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Cosmology quiz


1. How long does it take light from the sun to reach the earth?

a) 1 minute and 8 seconds;

b) 8 minutes and 18 seconds;

c) 18 minutes and 8 seconds;

2. How old is the sun?

a) 4.6 billion years;

b) 15 billion years;

c) 1 million years.

3. Which planet is the hottest?

a) Mars;

b) Mercury;

c) Venus.

4. Which of the planets, other than Earth, has an atmosphere and seasons?

a) Uranus;

b) Venus;

c) Mars.


Reading and Speaking 2

THE BIG BANG

Cosmology is the search for origins. The origin of the universe remains one of the greatest questions in science.

According to the Big Bang theory, our Universe came into being as an infinitesimally small, infinitely hot, infinitely dense, something – a "singularity" around 13.7 billion years ago. Singularities are zones of infinite density that are thought to exist at the core of black holes, which are areas of intense gravitational pressure. In the first second after the Universe began, the surrounding temperature was about 5.5 billion Celsius. After its initial appearance, it apparently inflated (the "Big Bang"), expanded and cooled, going from very, very small and very, very hot, to the size and temperature of our current universe. It continues to expand and cool to this day and we are inside of it.

 

The Big Bang theory is the result of several important observations. In 1927, Edwin Hubble first observed that:

· The light from all the distant galaxies is red-shifted.

· The further away the galaxy the bigger the red-shift.

 

This means:

· All the distant galaxies are moving away from us.

· The further away the galaxy, the faster it is moving away.

We would not see these patterns in the red-shifts just because we, or the galaxies, are moving through space, but it is what we would see if space was expanding.
This is why scientists think we live in an expanding Universe. The Universe is everything that exists. There is nothing outside the Universe – not even empty space.

If the Universe is expanding, then one can assume that the galaxies that compose our Universe were once much closer together than they are now. By simply measuring how far apart galaxies are and how fast they are moving, we determine the Hubble Constant (estimates range from 50 to 100 km/s per kiloparsec*). The Hubble Law states that the recessional velocity** of a distant galaxy is proportional to its distance from us. It is very easy to determine the recessional velocity of galaxies; on the other hand, their current positions are difficult to measure. The distance to the galaxy is quite hard to measure, but can be estimated from its apparent angular size or by the brightness of objects in it such as supernovae.

If we run the expansion process backward, we get two results.

· The first is that it probably took approximately 15 billion years for the Universe to grow to its present size.

· Second, the Universe must have begun its expansion in an awesome event that astronomers call the Big Bang.



 

The Big Bang Theory started as a hypothesis – a suggested explanation created to account for the data. Scientists then used it to make a prediction. They said that the Big Bang would have produced radiation that, by now, would be found in the microwave region*** of the spectrum. It would come from all parts of the Universe. Scientists called this the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR). Scientists began searching for the CMBR and in 1965 two scientists, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, discovered it accidently. They were using a radio telescope and could not account for an annoying microwave signal that seemed to come equally from all directions. It was the CMBR. The Big Bang Theory was the only theory that could account for it, so this evidence led to the theory being accepted by most scientists.

___________________________

* A distance of 1000 parsecs (3262 light-years) is commonly denoted by the kiloparsec (kpc). Distances expressed in parsecs (pc) include distances between nearby stars.

** Recessional velocity can be calculated according to the formula:

where is the Hubble constant, is the distance, and is the recessional velocity, generally measured in km/s.

*** Microwave region - ìèêðîâîëíîâûé äèàïàçîí, äèàïàçîí ñâåðõâûñîêèõ ÷àñòîò

Task 1. Decide if these statements are true or false.

1. If a source of waves is moving away, the wavelength appears shorter.

2. The only thing that exists outside the Universe is empty space.

3. The further away the galaxy, the slower it is moving away.

4. It is believed that the galaxies composing the Universe used to be much closer together than they are now.

5. Cosmic microwave background radiation didn’t prove the Big Bang theory.

Task 2. Match the words with the definitions.

 

to account for (something) the rate or speed at which an object is moving away, typically from Earth
to expand to the same degree
a pattern clear to understanding, open to view
recessional velocity to give reasons for, to explain
current to make or become greater in extent, volume, size, or scope; increase
equally a star that explodes catastrophically due to instabilities of its nuclear fuel or gravitational collapse
apparent a form or model proposed for imitation
supernova (pl -ae) most recent; up-to-date

Task 3. Complete the sentences using correct forms of the following words:

to account for (something), to expand, pattern, recessional velocity, current, equally, apparent, supernovae.

1. What is your opinion of the ___________ state of modern art, in this country and internationally?

2. _________ is measured by distance from the Earth multiplied by the Hubble constant.

