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An educational institution which has been recognized as maintaining standards that qualify graduates for admission to higher, or more specialized, institutions or professional practice.
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A rocky space object which can be from a few hundred feet to several hundred km wide. Most asteroids in our solar system orbit the Sun in a belt between Mars and Jupiter.
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An expert in the study of the Sun, Moon, stars, planets, and other space bodies.
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The approximate distance from the Sun to the Earth which is equal to 150,000,000 kilometers.
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The layers of gases which surround a star, like our Sun, or a planet, like our Earth.
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An imaginary straight line around which an object rotates.
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Living things that have only one cell and are so small they can only be seen with a microscope.
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A dark, fine-grained volcanic rock.
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A theory which states that the Universe began to expand after a super powerful explosion of concentrated matter and energy.
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The leftover core of a super massive star after a supernova. Black holes exert a tremendous gravitational pull.
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A scale on a thermometer where the interval between the boiling point and the freezing point of water is divided into 100 degrees. Freezing point is represented by 0 degrees and boiling point is represented by 100 degrees. The same scale is also utilized in Centigrade.
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See Celsius
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Electrons, protons, and ions.
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A hazy cloud which surrounds the nucleus of a comet.
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Frozen masses of gas and dust which have a definite orbit through the solar system.
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The very hot outermost layer of a star's atmosphere. Our Sun's corona can only be seen during a total solar eclipse.
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An astronaut from the former Soviet Union or the current republic of Russia.
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Having to do with the study of the history, structure, and changes in the Universe.
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The Universe is made up of various firms of matter. Galaxies have stars which emit light and radiation. This provides our view of the 'lit' Universe. But there is more matter out there in space, than just the particles that we can see through visible light and gamma radiation. The other matter is called 'Dark Matter.' It is theorized that 90% of the Universe is made up of Dark Matter.
A path around an object which decreases in size with time. For example, when a satellite enters a decaying orbit above Earth, its orbit size decreases to the point that it enters Earth's atmosphere where it burns up.
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The mass per unit of volume of a substance.
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A shift in an object's spectrum due to a change in the wavelength of light that occurs when an object is moving toward or away from Earth.
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The entire range of the different types of electromagnetic radiation, or waves. It goes from the very long wave, low frequency, radio waves through infrared waves and visible light waves to the very high frequency and short waves of the gamma-rays and X-rays. Those wavelengths in the visible light range have a specific color associated with them when they pass through a prism. The lower frequency, longer wavelengths produce a red while those with higher frequency, shorter wavelengths produce a violet. Those wavelengths which fall somewhere in between these two points produce the orange, yellow, green, and blue also found in a spectrum.
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A wave of electric and magnetic energy that is generated when an electric charge is accelerated.
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Shaped like an elongated closed curve.
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Usable heat or power; in physics, it is the capacity of a physical system to perform work.
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The velocity an object needs to reach to leave a gravitational field.
A scale on a thermometer where the freezing point of water is represented by 32 degrees and the boiling point is represented by 212 degrees.
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A nuclear reaction in which an element with small atoms fuses to form an element with larger atoms, releasing large amounts of energy.
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A cluster of stars, dust, and gas held together by gravity.
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Penetrating short wave electromagnetic radiation of very high frequency.
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An orbit in which a satellite's rate of revolution matches the Earth's rate of rotation. This allows the satellite to stay over the same site on the Earth's surface at all times.
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The volume over which an object exerts a gravitational pull.
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See Gravity
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See Gravity
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The force of attraction between two objects which is influenced by the mass of the two objects and the distance between the two objects.
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A heavy wheel or disk mounted so that its axis can turn freely in one or more directions. A spinning gyroscope tends to resist change in the direction of its axis.
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The place in which an organism lives and obtains the materials it needs in order to survive.
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Having the Sun as a center, such as a heliocentric solar system.
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Craters which are the result of a collision between a large body, such as a planet or satellite, and a smaller body such as an asteroid or meteorite.
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Electromagnetic radiation with long wavelengths which is found in the invisible part of the spectrum. Human beings experience infrared waves as heat.
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An electrically charged particle. Ions may be negatively or positively charged.
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A scale for measuring temperature where 0 Kelvin is equal to -273.16 degrees Celsius. Zero Kelvin is referred to as absolute zero, the point at which all motion within molecules comes to a stop.
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1000 grams. A kilogram equals 2.2 pounds.
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1000 meters. A kilometer equals 0.6214 miles.
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1000 parsecs. A parsec equals 3.26 light years.
