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The Cosmic Perspective
7th Edition
ISBN: 9780321839558
Author: Jeffrey O. Bennett, Megan O. Donahue, Nicholas Schneider, Mark Voit
Publisher: Addison-Wesley
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Textbook Question
Chapter 11, Problem 23EAP
Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries described below. (These are not real discoivries.) Decide whether each discovery should be amsulrnii mtsmuible or surprising. More than one right answer may be possible, so explain your answer clearly.
- Saturn’s core is pockmarked with impact craters and dotted with volcanoes erupting lava.
- Neptune's deep blue color is not due to methane, as previously though!, but instead is due to its surface being covered with an ocean of liquid water.
- A jovian plane! in another star system has a moon as big as Mars.
- A planet orbiting another star is made primarily of hydrogen and helium and has approximately the same mass as Jupiter but is the same size as Neptune.
- A previously unknown moon orbtts Jupiter outside the orbits of other known moons. It is the smallest of Jupiter's moons but has several large, active volcanoes.
- A previously unknown moon orbits Neptune in the planet’s equatorial plane and in the same direcnon that Neptune rotates, but it is made almost entirely ol metals such as iron and nickel.
- An icy, medium-size moon orbits a jovian planet in a star system that is only a few hundred million years old. The moon shows evidence of active tectonics.
- A jovian planet is discovered in a star system that is much older than our solar system. The planet has no moons but has a system of rings as spectacular as the rings of Saturn.
- Future observations discover rainfall of liquid water on Titan.
- During a future mission to Uranus, scientists discover that it is orbited by another 20 previously unknown moons.
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Chapter 11 Solutions
The Cosmic Perspective
Ch. 11 - Prob. 1VSCCh. 11 - Prob. 2VSCCh. 11 - Prob. 3VSCCh. 11 - Prob. 4VSCCh. 11 - Prob. 1EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 2EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 3EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 4EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 5EAPCh. 11 - How do clouds contribute to Jupiter's colors? Why...
Ch. 11 - Prob. 7EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 8EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 9EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 10EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 11EAPCh. 11 - Summarize the evidence for and some of the...Ch. 11 - Prob. 13EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 14EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 15EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 16EAPCh. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Prob. 24EAPCh. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Suppose someone claimed la make the discoivries...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Choose the best answer to each of the following-...Ch. 11 - Prob. 37EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 38EAPCh. 11 - 39. Unanswered Questions. Choose one unanswered...Ch. 11 - Comparing Jovian Moons. Roles: Scnbe (collects...Ch. 11 - Prob. 41EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 42EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 43EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 44EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 45EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 46EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 47EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 48EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 49EAPCh. 11 - Re sure to show all calculations clearly and state...Ch. 11 - Re sure to show all calculations clearly and state...Ch. 11 - Prob. 52EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 53EAPCh. 11 - Re sure to show all calculations clearly and state...Ch. 11 - Prob. 55EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 56EAPCh. 11 - Pick a Moon. Suppose you could choose any one moon...Ch. 11 - Prob. 58EAPCh. 11 - Prob. 59EAP
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