3. A great proportion of primary cosmic rays comes from _______________.

4. From the beginning, it was __________ that she was not an ordinary child.

5. Both features allow you to specify a ________ that controls the form of data.

6. It is ________ important to install these updates, especially for web applications.

7. The liquid __________ and contracts with changes in temperature.

8. How do you ___________ the fact that the amount of particles is still rising?

Task 4. Summary Questions

1. What is a red-shift?

2. What relationship exists between the speed of the galaxies moving apart and their initial distance from one another? Name this Law.

3. What is harder for the astronomer to measure: a galaxy's redshift (indicating recessional velocity) or its distance from Earth?

4. How long ago was the Big Bang?

5. What did the Big Bang Theory predict that scientists started to search for?

6. Why is it believed that we live in an expanding Universe?

Listening 2

Dark matter

 

Task 5. Read the introduction.

All the stars in a spiral galaxy rotate around a center– but to astronomers, the speed that each star travels wasn't making sense. Why didn't stars slow down toward the edges as expected? Don Lincoln explains how a mysterious force called dark matter is (possibly) the answer – and why the search for an answer matters.

 

Task 6. Make sure you understand these phrases:

― this observation was devastating

― to move leisurely

― galaxies should have torn themselves apart

― other options have been ruled out

 

Task 7. Listen to OR watch the video and answer the questions. Only one answer is correct. Read the questions first.

 

1) The fact that we can see so many spiral galaxies using our telescopes tells us that they are both:

A spontaneous and short-lived

B common and stable

C hot and dangerous

D magnetic and bright

 

2) Stars at which distance from the center of the galaxy move the fastest according to predictions?

A Those closest to the center

B Those in the middle

C Those on the outer edge

D All the stars move at the same speed

 

3) The observation that the stars located far away from the center of a galaxy move too quickly was devastating because scientists began to doubt:

A Newton’s Theory of Gravity

B Theory of Motion

C mathematical calculations of mass of galaxies

D all mentioned above

4) What's the best description of dark matter?

A A watery substance that surrounds most galaxies that is unaffected by gravity and visible to visible light and all other form of electromagnetic radiation

B A vacuum that surrounds some galaxies that is affected by gravity and invisible to ultraviolet light and most other form of electromagnetic radiation

C A cloud that surrounds most galaxies that is affected by gravity and invisible by visible light and all other form of electromagnetic radiation

D A weighty dust that surrounds most galaxies that is affected by gravity and visible to visible light and most other form of electromagnetic radiation

 

5) Which is not true about dark matter?

A Its name comes from its inability to emit or absorb light

B It adds to the mass of the galaxy it surrounds

C It has not yet been directly observed

D The dark matter hypothesis has been proved beyond all reasonable doubt

 

 

Grammar 2

Infinitive as Complex Object (see Êîñàðåâà, Ñêîíå÷íûõ)

Translation 2

Task 8. Dark Energy

In 1996, observations of very distant supernovae required a dramatic change in the picture. It had always been assumed that the matter of the Universe would slow its rate of expansion. Mass creates gravity, gravity creates pull, the pulling must slow the expansion. But supernovae observations showed that the expansion of the Universe, rather than slowing, is accelerating. Something, not like matter and not like ordinary energy, is pushing the galaxies apart. This "stuff" has been dubbed dark energy, but to give it a name is not to understand it. Whether dark energy is a type of dynamical fluid, heretofore unknown to physics, or whether it is a property of the vacuum of empty space, or whether it is some modification to general relativity is not yet known.

Part III “Space Exploration”

Lead-In 3

Methods of finding out about the Solar System and what is beyond it are: to use telescopes both ground-based and in orbit, to send unmanned space probes, to send manned spacecrafts. In your opinion, which method is the most dangerous? the cheapest? the most effective?

 

Listening 3

Task 1. Questions

Do you know who Stephen Hawking is?

Do you think people will destroy the Earth one day? How will that happen?

Do you believe that people may die out just like dinosaurs?

Is it now possible for people to move to another planet?

 

 

Task 2. Listen to OR watch a video of an interview with Stephen Hawking* recorded on March 7, 2008 and answer the following questions.

____________________

* Stephen Hawking is a British theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author. Despite being almost completely paralyzed and communicating through a speech generating device, Hawking remains one of the world's foremost theoretical physicists and has contributed greatly to our understanding of the universe.

 

Questions:

1. What is going to be the greatest achievement of scientists since the Theory of Relativity?

2. What does Stephen Hawking worry about?

a) about the future of the Universe because it can explode one day

b) about the life on Earth because people can destroy themselves

c) about the future of the Universe because it will continue to grow forever

d) about the life of the human race because there wouldn’t be enough resources on Earth

3. What does human survival depend on?

4. What should people do by the end of this century?

a) invent the Theory of Everything and it will make life easier

b) find another place to live beside Earth

5. What is the problem that people are not solving efficiently nowadays?

a) inventing the Theory of Everything

b) climate change

c) finding life on Mars

d) researching the Dark matter and energy

6. Does Stephen Hawking believe that people are going to survive?

 

Reading and Speaking 3


Date: 2015-01-11; view: 1289


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