The Universe
Across
- 2. The change in the wavelength or frequency of the waves with respect to the observer who is in motion relative to the source of the wave.
- 3. A graph used by scientists which plots luminosity verses temperature of the stars. The y-axis displays increasing luminosity, while the x-axis displays decreasing temperature.
- 5. The area in the interior of a star which is above the radioactive zone, where hot gases rise towards the surface and cooler gases sink into the interior.
- 6. An instrument used by scientists which spreads light into different wavelengths. It allows scientists to study stars’ characteristics such as temperatures, compositions, distances, and energies.
- 9. This is a measure of the distance light travels in 1 year. Since light travels at about 300,000 km/s, that means this is equal to about 10 trillion kilometers!
- 11. A huge collection of stars: hundreds of billions of which exist in the universe.
- 12. This is the dense, bright part of the star which you can see, where light energy radiates into space: the apparent surface of a star.
- 13. an enormous explosion of a star more than 10 times the mass of the Sun, which destroys the star. This occurs when iron forms in a star’s core, causing it to collapse and release a massive amount of energy.
- 14. The measure of how bright an object appears from Earth.
- 16. A measure of the true brightness of an object (e.g., star), measured using an absolute magnitude scale, dependent upon a star’s temperature, and not its distance from Earth.
- 18. Formed from the collapse of the most massive stars and is an object whose gravity is so great that no light can escape.
- 19. The wide, outermost layer of a star’s atmosphere. Its temperature is higher than that of the chromosphere or the photosphere. It has an irregular shape and can extend outward for several million kilometers.
- 21. A process that occurs when the nuclei of several atoms combine into a larger nucleus, releasing a great amount of energy which powers stars.
Down
- 1. This is the orange-red layer of a star, above the photosphere. This is one of the two outer layers of a star.
- 4. The average distance between Earth and the Sun, which is about 150 million kilometers.
- 7. Matter that emits no light at any wavelength, comprising more than 90% of the universe’s mass.
- 8. The eventual phase of an average mass star, like the Sun, and is a hot, dense, slowly cooling sphere of carbon.
- 10. – A cloud of gas and dust where stars form, deep within.
- 15. A dense core of neutrons that remains after a supernova.
- 17. A large ball of gas held together by gravity with a core so hot that nuclear fusion occurs.
- 20. Interior area of a star which is a shell of cooler, dense hydrogen above the core.