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A light-year is a unit of distance. It is the distance that light can travel in one year. Light moves at a velocity of about 300,000 kilometers (km) each second. So in one year, it can travel about 10 trillion km. More precisely, one light-year is equal to 9,500,000,000,000 kilometers.
The area in which an attractive or repelling force exists between two magnets or in association with the element iron. The Earth's magnetic field is thought to be due to the liquid iron-nickel which is in its core. This magnetic field protects Earth from constant bombardment by high-energy charged particles.
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The middle layer of a planet located between the crust, or surface, and the core.
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The measure of the amount of matter in an object.
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Anything which has mass and occupies space.
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Meteoroids which burn up in the atmosphere of a space body, such as the Earth, prior to impacting on the surface.
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Fragments of material that fall from space and impact on other larger space bodies.
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Fragments of material which vaporize when they have a close encounter with a space body which has an atmosphere.
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1000 kilograms. A metric ton equals 2,204 pounds.
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Very small pieces of matter which are encountered in space.
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Electromagnetic radiation which has a long wavelength (between 1 mm and 30 cm). Microwaves can be used to study the Universe, communicate with satellites in orbit around Earth, and cook popcorn.
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A tough polyester material used as an insulator.
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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration which oversees the space program in the United States.
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A low density cloud of gas and dust in which a star is born.
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A huge cloud which is thought to surround our solar system and reach over halfway to the nearest star. Comets originate in the Oort Cloud.
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A specific path followed by a planet, satellite, etc.
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One parsec equals 3.26 light-years.
The main body of the Space Shuttle where the payload, or cargo, is stored.
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The process by which plants use carbon dioxide, nutrients, and sunlight to produce food.
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A person who studies physics.
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The science of matter and energy, and of interactions between the two. A person who studies physics is called a physicist.
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Vast, flat areas with low elevation.
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Unmanned spacecraft which are launched into space in order to collect data about the solar system and beyond. Space probes are not necessarily designed to return to Earth.
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A theory in physics which is based on 2 ideas: (1) light can be emitted or absorbed only in discrete quantities called quanta, whose energy is proportional to their wavelength; and (2) you can never be exactly sure of the position and velocity of a particle, the more accurately you know the one, the less accurately you can know the other.
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A distant energy source which gives off vast amounts of radiation, including radio waves and X-rays.
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A type of electromagnetic radiation which has the lowest frequency, the longest wavelength, and is produced by charged particles moving back and forth. Radio waves are not blocked by clouds in the Earth's atmosphere.
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Having a direction which is opposite that of similar bodies.
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The circling of a smaller object around a larger object.
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The spinning of an object on its axis.
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An object that revolves around a larger primary body. Satellites may be naturally occurring, such as the Moon, or they may be man-made, such as the Hubble Space Telescope and the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory.
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A non-metallic chemical element.
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A shadow which falls on an area of Earth when the Moon moves between the Sun and Earth.
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A magnetic storm on the Sun's surface which shows up as a sudden increase in brightness.
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Gases trapped at the edge of the Sun which appear to shoot outward from the Sun's surface.
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The Sun and all of the planets, comets, etc. which revolve around it.
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A continuous stream of charged particles which are released from the Sun and hurled outward into space at speeds up to 800 kilometers per second. Solar winds are very prominent after solar flare activity.
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A panel of solar cells which converts sunlight into electrical energy.
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The image of the electromagnetic spectrum produced by a spectroscope.
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An instrument which separates visible light into its various wavelengths. Each wavelength corresponds to a specific color in the spectrum.
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A band of colors which forms when visible light passes through a prism. The band ranges in color from violet (shorter wavelength) to red (longer wavelength).
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A magnetic storm on the the Sun's surface which appears as a dark area. A sunspot is approximately 1500 degrees Celsius cooler than it's surrounding material. The number of sunspots we see on the Sun at any given time appears to cycle every 11 years.
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A shifting of an object's surface due to changes in the material underlying the surface.
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Any of various devices, sometimes made with an arrangement of lenses, mirrors, or both, used to detect and observe distant objects by their emission, transmission, reflection, or other interaction with invisible radiation.
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An instrument for measuring temperature.
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Invisible electromagnetic radiation which is comprised of very short wavelengths. Human beings get a sunburn from the ultraviolet rays emitted by the Sun.
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The vast expanse of space which contains all of the matter and energy in existence.
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Volcanic activity.
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Penetrating electromagnetic radiation which has an extremely short wavelength.
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