A) measuring distances to stars
B) searching for planets around stars
C) measuring the positions of stars on the sky
D) measuring the velocities of stars via the Doppler effect
E) using metric units for distance (e.g.meters rather than light years)
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Multiple Choice
A) Most of them are much more massive than Earth.
B) Photographs reveal that most of them have atmospheres much like that of Jupiter.
C) Many of them orbit closer to their star than Jupiter orbits the Sun.
D) Many of them have been discovered by observing Doppler shifts in the spectra of the stars they orbit.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) In addition to the categories of terrestrial and jovian,there must be an "in-between" category of planet that has the mass of a jovian planet but the composition of a terrestrial planet.
B) Jovian planets can migrate from the orbits in which they are born.
C) In some star systems,it is possible for jovian planets to form in the inner solar system and terrestrial planets to form in the outer solar system.
D) Some of the "exceptions to the rules" in our own solar system are likely to have been the result of giant impacts.
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Multiple Choice
A) cloudtop temperatures over 1000 K
B) intense volcanism
C) clouds made of rock dust
D) density similar to or lower than Jupiter's
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Essay
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) the planets reflect more light the closer they are to the star.
B) more of the starlight is blocked by the planet when it transits the star.
C) the amount and frequency of the star's motion are both higher.
D) the closer to a star,the hotter and therefore brighter the planet is.
E) planets that are close to a star are heated up and therefore larger.
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Multiple Choice
A) It shows that our Solar System is very unusual.
B) It shows that our Solar System is very typical.
C) It shows that we do not fully understand the formation of our Solar System.
D) It shows that life in the Universe is rare.
E) It shows that Jupiter is unusually cold.
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True/False
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Doppler and astrometric observations.
B) Doppler and transit observations.
C) spectral observations of the planet's atmosphere.
D) any method that measures the gravitational tug of the planet on the star.
E) direct imaging from the new generation of space telescopes.
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Multiple Choice
A) the Doppler technique.
B) astrometric measurements.
C) transit observations.
D) spectra.
E) all of the above
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Multiple Choice
A) 100.
B) 1,000.
C) 10,000.
D) 100,000.
E) a million.
Correct Answer
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Essay
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View Answer
True/False
Correct Answer
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) the planet's size and density.
B) the planet's mass and orbital distance.
C) the planet's mass and composition.
D) the planet's orbital period and eccentricity.
E) the planet's size and orbital distance.
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Multiple Choice
A) jovian planets
B) terrestrial planets
C) Kuiper belt objects
D) None of the above: most extrasolar planets apparently belong to some new category of object.
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Multiple Choice
A) Doppler
B) astrometric
C) transit
D) gravitational lensing
E) combining all the above
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) Extrasolar planets give off light at different wavelengths than planets in our solar system.
B) No telescope is powerful enough to detect the faint light from a distant planet.
C) Their light is overwhelmed by the light from their star.
D) Telescopes are too busy with other projects.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) minimum mass.
B) orbital radius.
C) orbital eccentricity.
D) all of the above
Correct Answer
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