Stars/Yellows/Quiz

Yellow stars is a lecture from the radiation astronomy department for possible inclusion in the course on the principles of radiation astronomy.
You are free to take this quiz based on yellow stars.
To improve your scores, read and study the lecture, the links contained within, listed under See also, External links and in the Template:Tlx template. This should give you adequate background to get 100 %.
As a "learning by doing" resource, this quiz helps you to assess your knowledge and understanding of the information, and it is a quiz you may take over and over as a learning resource to improve your knowledge, understanding, test-taking skills, and your score.
Suggestion: Have the lecture available in a separate window.
Enjoy! Template:Clear
Quiz
<quiz>
{Which of the following emission/absorption phenomena are associated with yellow stars? |type="[]"} - helium lines at 501 and 505 nm - the strong C2 (1,2) band - nitrogen emission in plasmas at 566.934 nm from N VIII + helium emission line at 5876 Å - neutral iron line at 526.96 nm + calcium yellow line at 569.4 nm
{Which of the following is a phenomenon associated with yellow stars? |type="()"} - Jupiter + sodium line emission - sunspots on the Sun - an emission with a wavelength of 420 nm - phosphorus - TiO
{True or False, The red shift cannot affect yellow stars. |type="()"} - TRUE + FALSE
{Complete the text: |type="{}"} A filter of type F588N allows the transmission of { yellow (i) } rays.
{Which of the following emission/absorption phenomena are associated with yellow stars? |type="[]"} + Nitrogen emission line at 575.5 nm - the strong C2 (1,2) band - nitrogen emission in plasmas at 566.934 nm from N VIII + Helium emission line at 5876 Å - neutral iron line at 526.96 nm + Calcium yellow line at 569.4 nm
{Which of the following is not a prominent feature associated with the yellowness response? |type="()"} - M cone cells - a green light source + L cones - "bluish green" 493-498 nm - "yellowish green" 530-559 nm - "yellow green" 559-570 nm
{True or False, Bremsstrahlung radiation may be a source of the yellow continuum. |type="()"} + TRUE - FALSE
{Which of the following are likely associated with a yellow emission line control group? |type="[]"} - rocky objects + high peak to background + plasma objects + a G2V photosphere - rotation - watery surface - spots
{Using the equation what temperature corresponds approximately to a Planckian peak wavelength of 580 nm? |type="()"} - 5140 K - 5800 K + 5170 K - 6000 K - 5870 K - 5250 K
{Which of the following are the differences between a star and an astronomical yellow source? |type="[]"} + a star may emit predominantly green rays - an astronomical yellow source is spherical - a yellow star is an astronomical yellow source + a star with nuclear fusion in its chromosphere emits neutrinos, but a yellow source with no nuclear fusion ongoing does not + a yellow source may be cloud like + an astronomical yellow source may be a rocky object
</quiz>
Hypotheses
- Yellow stars allow the study all the astronomical objects of the Solar System.
See also
- First astronomical X-ray source/Quiz
- Planetary science/Quiz
- Radiation astronomy/Quiz
- Radiation chemistry/Quiz
- Radiation geography/Quiz
- Radiation history/Quiz
- Stellar active region/Quiz
External links
- NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database - NED
- The SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System
- SIMBAD Astronomical Database
Template:TlxTemplate:TlxTemplate:TlxTemplate:Stars resourcesTemplate:Sisterlinks