likely to be hit when many larger rocks fall from above
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Multiple Choice
A) the time since the last Ice Age on Earth
B) the oldest ages we have measured for any bodies in the solar system
C) the time since the great impact that killed the dinosaurs
D) the time that has passed since the death of Julius Ceasar
E) you can't fool me, we have no way of measuring the ages of stony meteorites
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Multiple Choice
A) the fact that all the planets revolve around the equator of the Sun in the same direction
B) the difference in the composition of the terrestrial and jovian planets
C) the ages of the oldest rocks on Earth, the Moon, and meteorites
D) the plane of the orbit of Pluto
E) the existence of comets in the outer solar system made mainly of frozen gases
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Multiple Choice
A) the dust freed from some comets is clumpy and not evenly distributed along its orbit
B) how many meteors we see in a given year depends one which side of the Sun we are on
C) we get meteor storms at the same time and for the same reason we have more hurricanes on Earth
D) meteor storms happen when Halley's Comet is near the Earth in its 76-year orbit
E) no one has any idea about why meteor storms happen; they are a mystery
Section 14.2: Meteorites: Stones from Heaven
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Multiple Choice
A) Mercury
B) Uranus
C) Earth
D) Jupiter
E) Neptune
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Multiple Choice
A) gold, iron, and nickel atoms
B) planetesimals (a few km to tens of km wide)
C) giant accretion grains about the size of Mars
D) extremely hot clouds of gas torn out of the Sun, which was already shining brilliantly
E) pure water ice crystals, about the size of a snowflake
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Multiple Choice
A) on the tallest mountains on Earth
B) in orbit around Mercury
C) in the asteroid and Kuiper belts
D) under the permafrost of Mars
E) you can't fool me, such planetesimals were swept up by the Sun long ago; none remain
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Multiple Choice
A) the heat of the Sun vaporized much of their solid material early on
B) the heaviest chunks that hit early on were able to bore through solid rock to the center
C) the continuing impacts on a growing protoplanet eventually melted the entire body
D) large amounts of hydrogen and helium collect around such planets a little later in their history
E) planetesimals with different types of composition hit at different times, with the heaviest ones hitting first
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Multiple Choice
A) meteorites
B) asteroids
C) meteors
D) meteor showers
E) comets
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Multiple Choice
A) only a few dozen years - it was over very quickly
B) about 100 million years (0.1 billion)
C) about two billion years
D) about four billion years (it only ended about half a billion years ago)
E) that era is not finished yet - giant impacts are still happening all over the solar system
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Multiple Choice
A) the Oort Cloud
B) the Kuiper Belt
C) the proto-Sun
D) the solar nebula
E) Bayonne, New Jersey
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Multiple Choice
A) terrestrial planet
B) jovian planet
C) dwarf planet
D) minor planet (asteroid)
E) all of the above are round
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