Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
Homework #6
  • Question 1  (1 point) In a lava lamp, heat is transported by blobs of hot wax moving up when they are hot and down when they are cooler. What type of heat transport is this?
     
    a. Conduction   b. Radiation   c. Convection   d. No heat is transported.
  •  Question 2   (1 point) You're the captain of a Bird of Prey during the Klingon Civil War. You're being pursued by a dishonorable traitor who deserves to die. Directing your ship to the flare star you skim its surface, dodging disruptor fire the whole time. Your sensors pick up a building solar flare, as powerful as anything produced on Earth's sun. If the pursuing ship's shields can absorb the power of a thousand hydrogen bombs, can it survive this flare? (This information IS in your textbook! Check out the two-page spread.)
  • a. I'm peaceful and live according to the non-violent principles of Ghandi!
  • b. Yes, I must find another way to destroy my pursuer.
  • c. No, he will die like the dog he is! I just hope I can escape it myself, but if I do not they will write an epic poem about my deeds.
  •  Question 3   (1 point) Most of the light we see coming from the sun originates in the
     a.chromosphere   b.photosphere   c.corona   d.sunspots   e.magnetic field
2
Homework #6
  • Question 4   (1 point) The key difference between atoms of two different chemical elements is their number of
     a.Electrons   b.Protons   c.Neutrons
  • Question 5   (1 point) The neutral atom of the most common form of hydrogen consists of
  • a.one proton and one neutron.
  • b.one proton.
  • c.one proton, one neutron, and one electron.
  • d.one proton and one electron.
  • e.an isotope and an ion.
  •  Question 6   (1 point) Two neutral atoms of the same element but of different isotopes contain the same number of
  • a. Electrons, Protons, and Neutrons
  • b. Electrons and Protons but not Neutrons
  • c. Electrons and Neutrons but not Protons
  • d. Neutrons and Protons but not Electrons
3
Homework #6
  • Question 7   (1 point) The sun produces energy by converting mass into energy via a fusion process. How much energy is produced when the sun converts 1 kg of mass into energy? Also note that when checking units the unit of energy called a "Joule" is shorthand for a "kg m2/s2".
    a.   6 x 1016 J  b.   9 x 108 J   c. 6 x 1016 J   d. 3 x 1016 J   e. 9 x 1016 J
  • E = mc2.  Mass = 1 kg, c = 3x108 m/s.  So E= 1kg x (3x108 m/s)2
  • So that’s jut 9x1016 J, right?


4
Homework #6
  • Question 8   (1 point) How much energy is produced when the sun converts 1 kg of hydrogen into helium? Note that this is different than a problem which asks how much energy is produced when the sun converts 1 kg of mass into energy. When hydrogen is converted to helium, only a small fraction of the mass is "lost" and converted to energy.
     a.   1.2 x 1012 J   b.   6.4 x 1014 J   c.   2.8 x 1015 J   d.   9.0 x 1016 J
  • From class notes: Compare mass of four 1H to mass of one 4He
    • 6.693 ´ 10-27 kg   -  6.645 ´ 10-27 kg   =  0.048 ´ 10-27 kg       drop in mass
    • E = mc2 = 0.048 ´ 10-27 kg ´ (3 ´ 108 m/s)2 =  0.43 ´ 10-11 kg m2/s2 = 0.43 ´ 10-11 J
    • So 4.3 ´ 10-12 J of energy released for every He made.
    • How many Hydrogen atoms in a kg?  Just 1 kg/1.673x10-27 = 5.976x1026
    • Divide this by 4 (since 4 hydrogens = 1 He).  Multiply this by energy for each He produced = 5.976x1026 x 4.3 ´ 10-12 J = 6.4 x 1014 J
5
Homework #6
  •  Question 9   (1 point) If a sunspot has a temperature of 4200 K and the solar surface has a temperature of 5800 K, how many times brighter is the surface compared with the sunspot? (Hint: Use the Stefan-Boltzmann law.)
    a.It isn't brighter -- it is fainter!   b.About 1.4 times brighter.   c.About 3.6 times brighter.   d.About 5.6 times brighter.
  • Sunspot brightness, use E = σT4
  • (T1/T2)4 = (5800/4200)4 = 3.6 times brighter


  •  Question 10  (1 point) Fusion of very light elements to make heavier ones releases energy, as does fission of very heavy elements to make lighter ones. The most "energetically favorable" and stable element from which neither fission nor fusion can release energy is
     
    a.Hydrogen   b.Helium   c.Carbon   d.Iron   e.Uranium